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That's alll bi rds 19 00:00:58,960 --> 00:01:14,520 Speaker 1: dot com. Welcome to Unexplained Extra with Me Richard McClain smith, 20 00:01:15,120 --> 00:01:17,320 Speaker 1: where for the weeks in between episodes, we look at 21 00:01:17,360 --> 00:01:20,400 Speaker 1: stories and ideas that, for one reason or other, didn't 22 00:01:20,440 --> 00:01:23,880 Speaker 1: make it into the previous show. In last week's episode, 23 00:01:24,160 --> 00:01:26,959 Speaker 1: A Man of Wealth and Taste, we traveled with the 24 00:01:27,080 --> 00:01:31,440 Speaker 1: enigmatic Count of Saint Germain, who seemingly strange inability to 25 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:35,120 Speaker 1: age has left many questioning if he'd somehow discovered the 26 00:01:35,160 --> 00:01:39,200 Speaker 1: secret to immortality. It's one of those stories that, on 27 00:01:39,280 --> 00:01:42,600 Speaker 1: first hearing, leads you immediately to suspect it all must 28 00:01:42,640 --> 00:01:47,240 Speaker 1: have been fabricated. And yet Saint German was very definitely 29 00:01:47,280 --> 00:01:50,880 Speaker 1: a real person whose existence was attested to by a 30 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:55,840 Speaker 1: number of esteemed individuals throughout the eighteenth century, such as 31 00:01:55,880 --> 00:01:58,760 Speaker 1: the mystery surrounding the man in the excitement to fill 32 00:01:58,760 --> 00:02:00,880 Speaker 1: in the gaps of who he might have been and 33 00:02:01,040 --> 00:02:04,200 Speaker 1: where he came from. His story has only gotten more 34 00:02:04,240 --> 00:02:07,600 Speaker 1: and more strange. In truth, I could have filled an 35 00:02:07,720 --> 00:02:11,480 Speaker 1: entire episode just listing the many avenues are neglected to 36 00:02:11,520 --> 00:02:15,720 Speaker 1: go down in telling his story. Some, such as infamous 37 00:02:15,760 --> 00:02:20,359 Speaker 1: occultist Madame Blavatsky, champion Sant German as a master adept 38 00:02:20,600 --> 00:02:24,320 Speaker 1: high up in the Rosicrucian order, unparalleled in his knowledge 39 00:02:24,320 --> 00:02:29,480 Speaker 1: of ancient esoteric truths and secret rites. Others, as the 40 00:02:29,480 --> 00:02:34,720 Speaker 1: episode's title implied, believe he was, or rather is, nothing 41 00:02:34,800 --> 00:02:39,880 Speaker 1: less than the devil. The author, Chelsea Quinn Yabos San 42 00:02:39,960 --> 00:02:44,000 Speaker 1: German cycle historical novel series portrays the Count as a 43 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:50,720 Speaker 1: vampire born in the Carpathian Mountains in twenty one nineteen BC. Indeed, 44 00:02:50,720 --> 00:02:55,120 Speaker 1: with his reportedly refined manner, aversion to eating food, and 45 00:02:55,240 --> 00:02:59,280 Speaker 1: his elegant sartorial style, not to mention being a count, 46 00:03:00,040 --> 00:03:04,840 Speaker 1: it isn't hard to see where she got the idea from. Interestingly, however, 47 00:03:05,320 --> 00:03:09,000 Speaker 1: although the notion of vampires existed during San German's time, 48 00:03:09,560 --> 00:03:12,720 Speaker 1: or at least the time he is most prominently associated with, 49 00:03:13,360 --> 00:03:17,160 Speaker 1: the eighteenth century, his characteristics were not ones that would 50 00:03:17,160 --> 00:03:21,320 Speaker 1: have been associated with them. It wouldn't be until one 51 00:03:21,320 --> 00:03:24,800 Speaker 1: turbulent night in the summer of eighteen sixteen that the 52 00:03:24,919 --> 00:03:28,600 Speaker 1: idea of a vampire as a suave and sophisticated operator, 53 00:03:29,240 --> 00:03:32,240 Speaker 1: as opposed to the foul smelling wretch it had previously 54 00:03:32,280 --> 00:03:36,640 Speaker 1: been thought of, would first be conceived. It was a 55 00:03:36,800 --> 00:03:39,960 Speaker 1: night that has since gone down in horror history as 56 00:03:40,000 --> 00:03:43,320 Speaker 1: the night that spawned not one but two of the 57 00:03:43,360 --> 00:03:55,920 Speaker 1: genre's most affecting and enduring creations. On April fifth, eighteen fifteen, 58 00:03:56,680 --> 00:04:02,040 Speaker 1: Sambawa Island in Indonesia was rocked by acious explosion equivalent 59 00:04:02,080 --> 00:04:05,400 Speaker 1: to the detonation of an eight hundred megaton nuclear bomb, 60 00:04:05,960 --> 00:04:08,720 Speaker 1: blowing the top from Mount Tambora in the north of 61 00:04:08,720 --> 00:04:13,360 Speaker 1: the island. It was five days later, just after seven pm, 62 00:04:13,760 --> 00:04:17,279 Speaker 1: that the island's residence watched in horror as three giant 63 00:04:17,360 --> 00:04:21,360 Speaker 1: columns of flame burst from out of the volcano, merging 64 00:04:21,400 --> 00:04:24,839 Speaker 1: together in a hellish fountain of molten rock and fire. 65 00:04:26,360 --> 00:04:29,600 Speaker 1: The column of flame was seen raging unabated for the 66 00:04:29,640 --> 00:04:33,320 Speaker 1: next hour, until the sheer density of matter spewing from 67 00:04:33,320 --> 00:04:38,200 Speaker 1: the mountaintop completely obscured it from view, and then the 68 00:04:38,279 --> 00:04:43,080 Speaker 1: stones started to fall, Giant rocks of pumice, some the 69 00:04:43,160 --> 00:04:46,719 Speaker 1: sides of a fist, raining down across the island as 70 00:04:46,760 --> 00:04:49,919 Speaker 1: local villagers tried in vain to run for their lives. 71 00:04:51,440 --> 00:04:54,039 Speaker 1: This was followed by a violent rush of hot air 72 00:04:54,360 --> 00:04:58,479 Speaker 1: that swept down the mountain, destroying everything and anything in 73 00:04:58,560 --> 00:05:02,960 Speaker 1: its path. By the time, the largest volcanic eruption in 74 00:05:03,080 --> 00:05:07,719 Speaker 1: thirteen hundred years had finally dissipated. Ten billion tons of 75 00:05:07,760 --> 00:05:11,960 Speaker 1: igneous rock had been expelled into the atmosphere, and Mount 76 00:05:11,960 --> 00:05:15,240 Speaker 1: Tambora was more than a kilometer shorter than it had 77 00:05:15,279 --> 00:05:19,279 Speaker 1: been before. Seventy one thousand people are thought to have 78 00:05:19,400 --> 00:05:22,719 Speaker 1: died as a direct result of the eruption, but the 79 00:05:22,760 --> 00:05:28,840 Speaker 1: effect on the world's climate was only just beginning. Within months, 80 00:05:29,400 --> 00:05:32,240 Speaker 1: due to the volume of ash ejected into the atmosphere, 81 00:05:32,680 --> 00:05:35,679 Speaker 1: the planet found itself in the grip of a volcanic winter, 82 00:05:36,360 --> 00:05:40,239 Speaker 1: causing temperatures to plummet and setting in motion a vicious 83 00:05:40,240 --> 00:05:44,719 Speaker 1: cycle of endless storms and flooding. By the following year, 84 00:05:45,160 --> 00:05:48,880 Speaker 1: the world seemed to be experiencing some terrifying affliction of 85 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:53,920 Speaker 1: biblical proportions, with red snow falling in Italy and candles 86 00:05:54,000 --> 00:05:56,560 Speaker 1: having to be lit by midday, such was the lack 87 00:05:56,600 --> 00:06:03,560 Speaker 1: of sunlight. By the afternoon, evens had fallen silent. As 88 00:06:03,600 --> 00:06:06,880 Speaker 1: Lord Byron said of that most ominous year, known as 89 00:06:06,880 --> 00:06:10,520 Speaker 1: the Year without Summer, I had a dream which was 90 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:14,279 Speaker 1: not all a dream. The bright sun was extinguished, and 91 00:06:14,400 --> 00:06:19,040 Speaker 1: the stars did wander darkling in the eternal space, rayless 92 00:06:19,040 --> 00:06:23,520 Speaker 1: and pathless, and the icy earth swung blind and blackening 93 00:06:23,760 --> 00:06:30,279 Speaker 1: in the moonless air. In May eighteen sixteen, Byron twenty 94 00:06:30,279 --> 00:06:33,800 Speaker 1: eight at the time and his personal physician, twenty one 95 00:06:33,880 --> 00:06:37,520 Speaker 1: year old John Polidori, were en route to Lake Geneva 96 00:06:37,680 --> 00:06:41,640 Speaker 1: in Switzerland to rendezvous with another group of fellow travelers 97 00:06:41,680 --> 00:06:53,040 Speaker 1: from England, for whom all was not well. Never was 98 00:06:53,080 --> 00:06:56,880 Speaker 1: a scene more awfully desolate. The trees in these regions 99 00:06:56,920 --> 00:07:00,560 Speaker 1: are incredibly large and stand in scattered clumps over the 100 00:07:00,600 --> 00:07:05,240 Speaker 1: white wilderness. The vast expanse of snow checkered only by 101 00:07:05,279 --> 00:07:08,960 Speaker 1: these gigantic pines and the poles that marked our road. 102 00:07:10,160 --> 00:07:15,440 Speaker 1: No river or rock encircled lawn relieved the eye, so 103 00:07:15,640 --> 00:07:19,400 Speaker 1: wrote then eighteen year old Mary Godwin, as she and 104 00:07:19,480 --> 00:07:23,160 Speaker 1: her boyfriend Percy Shelley, along with their four month old 105 00:07:23,200 --> 00:07:27,000 Speaker 1: baby William, slowly made their way through the mountains to 106 00:07:27,120 --> 00:07:31,400 Speaker 1: Lake Geneva. But it wasn't just the landscape that was 107 00:07:31,440 --> 00:07:35,920 Speaker 1: weighing heavily on her mind. Only the year before, the 108 00:07:36,000 --> 00:07:40,320 Speaker 1: couple's first child, Clara, died a few weeks after her birth, 109 00:07:41,000 --> 00:07:44,920 Speaker 1: having been born two months premature. Not a day went 110 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:50,040 Speaker 1: by that Mary hadn't thought about her Mary's travel sickness, 111 00:07:50,320 --> 00:07:53,680 Speaker 1: and Shelley's struggles with mental illness at the time did 112 00:07:53,760 --> 00:07:57,680 Speaker 1: little to lighten the mood. The trio were joined on 113 00:07:57,720 --> 00:08:01,600 Speaker 1: the trip by Mary's stepsister, eighteen year old Claire Claremont. 114 00:08:02,680 --> 00:08:05,440 Speaker 1: It was in fact Claire's idea to meet with Byron, 115 00:08:05,880 --> 00:08:08,520 Speaker 1: whom she knew was also keen to meet Percy Shelley, 116 00:08:09,080 --> 00:08:12,040 Speaker 1: a new kid on the block whose work he greatly admired. 117 00:08:13,200 --> 00:08:16,080 Speaker 1: For her part, Claire had hoped to use the meeting 118 00:08:16,200 --> 00:08:18,920 Speaker 1: to rekindle the brief romance that she and Byron had 119 00:08:18,960 --> 00:08:23,440 Speaker 1: shared a few weeks previously. Having eventually arrived at the 120 00:08:23,480 --> 00:08:28,000 Speaker 1: Hotel D'angletaere, the group were joined by Byron ten days later, 121 00:08:28,480 --> 00:08:32,560 Speaker 1: announcing himself with characteristic flare by pulling up just after 122 00:08:32,640 --> 00:08:39,400 Speaker 1: midnight in a grand Napoleonic carriage. The following day, with 123 00:08:39,480 --> 00:08:44,040 Speaker 1: the women expected to entertain themselves, Byron and Shelley spent 124 00:08:44,120 --> 00:08:46,800 Speaker 1: the morning getting to know each other as they danced 125 00:08:46,800 --> 00:08:50,520 Speaker 1: and probed around each other's egos. By the end of 126 00:08:50,559 --> 00:08:54,720 Speaker 1: the day, having established themselves as firm friends, the pair 127 00:08:54,800 --> 00:08:58,400 Speaker 1: decided to leave the hotel and rent houses near by instead. 128 00:09:00,120 --> 00:09:04,480 Speaker 1: Despite each renting a property, the incessant rain eventually forced 129 00:09:04,480 --> 00:09:09,040 Speaker 1: them all into Byron's place, a large, grand porticoed house 130 00:09:09,200 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 1: on the edge of the lake known as Villa Diodati. 131 00:09:18,720 --> 00:09:20,760 Speaker 1: You know all that time you spent playing games on 132 00:09:20,800 --> 00:09:22,959 Speaker 1: your phone, There's actually a way you could be playing 133 00:09:23,000 --> 00:09:26,320 Speaker 1: your favorite games and winning money and prizes. Join me 134 00:09:26,480 --> 00:09:30,760 Speaker 1: and unexplained listeners at skills dot com. 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See website for details. 151 00:10:32,440 --> 00:10:35,839 Speaker 1: One night, with the newly acquainted friends forced to find 152 00:10:35,880 --> 00:10:39,040 Speaker 1: ways to pass the time indoors, Huddling round the fire 153 00:10:39,200 --> 00:10:43,640 Speaker 1: as the endless thunderstorms raged outside, Byron suggested they take 154 00:10:43,679 --> 00:10:47,120 Speaker 1: advantage of the atmosphere and read ghost stories to each other. 155 00:10:48,280 --> 00:10:52,400 Speaker 1: After a few evenings reading from Phantasma Gorriana, a collection 156 00:10:52,440 --> 00:10:56,199 Speaker 1: of German horror stories, Byron eventually board of the game 157 00:10:56,520 --> 00:11:00,360 Speaker 1: and suggested they try something else, challenging them all to 158 00:11:00,440 --> 00:11:02,840 Speaker 1: come up with the horror story of their own to share. 159 00:11:04,280 --> 00:11:07,040 Speaker 1: And so it was, under the flicker of candle light, 160 00:11:07,679 --> 00:11:11,280 Speaker 1: with the thunder rolling off the mountains and violent stabs 161 00:11:11,280 --> 00:11:15,640 Speaker 1: of lightning flashing into the room, the group set about 162 00:11:15,840 --> 00:11:22,080 Speaker 1: penning their latest masterpieces. Percy attempted something inspired by his childhood, 163 00:11:22,720 --> 00:11:25,880 Speaker 1: while Byron composed a story written in the form of 164 00:11:25,920 --> 00:11:29,680 Speaker 1: a letter describing a journey taken by the narrator while 165 00:11:29,679 --> 00:11:33,200 Speaker 1: in the company of a strange man named Augustus Darville. 166 00:11:34,360 --> 00:11:37,560 Speaker 1: As the journey progressed, the man appeared to become weaker 167 00:11:37,600 --> 00:11:41,480 Speaker 1: and weaker, until finally he succumbed to whatever illness had 168 00:11:41,520 --> 00:11:45,480 Speaker 1: been ailing him. Byron had intended to have him rise 169 00:11:45,520 --> 00:11:49,080 Speaker 1: again as a vampire, but neglected to finish the story, 170 00:11:50,480 --> 00:11:54,680 Speaker 1: while Polydori tried something involving a skull headed lady that 171 00:11:54,880 --> 00:11:59,280 Speaker 1: was roundly regarded as a miserable effort. As for Mary 172 00:11:59,760 --> 00:12:01,560 Speaker 1: or though she tried her best to come up with 173 00:12:01,640 --> 00:12:04,600 Speaker 1: something that would, as she put it, speak to the 174 00:12:04,679 --> 00:12:08,560 Speaker 1: mysterious fears of our nature and awaken a thrilling horror, 175 00:12:09,600 --> 00:12:19,160 Speaker 1: in the end she had nothing. It was a few 176 00:12:19,240 --> 00:12:22,720 Speaker 1: nights later, as lightning flashed and the wind and rain 177 00:12:22,920 --> 00:12:27,040 Speaker 1: continued to whip unceasingly at the windows, the talk eventually 178 00:12:27,080 --> 00:12:30,640 Speaker 1: turned to the nature of life and the contemporary fascination 179 00:12:30,840 --> 00:12:35,280 Speaker 1: with galvanism, the use of electricity to stimulate muscle movement. 180 00:12:35,760 --> 00:12:38,680 Speaker 1: Although it was mostly the men who talked among themselves 181 00:12:39,760 --> 00:12:44,079 Speaker 1: all the while, Mary sat listening quietly as talk moved 182 00:12:44,120 --> 00:12:46,800 Speaker 1: on to whether it might even be possible to bring 183 00:12:46,800 --> 00:12:50,840 Speaker 1: a dead body back to life through such methods. It 184 00:12:50,920 --> 00:12:55,280 Speaker 1: was for her an especially difficult conversation, bringing back memories 185 00:12:55,280 --> 00:12:58,600 Speaker 1: of the night her baby died, and although dreams she'd 186 00:12:58,600 --> 00:13:02,200 Speaker 1: had since of her and Percy sat by the fire 187 00:13:02,640 --> 00:13:05,600 Speaker 1: with the child in her arms, hoping that if only 188 00:13:05,640 --> 00:13:08,520 Speaker 1: they could warm her up, she might yet come back 189 00:13:08,559 --> 00:13:14,080 Speaker 1: to life. When Mary's head finally hit the pillow that night, 190 00:13:14,600 --> 00:13:17,280 Speaker 1: her face lit up by the lightning as it flashed 191 00:13:17,280 --> 00:13:20,640 Speaker 1: through the curtains. With thoughts of her dead daughter flooding 192 00:13:20,679 --> 00:13:24,720 Speaker 1: her mind, there would be little chance of sleep, and 193 00:13:24,840 --> 00:13:29,040 Speaker 1: so she lay eyes closed, listening to the rain lashing 194 00:13:29,080 --> 00:13:34,560 Speaker 1: down as a vision slowly came to her. A pale 195 00:13:34,600 --> 00:13:38,560 Speaker 1: student of the unhallowed arts, kneeling beside a thing he 196 00:13:38,600 --> 00:13:42,520 Speaker 1: had put together, A hideous phantasm of a dead man 197 00:13:43,000 --> 00:13:47,680 Speaker 1: stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, 198 00:13:48,440 --> 00:13:52,600 Speaker 1: slowly it began to show signs of life and stir 199 00:13:52,760 --> 00:13:58,120 Speaker 1: with an uneasy, half vital motion. Rising from her bed, 200 00:13:58,679 --> 00:14:03,160 Speaker 1: Mary grabbed a pencil and began to write. It was 201 00:14:03,200 --> 00:14:06,040 Speaker 1: on a dreary night of November that I beheld my 202 00:14:06,120 --> 00:14:10,320 Speaker 1: man completed, and with an anxiety that almost amounted to agony, 203 00:14:10,840 --> 00:14:14,440 Speaker 1: I collected instruments of life about me, and endeavored to 204 00:14:14,480 --> 00:14:17,800 Speaker 1: infuse a spark of being into the lifeless thing that 205 00:14:17,960 --> 00:14:21,960 Speaker 1: lay at my feet. The first words of the as 206 00:14:22,040 --> 00:14:31,160 Speaker 1: yet unnamed Victor Frankenstein. Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus, was 207 00:14:31,240 --> 00:14:35,320 Speaker 1: first published on January the first, eighteen eighteen, when Mary 208 00:14:35,480 --> 00:14:40,280 Speaker 1: was twenty years old. The book, however, was published anonymously 209 00:14:40,680 --> 00:14:44,240 Speaker 1: with a forward written by Mary's then husband to Percy Shelley, 210 00:14:44,920 --> 00:14:47,920 Speaker 1: leading many to suspect that Percy was in fact the 211 00:14:47,960 --> 00:14:52,560 Speaker 1: true author. Such an arrangement was common among publishers of 212 00:14:52,560 --> 00:14:55,760 Speaker 1: the time, fearful of the public's response to authors who 213 00:14:55,840 --> 00:14:59,560 Speaker 1: were women. When Mary Shelley as she was then known, 214 00:15:00,120 --> 00:15:03,000 Speaker 1: eventually had her name added to the book, it had 215 00:15:03,040 --> 00:15:06,640 Speaker 1: become so popular that it no longer mattered, despite a 216 00:15:06,760 --> 00:15:09,840 Speaker 1: number of critics doing their best to disparage what they 217 00:15:09,880 --> 00:15:15,400 Speaker 1: now suddenly perceived as its many feminine infused flaws. To day, 218 00:15:15,720 --> 00:15:18,680 Speaker 1: the book is widely regarded as a landmark in not 219 00:15:18,800 --> 00:15:22,920 Speaker 1: only Gothic literature, but science fiction too, and is among 220 00:15:23,000 --> 00:15:33,360 Speaker 1: the most influential novels of all time. Though many have 221 00:15:33,440 --> 00:15:36,920 Speaker 1: pointed to the death of Mary's child and indeed those 222 00:15:37,000 --> 00:15:41,760 Speaker 1: darkling atmospheric nights spent at Lake Geneva as key inspirations 223 00:15:41,760 --> 00:15:45,560 Speaker 1: for the novel, The tale of a creature so callously 224 00:15:45,600 --> 00:15:50,160 Speaker 1: created and then abandoned also shares parallels with Mary Shelley's 225 00:15:50,160 --> 00:15:54,160 Speaker 1: own complicated childhood, with some speculating that the death of 226 00:15:54,200 --> 00:15:58,840 Speaker 1: Mary's mother in childbirth, celebrated writer and women's rights activist 227 00:15:58,960 --> 00:16:03,840 Speaker 1: Mary Wolston Craft had inevitably left Mary angrily pondering her 228 00:16:03,880 --> 00:16:07,440 Speaker 1: own sense of abandonment. Though Mary would go on to 229 00:16:07,560 --> 00:16:10,200 Speaker 1: establish herself as one of the most revered writers of 230 00:16:10,240 --> 00:16:15,640 Speaker 1: all time, life did not get any easier. A third child, Clara, 231 00:16:15,880 --> 00:16:19,680 Speaker 1: born in eighteen seventeen, died the following year from dysentery, 232 00:16:20,600 --> 00:16:25,440 Speaker 1: then in eighteen nineteen. The next year, Mary and Percy's son, William, 233 00:16:25,560 --> 00:16:30,840 Speaker 1: also died from malaria. Though the couple's fourth child, also 234 00:16:30,960 --> 00:16:35,280 Speaker 1: named Percy, would go on to survive childhood. Only three 235 00:16:35,400 --> 00:16:39,560 Speaker 1: years later, his father and Mary's husband, an undoubted genius 236 00:16:39,560 --> 00:16:42,800 Speaker 1: in his own right, drowned in the Gulf of Spezzia 237 00:16:43,320 --> 00:16:46,800 Speaker 1: off the coast of Italy. He was twenty nine years old. 238 00:16:48,520 --> 00:16:51,440 Speaker 1: As for Lord Byron, he died two years later in 239 00:16:51,560 --> 00:16:55,400 Speaker 1: Greece at the age of thirty six of suspected sepsis, 240 00:16:55,440 --> 00:16:59,000 Speaker 1: while helping to fight for Greek independence against the Ottoman Empire. 241 00:17:00,040 --> 00:17:03,320 Speaker 1: In fact, within only eight years of that year, without 242 00:17:03,360 --> 00:17:06,200 Speaker 1: summer or three of the men that shared the trip 243 00:17:06,240 --> 00:17:11,080 Speaker 1: with Mary and her steps as Declare were dead. In 244 00:17:11,160 --> 00:17:15,639 Speaker 1: eighteen nineteen. Having tidied up the scraps of Byron's vampire story, 245 00:17:16,400 --> 00:17:19,800 Speaker 1: his physician John Polydori, decided to take a stab at 246 00:17:19,840 --> 00:17:24,680 Speaker 1: reworking it, retitling it the Vampire and reimagining its lead 247 00:17:24,720 --> 00:17:28,480 Speaker 1: as the suave and the charismatic Lord Ruthven, a thinly 248 00:17:28,560 --> 00:17:33,480 Speaker 1: veiled impression of Lord Byron himself. Polydori's creation would become 249 00:17:33,520 --> 00:17:37,359 Speaker 1: the template for almost all vampire stories that followed, most 250 00:17:37,400 --> 00:17:43,400 Speaker 1: famously Browmstoker's Dracula. Unlike Mary, however, he would not live 251 00:17:43,440 --> 00:17:46,480 Speaker 1: to enjoy the success of his creation, dying by a 252 00:17:46,520 --> 00:17:52,880 Speaker 1: suspected suicide in eighteen twenty one years later, Mary returned 253 00:17:52,880 --> 00:17:56,480 Speaker 1: to the Villa Diodati on the edge of Late Geneva, 254 00:17:56,800 --> 00:17:59,520 Speaker 1: saying of her return there that she felt like a 255 00:17:59,560 --> 00:18:03,639 Speaker 1: companion of the dead, for all were gone, even my 256 00:18:03,760 --> 00:18:08,160 Speaker 1: young child. Storm and blight and death had passed over 257 00:18:08,720 --> 00:18:14,160 Speaker 1: and destroyed all. But something had lived, something that she'd 258 00:18:14,160 --> 00:18:18,199 Speaker 1: brought to life one dark and stormy night many years before, 259 00:18:18,920 --> 00:18:23,879 Speaker 1: that would eventually outlive them all. A wondrous story that 260 00:18:24,080 --> 00:18:29,120 Speaker 1: remains today as thrilling moving and influential as the day 261 00:18:29,119 --> 00:18:34,679 Speaker 1: it was born. Please note Unexplained will be taking a 262 00:18:34,720 --> 00:18:39,639 Speaker 1: short break next week, but will return on Friday, January first, 263 00:18:39,640 --> 00:18:44,199 Speaker 1: twenty twenty one. If you enjoy Unexplained and would like 264 00:18:44,240 --> 00:18:47,160 Speaker 1: to help support us, you can now do so via Patreon. 265 00:18:47,720 --> 00:18:50,679 Speaker 1: To receive access to add three episodes, just go to 266 00:18:50,760 --> 00:18:54,320 Speaker 1: patron dot com, forward slash Unexplained pod to sign up, 267 00:18:54,960 --> 00:18:57,000 Speaker 1: or if you'd like to make a one time donation, 268 00:18:57,359 --> 00:19:01,240 Speaker 1: you can go to Unexplained podcast dot com forward Slash Support. 269 00:19:01,800 --> 00:19:06,640 Speaker 1: All donations, no matter how large or small, are greatly appreciated. Unexplained, 270 00:19:06,640 --> 00:19:09,960 Speaker 1: the book and audiobook, featuring ten stories that have never 271 00:19:10,000 --> 00:19:12,760 Speaker 1: before been covered on the show, is now available to 272 00:19:12,840 --> 00:19:16,760 Speaker 1: buy worldwide. You can purchase through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, 273 00:19:16,880 --> 00:19:22,080 Speaker 1: and Waterstones, among other bookstores. All elements of Unexplained, including 274 00:19:22,080 --> 00:19:25,200 Speaker 1: the show's music, are produced by me Richard McClain smith. 275 00:19:25,640 --> 00:19:28,760 Speaker 1: Please subscribe and rate the show wherever you listen to podcasts, 276 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:31,200 Speaker 1: and feel free to get in touch with any thoughts 277 00:19:31,280 --> 00:19:33,879 Speaker 1: or ideas regarding the stories you've heard on the show. 278 00:19:34,440 --> 00:19:36,560 Speaker 1: Perhaps you have an explanation of your own you'd like 279 00:19:36,640 --> 00:19:40,000 Speaker 1: to share, you can reach us online at Unexplained podcast 280 00:19:40,080 --> 00:19:44,920 Speaker 1: dot com, or Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at 281 00:19:44,920 --> 00:19:48,760 Speaker 1: Facebook dot com. Forward Slash Unexplained Podcast