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Classic Ghost Stories

S02E51 The Pomegranate Seed by Edith Wharton

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 4 October 2021

⏱️ 87 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Get a great discount on my Horror Stories For Halloween audiobook & ebook bundlehttps://spirit.ghostpod.org/horror-stories-for-halloween (https://spirit.ghostpod.org/horror-stories-for-halloween)The Pomegranate SeedThe pomegranate seed is a reference to the myth of Persephone and Demeter. Winter and Spring and the Lord of the Underworld. In a sense Mother and daughter are the same, and one aspect of the woman spends time in the world of the dead, while the other walks the world of the living.Kenneth disappears to see about ‘their passages.’ It is clear that it is his passage over the river Styx to the underworld that he finally arranges. He has been so attached to the ghost of his late wife, that he cannot escape her as she dominated him in life. He wants to escape, he wants to live with his new wife and have new experiences, but he is simply not strong enough to make it so.Charlotte represents the living, mortal world while Elise Ashby represents death. In that sense it is a story about a choice that all of us have to make: to live in this world and be of it and do what work it sets before us or spend our time dreaming of the underworld whence we came and to which we shall return. Deep for a Monday morning, I feel.However, Wharton’s skill as an observer of human behaviour also shines in this story, and for most of the time it is the skilful chronicle of that commonplace (sadly) or married life—the suspicion that our lover’s heart is tethered elsewhere. Trivial, but profoundly upsetting. Charlotte spends a lot of time arguing this when then that way that her husband is having an affair, trying to convince herself in a way that rings very true.Old Mrs Ashby plays the role of the mother goddess who loses her son in this case to the Underworld. This doesn’t totally fit. But she is on the side of life, despite her age, and she supports Charlotte and regrets her son’s attachment to his late wife.In construction there are four parts. We begin with a scene of Charlotte’s unsettledness, standing at the door. What had been her haven now disquiets her and she finds no comfort in modern New York or inside in her home that she once loved. She coveted the house when it was Elise’s and of course it has always remained Elises and again this is the story of the second wife who is dutiful and loving but is reminded by the possessions and moments and indeed children that she can never really supplant the first. Iff the first wife had been unfaithful then it would be easier, but by dying while he still loved her this has made the second wife’s job impossible. She can never win.Wharton raises questions throughout: what are the letters? Who are they from? Did he love this other woman? But she lays hints as the tension builds that these are not normal letters, they are grey, the handwriting is androgynous (perhaps because Elise is not a woman but a spirit? And therefore neither male nor female in that vague gray underworld?)But its a slow burn and the tension is that of a story about adultery, until it is revealed at the end to be a story about death’s hold on the living. Depressed now?She uses a lot of Britishisms: holiday for vacation, fortnight for two weeks —I don’t think Edith Wharton played Fortnite.The ending is ambiguous. Wharton prefers subtle hints rather than clear resolutions in her ghost stories, listen to Bewitched or Mr Jones on this channel for that.But it seems to me that both the Old Mrs Ashby and Charlotte are creatures of the daylight world and so they pretend that Kenneth’s disappearance is a daylight occurrence when they know that he has gone down into the night world. Still, they act as isSupport 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

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.7

Everybody come back, isn't that so?

0:14.6

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

0:17.4

How do the dead come back, mother?

0:20.1

What's the secret?

0:21.4

The pomegranate seed by Edith Wharton.

0:25.8

Chapter 1

0:26.5

Charlotte Ashby paused on her doorstep.

0:30.2

Dark had descended on the brilliancy of the March afternoon,

0:33.8

and the grinding, rasping street life of the city was at its highest. She turned her back on it,

0:39.9

standing for a moment in the old-fashioned marble-flagged vestibule before she inserted her key in the lock.

0:47.4

The sash curtains drawn across the panes of the inner door softened the light within to a warm blur,

0:53.4

through which no details showed.

0:56.6

It was the hour when, in the first months of her marriage to Kenneth Ashby,

1:00.9

she had most liked to return to that quiet house, in a street long since deserted by business

1:06.8

and fashion. The contrast between the soulless roar of New York, its devouring blaze of lights,

1:14.2

the oppression of its congested traffic, congested houses, lives, mines, and this veiled sanctuary

1:21.5

she called home, always stirred her profoundly. In the very heart of the hurricane, she had found her tiny eyelid,

1:30.7

or thought she had. And now, in the last months, everything was changed, and she always wavered

1:38.2

on the doorstep and had to force herself to enter. While she stood there, she called up the scene within. The hall hung with

1:46.5

old prints, the ladder-like stairs, and on the left her husband's long, shabby library,

1:53.0

full of books and pipes and worn armchairs inviting to meditation. How she had loved that room.

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