Sir David Suchet
π€ SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I resumed my downward way and, stepping out upon the level of the railroad and drawing nearer to him, saw that he was a dark, sallow man with a dark beard and rather heavy eyebrows.
His post was in as solitary and dismal a place as ever I saw.
On either side, a dripping wet wall of jagged stone, excluding all view but a strip of sky.
The perspective, one way only, a crooked prolongation of this great dungeon.
the shorter perspective in the other direction, terminating in a gloomy red light and the gloomier entrance to a black tunnel, in whose massive architecture there was a barbarous, depressing and forbidding air.
So little sunlight ever found its way to this spot that it had an earthy, deadly smell.
and so much cold wind rushed through it that it struck chill to me as if I had left the natural world.
Before he stirred, I was near enough to him to have touched him.
Not even then removing his eyes from me, he stepped back one step and lifted his hand.
This was a lonesome post to occupy, I said, and it had riveted my attention when I looked down from up yonder.
A visitor was a rarity, I should suppose, not an unwelcome rarity, I hoped.
In me he merely saw a man who had been shut up within narrow limits all his life, and who, being at last set free, had a newly awakened interest in these great works.
To such purpose I spoke to him, but I am far from sure of the terms I used.
For besides that I am not happy in opening any conversation, there was something in the man that daunted me.
He directed a most curious look towards the red light near the tunnel's mouth and looked all about it, as if something were missing from it, and then looked at me.
That light was part of his charge, was it not?
He answered in a low voice, Well, don't you know it is?
The monstrous thought came into my mind as I perused the fixed eyes and the saturnine face that this was a spirit, not a man.
I have speculated since whether there may have been infection in his mind.
In my turn I stepped back, but in making the action I detected in his eyes some latent fear of me.