The Station Master's Cottage, Uralla, New South Wales

Kitsmumma

The Station Master's Cottage, Uralla, New South Wales

The following piece written by Gregoryno6

The Station Master’s Cottage by Gregoryno6

It was abandoned long before the railway line was closed. Today it is principally the travellers who see it: a series of glimpses between the trees, as the highway veers to bypass the town. First impressions are often pleasant. In memory, a diseased greyness seeps in. A sense of blight comes down in a heavy curtain and no subsequent viewing, however sunlit, will dispel that.
The town has grown northward, away from the station master’s cottage. Something terrible happened there but the facts are dimly remembered. Few recall the event that overshadows the annual fair. It was no day for festivities in 1952: the station master, his wife and two grown daughters were discovered inside the cottage. The women were found unclothed, in obscene poses; the station master locked himself in his study before cutting his throat with a razor. The town’s policeman let it be understood that no suicide note had been found. In fact, when he broke down the door, he found the station master’s journal beside his chair.
The diary was a catalogue of perversions. From his first days in the town, the station master had recorded his vile amusements. The sergeant was not a religious man. But the book was a burden he could not bear alone; he took it to the station master’s former clergyman, who declared it the work of the devil. They agreed to cast it from this world. Page by page they burnt it in the pastor’s fireplace.
The sergeant was transferred to another town. The pastor was left to grapple with his questions. The station master had been a devout man, regular in his attendance. How could God have permitted such mockery? If ever a man belonged in Hell it was the station master. How could the Lord turn aside and stay His hand when filth such as that sang His praises? Doubts and rough whiskey left the pastor a hollow man. He became obsessed with the cottage – a jeering tribute to depravity. The pastor hoped to see it burn. But he lacked the courage to light the flame.
Faint hearts abet the enemy, and sometimes we betray our finer instincts. We offer aid or consolation and hurry on, disowning the gesture. Evil derides such compulsions. The black hymns of the pit reward pride and passion, and endurance. The darkness is ever rising against the tenuous light. Kindness is fleeting. Evil builds.
And evil waits. There is a boy, impatient to be a man, who looks restlessly for a future beyond the town. Lately he has taken to wandering while his parents sleep; a week ago, distracted by his conflicts, he found himself at the cottage. From the window of the study a bespectacled old man stared down at him. His face was locked in a silent scream – the boy fled. But youth won out over caution and he returned. Last night the old man walked into the boy’s dreams. The boy knows now that this old man is not a man at all… furthermore, he is not screaming.
He is laughing.

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The Station Master's Cottage, Uralla, New South Wales belongs to the following groups:

Architectural Photography, Australian Contemporary Photography, Layered with Texture, New South Wales Photography, Practising the Dark Arts, Rural NSW and The Grunge Art Gallery Available for sale as

Greeting Cards, Matted Prints, Laminated Prints, Mounted Prints, Canvas Prints, Framed Prints and Posters

The Station Master's Cottage, Uralla, New South Wales by Kitsmumma
  • purelydecorative

    purelydecorative

    Just feels like a 19th century oil painting- lovely.

  • Jessica  Tremp

    Jessica Tremp

    beautiful treatment

  • WENDY BANDURSKI-MILLER

    WENDY BANDURSK...

    well done! this is very atmospheric…....

  • deirdre butler derby

    deirdre butler...

    This is gorgeous! What a mood and time you’ve created!

  • Glenn Alderson

    Glenn Alderson

    Love the treatment of this work, looks like a classic.

  • Nicole Goggins

    Nicole Goggins

    love how you have processed this – great work!

  • ~ Ademac

    ~ Ademac

    Great concept and result…..............well done.

  • Anthony Mancuso

    Anthony Mancuso

    excellent work Sylvia, very nice image

  • Dee Boylan

    Dee Boylan

    interesting angle…..

  • Sensiworld

    Sensiworld

    Beautiful !
    Love thet treatment.

  • Lee Burgess

    Lee Burgess

    What a grand house… great composition and lovely use of texture!

  • Phil Thomson IPA

    Phil Thomson IPA

    Beautiful treatment has made this a timeless image, Sylvia….Well Done !!

  • Rhana Griffin

    Rhana GriffinRedbubbley Schweppervescence

    It’s BACK! I went to comment on this before and it was gone! I had a really spectacular comment all set up for you too… now I forget what I was going to say =( It’s been a long day… forgive me?

  • waitin' for rain

    waitin' for rain

    love these colors and textures !

  • Dorit

    Dorit

    Wonderful image. Love the framing and the way you applied the texture. Brilliant!

  • Michael Kienhuis

    Michael Kienhuis

    Lovely M:>

  • Bev Woodman

    Bev Woodman

    Beautiful old cottage and you have presented this one beautifully. Shame it hides such a dark past, despite that I love the history you have provided with this one and loved reading it.

  • Joyce Dickens, IPA

    Joyce Dickens,...

    OOOOOOOOOOOOOOH! I love it..gave me goosbeumps as I was reading, but I still love it as the hair on the back of my neck crawls…........perfect story for your incredible image!!!

  • adgray

    adgray

    Oh the stories these gorgeous old places could tell!
    Fantastic capture! & elegant fitting treatment for it too!
    Bravo! ☼

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