Have been a very steady listener for a few years now. Thank you for enriching a part of my life with audio literature. Enjoy your passion on display while reading the descriptions. Looking forward towards 2025!
For me, this is the best channel that I listen to while doing creative work, I am very grateful to you for your contribution for this sincere wish of good luck❤️
A lovely start for the holiday season, snuggled up in my 1850’s slaybed after all the decorations are finished in my little french cottage...thank you!
What is a molock as in 'a very molock of a baby' referred to in the 1st story. I can only find moloch on Google- a grotesque lizard or a Canaanite God- I suppose the lizard description might fit.
The Canaanite god was a devourer of children, so a figure of monstrosity and abomination. It's just a very literate insult in this context, except perhaps to say that the child constantly had its mouth wide open. The lizard is named after the god because it eats ants - it sits over a nest or a trail and picks them off one by one. So, some zoologist decided to give it a fancy name since it spent all its time devouring tiny things...
A moloch was what H G Wells called the underground monsters in The Time Machine. The ones that ate the Eloise who lived on the surface and were childlike and beautiful then eaten. Both were remnants of humanity living in the far far future. Hope that helps. Hope even more I remembered all of that correctly. Hohoho merry everything everybody.
@@shelleymarquis2887 I'm afraid those creatures were Morlocks - but then again you might be on to something with a connection between the two words. Ultimately the morlocks were revealed to be devourers themselves...
Have been a very steady listener for a few years now. Thank you for enriching a part of my life with audio literature. Enjoy your passion on display while reading the descriptions. Looking forward towards 2025!
Glad to have been of service.
For me, this is the best channel that I listen to while doing creative work, I am very grateful to you for your contribution for this sincere wish of good luck❤️
A lovely start for the holiday season, snuggled up in my 1850’s slaybed after all the decorations are finished in my little french cottage...thank you!
Thank you so much for all your posts, I've had so many hours of listening pleasure from them! ❤😊
Very glad to hear that - you're welcome.
Made my evening x
Glad to hear it. If time allows I hope to do a couple more of these 'Christmas Specials'...
@mysteriousmagpie can't wait x
i have been searching for Brit christmas ghost stories, not horror or pseudo "true". Gratitude for excellent compilation and quality audio.
There's another ten-hour video of ghost stories on my channel which you may like: ua-cam.com/video/KXc17xRxsxc/v-deo.html
away i go...
Oh boy! I'm saving this till nearer Christmas. Thank you!
I'm hoping to have a couple of other 'mammoth' videos for Christmas - I thought this one would make a nice start to the season...
Love these, thank you so much. ❤️
Thankyou ❤
Beguiling storie by charles dickins. Charles Dickins storeys are always full of coulorfull characters.
Thank you 😊
What is a molock as in 'a very molock of a baby' referred to in the 1st story. I can only find moloch on Google- a grotesque lizard or a Canaanite God- I suppose the lizard description might fit.
The Canaanite god was a devourer of children, so a figure of monstrosity and abomination. It's just a very literate insult in this context, except perhaps to say that the child constantly had its mouth wide open. The lizard is named after the god because it eats ants - it sits over a nest or a trail and picks them off one by one. So, some zoologist decided to give it a fancy name since it spent all its time devouring tiny things...
I think it refers to a devil of a child
A moloch was what
H G Wells called the underground monsters in The Time Machine. The ones that ate the Eloise who lived on the surface and were childlike and beautiful then eaten.
Both were remnants of humanity living in the far far future. Hope that helps. Hope even more I remembered all of that correctly. Hohoho merry everything everybody.
@@shelleymarquis2887 I'm afraid those creatures were Morlocks - but then again you might be on to something with a connection between the two words. Ultimately the morlocks were revealed to be devourers themselves...
Why on earth can't they stick to Dickens original words.