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Classic Ghost Stories

Episode 65 Branch Line to Benceston by Sir Andrew Caldecott

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 6 September 2020

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Branch Line to Benceston by Sir Andrew CaldecottBranch Line to Benceston was published in the collection Not Exactly Ghosts in 1947. He turned to writing after retirement from the Malaysian Civil Service, again like many of our ghost story writers, he had a career in the Colonial Civil Service of the British Empire. Sadly, he didn’t live long after retirement and died aged 65.Sir Andrew Caldecott (1884–1951) was born in Kent. He was educated at Uppingham School and at Exeter College, Oxford, where he became an Honorary Fellow in 1948. His father was a clergyman. Spooky. how this happens so much.He had a very distinguished career in the Colonial Service and was Governor of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) from 1937 until 1944 (so during the Second World War), and before that Governor of Hong Kong (1935–1937). He also worked in Malaya and Singapore and there is a station named after him in Singapore.He had a lifelong interest in the supernatural and, as is evident from his two volumes of supernatural tales, he was an accomplished writer, but it wasn’t until after his retirement in 1944 that he published his first volume of ghost stories. Not Exactly Ghosts was published in 1947 by Edward Arnold & Co. It contains twelve tales. Interestingly, features of Caldecott’s own interests, such as playing the piano, crop up in his stories and I suppose that is true for most writers, hence my frequent mentions of Hawkwind.In ‘Branch Line to Benceston’, Adrian Frent, a railway enthusiast and herbalist, is the first tenant of ‘Brentside’, the newly-built house next to the narrator’s own house in Brensham. Frent is a partner in a firm of music publishers, but he hates the other partner with a vengeance, feeling that the man has messed up his life stence since they were boys. He wishes his partner dead, and then when he does die, things turn weird. But the story is not exactly a ghost story. C aldecott does a couple of things wonderfully. Firstly; this story is a portrait of Metroland, the area outside London that was developed in the first half of the twentieth century with the benefit of faster rail connections to allow the middle classes, to have the benefits of living in a suburbia that appeared and was sold as being the English countryside, while still able to travel easily into London to their day jobs. Vast swathes of the Home Counties were gobbled up and railways proliferated. John Betjeman, the English poet laureate captured all of this in his film entitled: Metroland and much of his poetry is set in this half-and-half land bathed in the sunlight of the English dream.The second thing I think Caldecott does well is the set up of the story. The death of the Dachshunds and the herbalism and poison seems to be a red-herring. Though giving his great enemy Paul Saxon one of the tinctures he makes reminds Frent of his wish to kill Paul, and thus his sin, he does not actually poison the man. This is a misdirection, I think: a red herring.However, the real set-up is the trap-door. We have already been told how Frent tends to go off half-cocked, but after a brief mention of this trap-door, Caldecott leaves it. This is subtle and I didn’t get that until the end. Caldecott is a great wit and his comment about the coroner’s view that these houses are death-traps being ignored as normal with coroner’s comments reflects his own professional experience, I am sure, and is a bit of a joke because we are going to ignore this clue too, at least I did. Caldecott even flags this clue up saying he has recorded it for a reason that will become clear later. This to me is a great example of burying the obvious, and doing it well.The pSupport the showVisit us here: www.ghostpod.orgBuy me a coffee if you're glad I do this: https://ko-fi.com/tonywalkerIf you really want to help me, become a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/barcudMusic by The Heartwood Institute: https://bit.ly/somecomeback Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.5

Everybody come back.

0:12.6

Isn't that so?

0:14.4

You tried to get into the locked drawn today, didn't you?

0:17.4

How do the dead come back, mother?

0:20.1

What's the secret? Branchline to Benchaston.

0:27.0

Although to know Adrian Frent was not necessarily to like him, he interested me from the very first.

0:34.4

If his life contained much of the ordinary, the manner of his death was very far out of it.

0:40.3

The biographical portion of these notes is therefore by way of a preface to the mystery of his end.

0:49.3

I had lived at Brencham for two years before the Garden City Company showed any intention

0:55.3

of extending Ruskin Road.

0:57.8

So long as it remained a cul-de-sac, the piece of my bachelor homestead would remain undisturbed,

1:03.2

for beyond it lay only a wilderness of weed and bramble between the road's end and the

1:08.0

Brenn River.

1:09.5

I watched then, with misgiving, a gradual clearing by the

1:13.5

company's roadmen of this barren strip and the construction by them of a gravel track down its

1:18.6

centre. But I need not have worried, for a bridging of the Bren on a purely residential thoroughfare

1:24.5

was quite beyond the company's financial resources, and the sole purpose

1:28.6

of the extension was to afford access to a vacant building lot on the side opposite me and

1:34.5

nearer to the river. On this quickly arose Bren's side, and into it as first tenant moved Adrian

1:43.1

Frent. My first glimpse of him was during a reconnaissance

1:47.8

made by me along the riverbank for that very purpose. What would be the looks of a man whom I might

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