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The Curse of Mathair nan Uisgeachan by Angus Wolfe Murray 

Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
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A story set in the Scottish Highlands in the 1950s. A modern family get involved in an ancient Gaelic tale of the fairy folk and changelings
Mathair nan Uisgeachan## Get All Episodes Ad Free!
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Scottish Gaelic for The Mother of the Waters. The name of the whirlpool in the loch.
The story begins as a very naturalistic tale of an idealistic young man from the Scottish upper classes who returns to the family estate and appreciates the history of the Highlands. He comments on the empty glen and alludes to the Highland Clearances and the remaining Highlanders wily ways and tenacity to keep to tradition. Tradition when the clan owned everything in common and Chief was not a feudal lord, but the father of the tribe. Hugh, coming back from Toronto is a reminder of the change in attitudes where the Gaelic Clan Chiefs were Anglicised and transformed themselves into property owners as per the standard European model.
Hugh is not a sympathetic character, but his Canadian wife Anne is and our unnamed narrator falls for her. A love triangle evolves, though not as far or with as grisly outcome as in last weeks's story, Oscar Cook's Boomerang.
The narrator goes to see his aunt Magda in Aberdeenshire, talks late and falls asleep. Though the fact he has fallen asleep is not stated specifically. We believe he has gone back to the castle as he says, but the story gets weirder until he in fact states that he must be dreaming. It is difficult at first to disentangle which is dream and which is waking. The weirdness of the dream is full of symbols and ends with the legend of the death of Lochlann, murdered by the man who thought he was his father.
The story is conveyed in dream, but the ghost Lochlann appears in the real world too. First he is seen by Magda when he is with her sister Fiona, who died, and then he is seen by the narrator himself when he is with Anne. Though probably a ghost, he has some of the flavour of the fairy folk.
It seems that the curse affects women who have a child and are unfaitful to their husbands. In the legend the wife Shona was unfaithful and her child was not her husbands. I think it is possible that Anne's child was not Hughe's but was in fact conceived that day of the fishing trip, though this is not specifically mentioned.
Ten-year old Fiona was drowned, presumably as part of the curse, though she had not been unfaithful and her body was found in the river, not the whirlpool.
All in all though, Angus Wolfe Murray conjures the Highlands wonderfully and I kept thinking of the landscape off the A9 road that we travelled through last year on our trip to Inverness. He also manages to convey the feel of this fairy haunted land and say something about the tragic history of the Highland folk who were cleared to make way for sheep by the people who should have been looking out for them most -- their clan chiefs.
And then Aunt Magda wakes him and he realises Anne has not died. He can save her. He travels back to the castle and is told by Hugh that Anne has already gone fishing on the loch with Lochlann...
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Scottish Gaelic tradition has legends of The Washing Woman or the Washer at the Ford. She washes the blood from the linen of those who are about to die. I was reminded of this legend by the old woman he sees in his dream and by the descriptions of the long white shirt of Lochlann as he drowns in the whirlpool
The woman feels like a fairy woman because she warns him he must never touch her, and she relates the Highland legend that was the start of the Curse of Mathair nan Uisgeachan.
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Music is by The Heartwood Institute bit.ly/somecomeback

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1 авг 2021

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Комментарии : 107   
@nancyM1313
@nancyM1313 2 года назад
I am only five minutes into the tale and have to pause a bit. Can't wait to listen (uninterrupted) sounds wonderful. Exactly the narrator I was looking for. Thank you.⚘
@MSYNGWIE12
@MSYNGWIE12 2 года назад
Hi Nancy I did the same, hearing that Scottish brogue, I didn't get into the story till 3rd time! Great narrator isn't he!? Hi from Canada
@jturtle5318
@jturtle5318 2 года назад
I spoke with someone who described seeing a banshee, without realizing what he had seen. He and the person who died shortly after the vision were of Irish descent, but he had no idea what he had seen.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Wow. That’s a good story. I am fond of the whole banshee thing
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 2 года назад
Ditto also this time around, masterful presentation, accent. The independence of an emotional refugee. Thank you. Please ask Imogine for more of her charming, imaginative, illustrative figures. Am looking forward ALSO to them.
@TheRickie41
@TheRickie41 2 года назад
A jewel, with your wonderful reading!
@Katya-zj7ni
@Katya-zj7ni 2 года назад
Accent was really authentic, great story x
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Thank you! 😃
@stardust949
@stardust949 2 года назад
I enjoyed this story. I like the ones from other times especially. I love your Scottish accent! Thank you.
@lizbmusic11
@lizbmusic11 2 года назад
Scotland sounds beautiful. Such vivid description. I so want to go there.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
It's like New Zealand apparently
@sarahsamaria8283
@sarahsamaria8283 2 года назад
Love the accent. Beautiful Scottish scenery. Against this awesome panoramic background of Scotland, our human fragilities are so pretty.
@annabellreads
@annabellreads 2 года назад
I do so thoroughly enjoy your Scottish accent. This one reminded me quite a bit of Victorian styling, where there's a very lengthy time spent establishing this creepy atmosphere, and then the climax and denouement suddenly explains the whole thing. Of course, if it were truly Victorian there'd be a bit of moralizing, but then perhaps "don't sleep with your husband's brother" serves, haha.
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 2 года назад
Just as engaging, gripping presentation--fantastic accent. Perfect, necessary break-hour for a full day. You are a master story-teller. Thank you!
@ellenlaird8857
@ellenlaird8857 2 года назад
As a Glasgow girl I think your accent is very good, although I’m fairly sure that this guy would have cultivated a more Anglicised version.🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇬🇧
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Yes, he would. He might well sound English in fact
@itgetter9
@itgetter9 2 года назад
One of my favorites, which I'd likely never have discovered without you. Thank you!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
It's a real pleasure for me to introduce new writers to people
@itgetter9
@itgetter9 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost Thanks so much, and I agree: this had all the marks of a faerie tale. So wonderful!
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 2 года назад
Enchanting hour among Fairy Folk, vivid with word-paintings masterfully written and narrated, including an accent superbly delivered as if it were your native tongue, Thank you for all your hard work, interesting commentary and introducing us to Angus Wolfe Murray.
@rheinhartsilvento2576
@rheinhartsilvento2576 2 года назад
Wonderful story, as usual 😊 One remark though: a young man of the Scottish upper classes, one who spent little time in Scotland, studied in Cambridge and socialized with the landed gentry from the south, would be very unlikely to have a Scottish accent. He would speak the King's English, like his entourage. Whatever his feelings on class divides or equality might be...
@mandymckerl4548
@mandymckerl4548 2 года назад
As a Scot listening from the Hebrides I agree completely. He sounds like a mix of highlander, with a twang of East Coast and Glasgow vowels.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Indeed. You are right
@hollyhobby2763
@hollyhobby2763 2 года назад
yes, but it’s a story, such a beautiful story. and tony, here adds to the atmosphere of languid temptation. deeply so.🤍
@wmnoffaith1
@wmnoffaith1 2 года назад
Well, that may all be true, but it's a fictional story, and in a fictional world an upper class Scot can have a Scottish accent of any kind the author pleases, or narrator please:) or a mixture and slurred accent like so many people have today who have lived in various regions. You can't even determine where they're from because they use a whole combination of dialects. We have a lot of people like that in the U.S.
@rheinhartsilvento2576
@rheinhartsilvento2576 2 года назад
@@wmnoffaith1 Writing fiction doesn't mean the author/interpreter gets to make up the reality in which his/her protagonists live. That would be fantasy: a specific sub-genre. And even while writing fantasy/supernatural, it is all the more important to root all "normal" aspects of the story in a specific, plausible reality. Giving the protagonist here a Scottish accent IS not plausible: the only plausible accent he could have is the King's English. A person is a product of particular social circumstances, not a haphazardly made up congeries of traits that might make them "relatable" to some group or other.
@djr1943
@djr1943 Год назад
Thank you, Tony! That was a beautiful story wonderfully read. I love your Scottish accent.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Год назад
Thanks Don
@roxanavasilakis9435
@roxanavasilakis9435 Год назад
Thank you ever so much 🌳,love all your stories, always 😊
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Год назад
You are a great support Roxana.
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 2 года назад
Engaging, riveting also this time around. Masterful,Tony, Thank you!Love the accent!
@rattyrachel4316
@rattyrachel4316 2 года назад
Loved this - the complex story line, the beautiful, descriptive writing, your excellent reading (Your Scottish dialect is impressive!). The whole experience leaves nothing lacking!
@DreamingCatStudio
@DreamingCatStudio 2 года назад
Beautiful story and reading! As an American the discussion of class and accents in the comments is completely over my head. Of course we have a different set here, but I’m clueless what each means over the pond. I just appreciate your beautiful voice.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Do you know what fig rolls are or gingersnaps? I could maybe do a course...
@DreamingCatStudio
@DreamingCatStudio 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost This is a fascinating response and I have absolutely no idea what it means!
@trudypegg437
@trudypegg437 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost both are a kind of biscuit (UK ). One is fig covered in soft biscuit and the other is just ginger flavoured biscuit , lovely dunked in tea . Available in local shops or supermarkets.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
@@trudypegg437 if there was a prize you would have won it
@4444marla
@4444marla Год назад
Wonderful story, wonderful rendition!
@justanotherjoke
@justanotherjoke 2 года назад
I always enjoy hearing your Scottish accent, we don't hear much of it in Michigan :-) Always reminds me of my teen years hearing Donovan singing us the tales of Atlantis. I totally enjoy hearing you read, thank you Tony.
@rayswoop4947
@rayswoop4947 2 года назад
Awesome!!!!! I love Scottish mythical stories 😁👌
@Bebecat477
@Bebecat477 2 года назад
I love your stories and narration. Thank you.
@tonyinit8488
@tonyinit8488 2 года назад
Good accent Tony- adds to the atmosphere of the story
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Thanks !
@rayswoop4947
@rayswoop4947 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost I greatly love and appreciate your channel Tony, I have a short story called, "Suffer The Harpy" and I tried to write it in the Gothic era style and prose, and I would luv to see what you think😊 and maybe if it's to your liking; possibly narrate it, and if not, it would still be an honor and a joy to share it with you 😊
@djr1943
@djr1943 2 года назад
Thank you Tony for this wonderful story! Your Scottish accent is unbelievable. What a super story.
@melfreemans
@melfreemans 2 года назад
I'd love to vacation in Scotland. I'm from the US...North Carolina. We have beautiful coastline, the Outer Banks, and we have beautiful mountains, the Blue Ridge area. So I really shouldn't complain. But sometimes I feel drawn visit Scotland. My family are McLeods.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Ah, the McLeods of Dungarvan! With the fairy flag in the castle
@melfreemans
@melfreemans 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost I've heard my grandmother talk about Dunvegan...but nothing about a fairy flag. I'll have to Google that!
@grahamturner1290
@grahamturner1290 2 года назад
An interesting tale, stories with folktale elements are always entertaining. Thanks! 🤔😊
@kristinacable
@kristinacable Год назад
Very enjoyable tale 🙂
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it
@Bbergster
@Bbergster 2 года назад
This is good. Thatkx!! Yeah
@janemaas4225
@janemaas4225 2 года назад
Great story. A bit creepy with the whirlpool scene. No nightmares please. Would be great if you could interview the author. Best to you 💜
@kevinmortimer5681
@kevinmortimer5681 2 года назад
Splendidly rendered accent!!! I've found many Scottish folk storys rather imponderable but I enjoyed this. Thankyou!!
@ddbr5790
@ddbr5790 2 года назад
Hi Tony, another brilliant narration. I have always listened to your podcast and enjoy that thoroughly. Thought I’d take a look at your RU-vid after listening to Dragoon and DeWayne Hayes saying how much he enjoyed your channel. It’s good to see that you have so many listens and likes. Well deserved. Thanks for your hard work. Goretastic666
@Kojoanna
@Kojoanna 2 года назад
What a good story💖
@hollyhobby2763
@hollyhobby2763 2 года назад
wow. i am so in love with this story. so beautiful.
@rabbits.plinketty-plink.1276
@rabbits.plinketty-plink.1276 2 года назад
Fantastic!! Thank you so much. I really enjoyed that. I missed Boomerang, but am going to listen to that tomorrow, now we're in Lockdown yet again. 😕
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
I’m just going to upload it . It’s a horrid tale
@rabbits.plinketty-plink.1276
@rabbits.plinketty-plink.1276 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhostCool! I thought I'd missed it, but wondered why I couldn't find it. Looking forward to it!! 👍😊
@mariameere5807
@mariameere5807 2 года назад
You are spoiling us Tony! Like I said you really could be an actor and you do not look old at all! If I thought you did I just wouldn’t say anything but obviously you’re a gifted writer and that’s where your talents lye however it must be nice to be able to avail of your other God-given gifts! I love your discrimination when it comes to picking the cream of the best stories ever! Thank you for that! Thank you so much for what you do and I think you should be so proud of yourself! Blessings my friend!🌹
@hollyhobby2763
@hollyhobby2763 2 года назад
indeed. i am so completely in love with the stories tony authors himself. particularly the bewcastle fairies. what a man🤍
@mariameere5807
@mariameere5807 2 года назад
@@hollyhobby2763 couldn’t agree more!💛
@mandymckerl4548
@mandymckerl4548 2 года назад
Thank you. Really enjoyed your ending discussion and context.
@appalachianamerican7171
@appalachianamerican7171 2 года назад
Wonderful tale, I really enjoyed it. Great accent too.
@StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz
@StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz 2 года назад
Tony, you explored all the same lines of thought, and questions, which I myself had about this amazing AMAZING story. Thank you so much! Will definitely be buying you and a few others a mug o’ joe if I have a successful quarter coming up with my freelancing. Cheers
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Good luck with the freelancing. I get the rest but what's Zioglow?
@karenhanson5893
@karenhanson5893 Год назад
wonderful story
@PhilipLawsonArt
@PhilipLawsonArt 2 года назад
Awesome read . Thank you for these lovely podcast.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Thank you :)))
@puca7908
@puca7908 2 года назад
I so enjoy Scottish tales! You did warn us before hand that the narrator had been dreaming while at his aunt's house. But, I was a little confused about the child. Was there an actual Gypsy's child drowning, or was it Lochlann? One more thing please, I know Loch is Scot for lake, what does the rest of the name mean? Thank you so much for this story, your marvelous natural brogue adds character and depth to the stories you read. Take care!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Lochlann and loch are just coincidence. Lochlann is Gaelic for a Viking. So MacLaughlin, McLachlann etc are all just Mac Lochlainn ‘son of the Viking’
@mariameere5807
@mariameere5807 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost that is correct because in Ireland Irish is compulsory and if you want to be a teacher you have to be able to speak Irish fluently and they’re really trying to bring their Gaelic language back! There are parts of Ireland that was so isolated that the war never got to them so they just can’t even speak English! They’re very very old people in the west of Ireland. My mother knew one of them. I had to translate because my mum can’t speak Irish. I hated my Irish teacher so in my exams I got an A🌟 to prove her wrong! Then results day came and she walked up to me, my nemesis, and she shook my hand and congratulated me! She was a nun. I went to a convent and they have these Woods and a lake it was so beautiful but in the words they had the old convent and we did the Ouija board there and we asked for a sign and one of the doors just flung open all by it self and we all ran out screaming! Two of the girls were found hanging from the tree a week later! This is the truth, I was there and those girls were my friends, apparently the Ouija board told them they were going to fail their exams or something and the verdict was suicide... I don’t know I sometimes think something supernatural was involved like possession. I have experienced possession when I was having a nightmare I was literally possessed that spirit had full control of my body! it all happened in County Clare in Ireland! I’ve been here since I was 16, The UK, first few years of my life were in New York but I absolutely love London! I go back to New York quite a bit but London has a unique five and that’s why I love the London stories by Tony W.....🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
@DreamingCatStudio
@DreamingCatStudio 2 года назад
@@mariameere5807 Wow amazing stories! Ever consider writing a novel or autobiography?
@WolflordFenrisVargr
@WolflordFenrisVargr 2 года назад
Màthair nan Uisgeachan : Mother of the waters
@trudypegg437
@trudypegg437 2 года назад
@@mariameere5807 is it just for teaching now ? I am remember my uncle (rip ) had to pass it in order to get a degree .
@nocount1
@nocount1 2 года назад
Hi from Baltimore. I don't see any merchandise for sale on this upload.
@jturtle5318
@jturtle5318 2 года назад
I see it, maybe it didn't load right away.
@jamesfranklin5541
@jamesfranklin5541 2 года назад
Wow.
@MSYNGWIE12
@MSYNGWIE12 2 года назад
Such a wonderful dream-like quality, at times I was confused but it was worth a second listening! I loved hearing of the clash of the old cultures vs modern civilization- I am not sure when it was set- but the woman is wearing PVC red boots. Enjoyed the use of colour and its purported powers. A nifty folktale! Great job on the accents too. Namaste. Z ( is there a Scottish term for the land of the Dead? Pre-Christian?).
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Well of course you have Tir nan Og, the land of the young which lay in the west over the ocean
@mrs.cracker4622
@mrs.cracker4622 2 года назад
Wonderful narration and commentary but the story itself was a little overwrought I think. But I liked the Highland setting. Many thanks for all you do!
@OssamabinKenny
@OssamabinKenny 2 года назад
The Scotch accent is great with this one!
@earthcat
@earthcat 2 года назад
A love story 💖
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Really,yes.
@MSYNGWIE12
@MSYNGWIE12 2 года назад
Hi Tony, since there were some questions about Gaelic- I'll ask one, is Welsh, Scottish, and Irish - the native languages, are they pretty much the same Gaelic? Or is it as with Scandinavian countries- I watch TV shows and there are similarities but ...I've no ear for languages. I read Norweigans ( Roald Dahl program, 10 thumbs up) emigrated to Ireland and indeed another show in English had subtitles for the Irish and there was the same lilt...cadences...
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
So, Irish and Scottish (and Manx) are very close and until the 17th Century were the same language. So we may offend Scots, Irish and Manx by saying they are basically dialects of one common Gaelic. Welsh is related but different so Welsh is like Breton and Cornish. E.g the black cat. an cat dubh, in Irish and Scottish Gaelic. yn keyt doo (which sounds like the Irish and Scottish because Manx was written down by Englishmen not Gaels). Welsh is y gath ddu, Cornish an gath ddu, and Breton an kazh du. So cat is 'cat' in Gaelic but 'Cath' in Brittonic (Welsh/Cornish/Breton) and black is dubh in Gaelic pronounced 'doo'. and black is 'du' in Brittonic. There you have it.
@blixten2928
@blixten2928 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost Aha, my question answered below. You have three degrees. I knew your accents were impeccable, but didn't realise you could inform about Irish, Scottish, Manx, Gaelic and Cornish. And Brittonic, whatever that is. Were you drawn to languges because of your beautiful voice and expressive reading style, which makes them come alive?
@stardust949
@stardust949 2 года назад
On the shirts---will the quote be printed onto that large black square?
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
Yes and it should be that the black on the square is the same as the black o. The shirt. I will get someone real to model one
@stardust949
@stardust949 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost hmmm...that's okay on the black shirt. I don't care for how it looks on the other colors. Just sayin' ~ make it the way you want and all.
@stardust949
@stardust949 2 года назад
Have you ever read any classic ghost stories by Margaret Oliphant, like 'The Open Door'?
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
I know the story, but I haven't narrated it yet.
@MSYNGWIE12
@MSYNGWIE12 2 года назад
What is the term "pants-er" as in fly by the seat of your pants, never heard that literary term but I guess it is to wait for inspiration- ? Don't take this wrong but I love curse story- yes, the fairy folk, I loved as a kid and still do, the fairy folk. I still every year read for a few weeks, classic fairytales. Thank you for all that cultural info- YOUR 1ST DEGREE WAS IN IRISH, HOW MANY DOES OUR RENAISSANCE MAN HAVE? How did you end up a psychiatric nurse? Next time I have a breakdown I'll be sure and have it in your place of work! Thanks Tony, really interesting talk. Z.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
I have three degrees. Many have more
@blixten2928
@blixten2928 2 года назад
Thanks for asking all the questions I had!
@sugarfalls1
@sugarfalls1 2 года назад
I like how you're pronouncing gallic because in America we say "gaylic" (not that we spell it that way). I'm going to start pronouncing it the way you are and if I get any questions, I'm gonna tell 'em that's how Big Tony says it! :P That's for the background on the story and author! I hope he reaches out and and hey, I'd be flattered if someone read my story, if I were famous! I hope he thinks of it that way ;)
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 2 года назад
So the Scots call it Gallic but the Irish call it Gaelic (both spelled the same). Different Irish dialects call the language slightly different things.
@theoriginalsuzycat
@theoriginalsuzycat 2 года назад
@@ClassicGhost my grandmother was from Donegal and a native speaker, and from memory she said it something like Gellic, somewhere between the two.
@orestimano9954
@orestimano9954 2 года назад
Does this kill me
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