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Classic Ghost Stories

The Doll by Daphne du Maurier

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 2 September 2022

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Doll by Daphne du Maurier Dame Daphne du Maurier, Lady Browning was born in 1907 in London in 1931 and died in 1989 in Cornwall. She is a famous novelist with such best-sellers as Rebecca, Frenchman’s Creek, The Birds and the novella Don’t Look Now. This story is taken from a collection of short stories written before her famous novels. She was clearly fond of the name Rebecca for the dark-spirited anima-like femme fatale. I did a recording of Don’t Look Now, which has proved to be my most popular recording on Youtube.(If You Appreciate The Work I’ve Put In Here - You could buy me a coffee at https://ko-fi.com/tonywalker or join as a Patron for exclusive content here: https://www.patreon.com/barcud) Her father was an actor and theatre manager who was knighted for her services to the arts.  Her mother Muriel Beaumont was also an actress.   Daphne’s sister Angela was also an author and an actress and her other sister Jeanne who was part of the painter colony in St Ives Cornwall.  Daphne and her sister Jeanne look very like their mother in the photographs on the internet.  Their cousins were the inspiration for the children in J M Barrie’s Peter Pan.  Her great-great-grandmother was mistress of Frederick Augustus, Duke of York and Albany.  She was born when the family were living in a rather grand house on Cumberland Terrace on the eastern side of Regent’s Park in a house that is now a grade I listed building designed by the famous architect John Nash. Her father’s success made this possible.  She was born in a house Daphne du Maurier became more reclusive as she got more famous and spent her time n her beloved Cornwall. As she grew, the family had two houses — one in Hampstead, north London ( a grade II listed building from 1720) and a house in Fowey, Cornwall, where they lived exclusively during the Second World War.  She got married to a prominent soldier and had three children, of whom both girls married prominent soldiers.  The Wiki notes that her marriage was somewhat chilly and she herself could be distant from her children. Her husband died in 1965, when she was 34.  She moved permanently to Kilmarth, Cornwall. She was made a dame (equivalent of a knight) in 1969 but was very reticent about mentioning it and never made much of it. After she died in 1989, biographers discussed whether she was a lesbian. Her sister Jeanne had a close relationship with another woman. She notes that her father always wanted a son and so she was a tomboy. Her children denied that she was a lesbian. When she died of heart failure aged 81, her body was privately cremated.  In her obituary, Kate Kellaway said: “Du Maurier was mistress of calculated irresolution. She did not want to put her readers’ minds at rest. She wanted her riddles to persist. She wanted the novels to continue to haunt us beyond their endings.” The Doll This story was published in 1937, that is two years after the death of her husband, and one year before the publication of Rebecca.   Apparently she was only 21 when she wrote The Doll. And you can join my mailing list and get a  free audiobook:  https://bit.ly/dalstonvampire Music By The Heartwood Institute https://bit.ly/somecomeback*** New Patreon Request Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREE 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

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.4

Everybody come back, isn't that?

0:14.4

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

0:17.1

How do the dead comeback, mother?

0:19.9

What's the secret? The Doll by Daphne de Morroway, Mother. What's the secret?

0:22.4

The Doll by Daphne de Morrier.

0:26.1

Forward.

0:27.7

The following pages were found in the shabby pocketbook, very much sodden and discovered by saltwater,

0:34.4

tucked away between the crevices of a rock in bay.

0:40.7

The owner has never been traced,

0:47.6

and the most diligent inquiries have failed to discover his identity. Either the wretched man drowned himself near the spot where he hit his pocketbook and his body has been lost at sea, or he is still wandering about the world, trying to

0:57.7

forget himself, and his tragedy. Some of the pages of his story were so damaged by exposure as to

1:06.0

render them completely illegible. Thus, there are many gaps, and much of it seems without sequence,

1:13.7

including the abrupt and unsatisfactory termination. I have placed three dots between

1:20.6

sentences when words or lines were undecipherable, whether the wild improbabilities of the

1:26.8

story are true, or whether the whole is but the hysterical product of a diseased mind, we shall never know.

1:35.3

My sole reason for publishing these pages is to satisfy the entreaties of many friends who have been interested in my discovery.

1:44.0

Signed, Dr. E. Strongman, Bay, Southern England.

1:51.2

I want to know if men realize when they are insane. Sometimes I think that my brain cannot

1:56.8

hold together. It's filled with too much horror, too greater despair. And there is no one I have

2:04.6

never been so unutterably alone. Why should it help me to write this? Vomit forth the poison in my

2:13.0

brain. For I am poisoned. I cannot sleep. I cannot close my eyes without seeing his damned face.

...

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