Exhibit IV: The Tylwyth Teg’s Sentinel

Exhibit IV: The Tylwyth Teg’s Sentinel

Ah… still here, are you? I suspected you might linger. Exhibit IV has a way of settling in the bones. Step closer again, traveller — not too quickly. Some stories prefer patience.

You’ve already seen the sentinel. That worn Welsh stone, its hollow gaze fixed somewhere just beyond us. Many dismiss it as folklore made solid. A curiosity. A rustic superstition dragged into the light. But I have learned — painfully, over many years — that the oldest objects rarely survive by accident.

You see, boundaries are delicate things. Not just walls of stone or lines on maps, but agreements. Understandings. Quiet acknowledgements between worlds that were never meant to overlap too freely. The people who placed that head in the wall understood this instinctively. They didn’t worship it. They respected it.

Rhys did not.

Ambition makes a convincing argument, doesn’t it? More land. Straighter walls. Progress. Sensible improvements. He thought himself modern. Practical. Above the whisperings of old wives and shepherds. And for a brief moment, it must have felt like victory — the wall extended, the pasture widened, the old guardian discarded like rubble.

But land remembers. And sometimes… something else remembers too.

The souring milk, the uneasy livestock, the strange music under the floor — none of it violent at first. Just warnings. Gentle taps at the edge of perception. A chance, perhaps, to reconsider. But arrogance has a way of dulling the senses. By the time the lights danced across the field, by the time his son vanished into that impossible silence, the conversation was already over.

When Rhys dragged the stone back, broken by grief, he wasn’t restoring masonry. He was repairing a promise he hadn’t realised he’d broken. And the return of the boy — alive, yet altered — well… that feels less like mercy than a reminder. A mark left behind so the lesson would not fade.

Look again at that hollow eye. Go on. You may notice it does not appear entirely empty. Just depthless. As though it looks not at you, but through you, measuring where you stand. On which side of the boundary.

That is the purpose of a sentinel, after all. Not to attack. Simply to watch. To remember. To ensure the line, once drawn, is not forgotten again.

So we leave it where it rests. No more interference. No more clever improvements. Some artefacts serve best as warnings, not possessions.

Step back now, traveller. Carefully. And when you return to your own familiar paths, tread them with just a little more respect than before. Not everything unseen is imaginary… and not every boundary is meant to be crossed.

My duty, once again, is done. The story rests with you now. Carry it lightly — but not carelessly. This museum, and its Keeper, will remain… should curiosity bring you back.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(129)

Exhibit XIII: The Great Thunderstorm of Widecombe

Exhibit XIII: The Great Thunderstorm of Widecombe

The museum doors open once more, traveller, and tonight I invite you into a room where the sky itself became the killer. On an ordinary Sunday afternoon in 1638, the people of Widecombe-in-the-Moor ga...

8 Jul 11min

S5 E13 The Paraguayan War — The Nation That Bled to Death

S5 E13 The Paraguayan War — The Nation That Bled to Death

The Paraguayan War | When an Entire Nation Was Destroyed The Paraguayan War (1864–1870) remains one of the deadliest and most devastating conflicts in modern history, yet few people have ever heard of...

1 Jul 44min

Exhibit XII: The Skin That Walked Away

Exhibit XII: The Skin That Walked Away

The museum doors open once more, traveller, and tonight I invite you into a room filled with old warnings and older fears. Long before newspapers, police reports, and history books, stories were passe...

24 Jun 8min

S5 E12 Albert Fish — The Boogeyman

S5 E12 Albert Fish — The Boogeyman

Albert Fish — The Boogeyman How does a human being become a monster? In this disturbing episode of The Dark History Podcast, Rob explores the life and crimes of Albert Fish, one of the most infamous s...

17 Jun 32min

Exhibit XI: The Little People

Exhibit XI: The Little People

The museum doors creak open once more, traveller, and tonight I invite you into one of the strangest rooms in my collection. High above the city of Edinburgh, hidden within the slopes of Arthur's Seat...

10 Jun 13min

S5 E11: Gloomy Sunday — The Hungarian Suicide Song

S5 E11: Gloomy Sunday — The Hungarian Suicide Song

Gloomy Sunday — The Hungarian Suicide Song Could a song really drive people to take their own lives? In 1933, a struggling Hungarian pianist named Rezső Seress composed a melancholy melody that would ...

3 Jun 23min

Exhibit X: The Servants' Annihilation

Exhibit X: The Servants' Annihilation

Step quietly, traveller, and enter one of the darkest chambers of the Dark's Travelling Emporium. Behind the glass of Exhibit X lies a single brass earring, recovered from the yard of Eula Phillips in...

27 Mai 11min

S5 E10: Mysteries of the Sumerians — The Cradle of Civilization

S5 E10: Mysteries of the Sumerians — The Cradle of Civilization

Mysteries of the Sumerians — The Cradle of Civilization Who were the Sumerians, and how did a people living more than 5,000 years ago create the foundations of the modern world? In this fascinating ep...

20 Mai 40min

Populært innen Historie

rss-dette-ma-aldri-skje-igjen
henrettelsespodden
med-egne-oyne
historier-som-endret-norge
rss-benadet
aftenposten-historie
historier-som-endret-verden
rss-nadelose-nordmenn-gestapo
sektledere
historiepodden
rss-frontkjemperne
vare-historier
liberal-halvtime
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
historiepodden-ww2
sannhet-eller-konspirasjon
diktatorpodden
virkelig-grusomt
undersattene
rss-politisk-preik