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Classic Ghost Stories

S0201 A Journey of Little Profit by John Buchan

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 19 September 2020

⏱️ 2 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is a subscriber only episode, so come on and sign up at tonywalker.substack.comJohn Buchan: John Buchan, officially 1st Baron Tweedsmuir was born in 1875 in Perth, Scotland and died in 1940 aged only 64 in Montreal, Canada. He was Governor General of Canada until he died in office. His father was a minister of the Church of Scotland. Many of our ghost story writers are children of clergymen. He studied Classics at the University of Glasgow and then moved to Oxford University. After that he went to South Africa where he was private secretary to the High Commissioner of South Africa. Like Kipling, who we read last week, Buchan was a conservative son of the British Empire. He was a bit of a softie for a conservative though because later when MP for Peebles just south of Edinburgh, he supported votes for women, national health insurance for the poor and curtailing the power of the House of Lords.Though a Scot, he was not a Scottish Nationalist, and in common with many Scots of his class and time, he though Scotland was best off within the British Empire.When he returned from South Africa, he was called to the English Bar as a barrister (an advocate in Scotland). He was also editor of the still existing conservative magazine: The Spectator.In 1916, Buchan went to the Western Front, attached to the Intelligence Corps. Just before this he had just published his famous spy story The 39 Steps. In 1935, Buchan went as Governor General to Canada. He had always liked Canada, written about it as a journalist and fought alongside Canadian troops in the First World War. He encouraged a distinct Canadian identity and nationality. He hosted King George VI on the king's tour of Canada. He suffered a stroke at Rideau Hall and then a head injury as he fell. He was treated by the famous neurologist Wilder Penfield. A Journey of Little Profit was published in 1896 in The Yellow Book, so he was just twenty-one at the time. It's a well-regarded story about a bargain with the Devil.Because of its Scottish setting it has echoes with James Hogg's The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner, and of course with the Faust Legend.The great use of dialogue and language with lots of Scottish dialect words sets this story apart but also the fact that Duncan Stewart becomes fond of the Devil and escapes with his soul. We see him first the older wiser man, now regretful of his wild youth.It's a great story, I hope you enjoyed it too.Download Charles Dickens The Signalman Free Mp3 https://bit.ly/dickenssignalman (Subscribe to our list and keep in touch with the podcast. Learn of new episodes and bonus Content. )Support our work PLUS you get a free story right now!(The Story Link is in the Thank You Email)Show Your Support With A Coffee!https://ko-fi.com/tonywalker (Buy the thirsty podcaster a coffee...)Final Request: The SurveyI want to know what you want. If you have three minutes, I'd be grateful to know what you think of The Classic Ghost Stories Podcast.https://my.captivate.fm/Click%20here%20to%20go%20to%20the%20Survey (Click here to go to the Survey)Support 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

So this would have been episode 66 of the classic ghost stories podcast, and in some sense it still is.

0:14.8

But I've made the decision to move three out of four of the podcasts to Substack, which is a subscription service.

0:23.9

Now, you can subscribe free to Substack and get all the free ones.

0:27.5

But three out of four, so three weeks out of every month, I'm going to be doing a paid story.

0:34.9

The reason for making this decision was that we were getting 4,500 downloads a week,

0:43.2

and yet, I think, at the highest, the subscribers were 20, you know. And so that wasn't really

0:52.1

proportionate to the effort. And I thought, well, given the reviews and what people say,

0:56.9

it is something that people enjoy.

0:59.1

And human nature being what it is, if you can get something for free, that's good,

1:03.1

then you'd take it.

1:04.4

And I do that.

1:05.2

Funnily enough, with software,

1:06.9

and there are certain pieces of software I actually pay for

1:09.5

because of the benefits of them.

1:11.5

I'm thinking of Notion and Rome and drafts and Grammally and things like that.

1:17.6

And there are other ones like Canva where I get everything I need without paying.

1:21.5

And I love Canva and I'm very grateful to the people, but I'm not going to pay because I get everything I need without paying.

1:30.3

So it was that kind of decision.

1:36.3

Podcast does take a lot of work, effort, editing, recording. There are costs involved with it and only a small number of people.

1:40.3

And as well as the 20 subscribers or a cloud of about 10 people who were providing

1:46.4

coffee, which was great. Fantastic. Really do appreciate that. For the bulk of people, you know,

1:52.4

4,800 people a week, they weren't giving me anything back. So, and that might sound brutal,

...

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