I just love the way the older stories read. The descriptive language is marvelous. This was an amazing story experience. Brilliant narration @Ian. Thank you ❤️ 🤗🌟
When I see these 1+ hour videos drop, I know exactly what I'll be listening to as I wind down before bed that night. Looking forward to consuming this tale this evening! Ian, Jennifer - you are THE BEST. I am always recommending HorrorBabble to friends and family. Thank you for every ounce of time and energy you put into these stories.
What a story! This is a great one. I really like it. I love the descriptions and imagery interwoven with history and lore. The glowing/iridescent water keeps sticking in my head. Thanks for introducing me to yet another author who puts out of their modern counterparts to shame. When I heard "I stood there stupidly," I cracked up. As always, well done! Thanks!
According to ISFDB, the author's real name is L. H. Hardingham. Hardingham is relatively rare name apparently. There was a Lawrence H. Hardingham, who was living in Contra Costa, California both in 1930 and 1940 censuses. Possibly same person as Lawrence Hardingham, who was buried in Oakland, California, in 1971 and was recorded as being born in 1897. A L. H. Hardinghan, "wireless engineer" serving aboard a ship, wrote about his experiences in a short article published in a New Zealand newspaper in 1920 and is likely the same as L. H. Hardingham, "radio operator" mentioned in a trade journal in 1930. In latter case he had just moved from a Seattle radio station to a new job in Richmond, California. There's also L. H. Hardingham, who is reported to have arrived from UK to USA in 1923 and being born in 1898.
So Bertram Russell was one of the best mathematicians and philosophers of his generation, and also wrote Lovecraft-eque horror? I had no idea...another great one, Ian!
Apparently not, (different guy, Bertrand Russell,) yet somehow I feel that wouldn't necessarily have surprise me. if it had been the Symbolic Logic bloke. It would seem strangely in character; he was more than a bit like a horror story protagonist himself even if you just look a the old photos of him. If there's something strange In your neighborhood Who you gonna call? Bertrand Russell, If there's something weird And it don't look good Who you gonna call? Bertrand Russell,
@@Eris123451 If you've ever tried to navigate the Principia Mathematica, you have a good sense of all of those incomprehensible eldritch tomes. (I'm saying this with a degree in mathematics.)😆
I've never tackled the Principia , (my math isn't nearly good enough,) but I have had a good look at Symbolic Logic and I agree with you completely. Who you gonna call?
You Fool! Warren cannot come to the phone right now. But if you'll leave your name and number, he'll get back to you as soon as he can. Thanks. *Beeeeep!*
This new, haunting piece of music during the introduction, and the cadence of Russell's words is just exquisite. Also that cheeky "The night was exceptionally dark..." made me grin. Fun read!
@@GreenTeaViewer It sounds to me almost like a fourth wall break both on the author's and Ian's side. It's not really a straight line to my ears, but it is super fun.
@@szabolcsmezei4088 could be...I'm not saying you're wrong to see it that way. But this was pulp writing from 1924, I don't think they did a lot of camp intentionally, and it's not a particularly outrageous line to me.
@@GreenTeaViewer oh it's my subjective listening experience. It may not be an intentionally camp or meta line for Russell, but to me, and in Ian's delivery it comes across as such, and better for it.
Thank you to you all at HorrorBabble for being a fantastic guide to apsolufe gems of the weird genre. I learnt about Cthulu Mythos through you, and i am eternally grateful for this. 😊🎉
Missed the premiere. At least i have some time to listen as i wind down for the evening. A story I'm looking forward to, with a narrator i respect. Good end to the day. Thank you!
Im back at this story once more i fell asleep last time as i was so tired after work but im gonna listen till the end as i do xo cheers and thankyou so much Ian Gordon
Fun fact. Back just after ww2 the military who set the buoy's during the war didnt have the funding or the man power to set up sonar stations all throughout the oceans. So they "let" commercial companies world wide do it for them as they traded from country to country. The military had access to them and the commercial companies got paid to set up the routes and sonar stations. Thats when we picked up the "bloop" look it up if your interested. Thats how i found out that sound could kill someone by liquifying you. An ice berg from the polar caps ground off Almost the size of road island and the people ten miles out went deff for about 10 minutes as the sound wave made its way across the water. They said if they were closer then 1 mile or so they would have been killed
I distinctly remember always dreaming about water. Even in waking moments, feeling a strange cool water like sensation that went through my body. Never could explain how and why. So this story really got me together haha
Man that story got so confused at the end, like he just didn't know what to do with it and wanted to get it over with ASAP. Why focus on the attack from the ocean? Well, because that's where you've described B'Moth. What's he attack with? Well, since he's in the ocean, a bunch of giant fish-like things, I guess. What do they do? Do they just attack ships? Nah, they gotta go on land to threaten people, somehow. Okay, I guess it's just amphibious sea monsters. Alright. The attack comes, and he just decides to not describe them any further. Where do they attack? He describes the Presidio at San Francisco. Somehow, this apparently-intelligent attack targets a naval fort. Why? Who knows. I guess because it's the only way the narrator can describe enough firepower in one place to take the horde on. So what's been the point of all those human cultists? I guess to summon him, because it clearly was not to gain knowledge of what weaknesses and strengths human civilization has. After all, B'Moth didn't seem to know any better what to attack and not to attack. Speaking of which, where'd the cultists go in the attack? Were they all feverish in bed, like Prendergast? What about all those ones at the meetings? Why was no warning sent out the week beforehand to stay on watch for the cultists? Aren't the human B'Moth followers that you've described as being so wide-spread a problem? Why not have them seize some armories? Nope, they seem simply forgotten. What happened to the attack in the rest of the world? Well, I guess it was just turned back everywhere. When it wasn't the ocean, it came from the jungle. No real explanation as to how the African nations turned back the attacks from the jungle in the early 1900s, of, y'know, animals much more capable of launching an attack on land: they just did; and that's not to mention the attacks from the ocean in places where they didn't have such powerful bases... they just did. I guess. (Or is it that they had decided to just launch everything in the world's ocean at San Francisco??) LOOK, THE MOVIE RAN OUT OF BUDGET! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ THE END
Most enjoyable ! Living on the coast as I do.I can say that we are well used to weird, bizarre and unusual creatures turning up on the beaches. Strange things they are, at first appearing to have a covering of deathly pale and unhealthy skin, that so vile looking it makes you feel quite ill to look at it. After a while though, their skin takes on a vibrant red colour and they give out loud animalistic groans and angry sounding cries if anything ( including one of their own species ) should touch them. Eventually though, as if called by some unknown demonic force, they disappear back to whatever evil nether region it is that they call home, leaving a horrible detritus behind them. This happens at least once every year, so we are, as I have said, used to it. Holiday Makers I believe they are called...
I fell asleep listening to this only to be woken up in a feverish sweat to the sound of loud chanting. Turns out a nearby school was having its sports day and all of the children were cheering for their respective houses. 😂😅
OK so my favorite weird/horror story ? The one that sprung immediately and unbidden to mind, (which is an indication of how good and how memorable it is,) is, was The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis" by Clark Ashton Smith. There's a reason why Lovecraft, Ashton-Smith, Howard, Hope-Hodgeson, James, Blackwood, Bierce, et al are all still remembered so well and with so much regard and affection; that's because their stories are so good and were constantly much better than those of other writers of the genre, (pat and current,) nonetheless although the other more obscure writers remain interesting and indeed many of them had their, "moments of genius, as well stories such as The Vaults.... come close to something like perfection. That's what I think anyway.
The beeping (right on my threshold of hearing) @0:53 made me think a truck was backing up outside or that I had some electronics alarming though.. had me pausing playback to listen a couple times.
While on a trip around a local baked goods factory Warren tripped and fell into vat of dough - the foreman yelled out in an anguished voice, ‘Warren is bread!!!!!!!’
This is a great little tale-not a huge fan of the ending wherein the militaries of the world beat back the horde since that feels a little less than traditional Lovecraft (definitely prefer the ‘Dunwich Horror’ kind of victory where it’s a small group of people) but beyond that the description of creeping insanity at the start is delightful!
I wondered the same thing. Turns out no, these are different people from the early 20th century. It is quite difficult to find anything else about Bertram Russell since he was so obscure.
Something Something talons gripping tender flesh. Splashes of sound filter through the crying of the gulls. It's singing, as by a children's choir. I carefully straighten my collar and walk briskly to the railing of the boardwalk. In the distance, I can make out the smoke streaming from a huge ocean liner hanging on the blue horizon.
Didn't Godzilla fight this big moth critter back in the 60's. I was just a little kid but seems like the big moth thing had two little tiny girls singing it's praise throughout the movie.
My brain keeps making B’Moth into B’Mothman when I hear it. The B’Mothman is far scarier than either one and I can’t stop thinking about it. Nothing has helped this idea go away. You now bear this curse. Enjoy.
Amazing there is room for dead Warrens in the ocean between Bmoth, Cthulhu, Big Willy Hope Hodgson's chatty crabs, rats, kraken and naughty mould... actually Big Willy is the main culprit, let's face it :)
So, the protagonist just happens to have a friend who not only knows all about a secret, millennia old, ritual, but also has seen it while on a cruise trip? This can certainly be made into a Hollywood movie now, it’s got a big enough plot hole to quality.
By any chance did you ever do a reading of “the grinning ghoul” it’s a story about a doctor treating a patient who has a reoccurring nightmare about a cemetery and so the doctor decides to bring him to the cemetery to prove its nonsense. I’ve been looking everywhere for the story after listening to it a while back by can’t find it anywhere.
Just to add - the doc finally reached the biblical reference after I commented, but it took *such* a roundabout route. Imagine me as a stereotypical librarian tut-tutting as this guy spends three hours in the 'Forbidden Tomes' room when the KJV is sitting out on a second-floor public lectern.
Artwork by the fabulous Vishnu Prasad: instagram.com/artgeek09
Series playlist: ua-cam.com/play/PLeNNKRLWxwoMIyYSdiYkITs16aHqjHY6b.html
TOP NEWS IN THE INTRO..OUTSTANDING NEWS. THANK YOU IAN..
I learned 3 things from this video:
1. I am a fool
2. Warren is dead
3. Ian Gordon's narration is a blessing for the horror fans
I just love the way the older stories read. The descriptive language is marvelous. This was an amazing story experience. Brilliant narration @Ian. Thank you ❤️ 🤗🌟
When I see these 1+ hour videos drop, I know exactly what I'll be listening to as I wind down before bed that night. Looking forward to consuming this tale this evening! Ian, Jennifer - you are THE BEST. I am always recommending HorrorBabble to friends and family. Thank you for every ounce of time and energy you put into these stories.
What a story! This is a great one. I really like it. I love the descriptions and imagery interwoven with history and lore. The glowing/iridescent water keeps sticking in my head.
Thanks for introducing me to yet another author who puts out of their modern counterparts to shame.
When I heard "I stood there stupidly," I cracked up.
As always, well done!
Thanks!
According to ISFDB, the author's real name is L. H. Hardingham. Hardingham is relatively rare name apparently.
There was a Lawrence H. Hardingham, who was living in Contra Costa, California both in 1930 and 1940 censuses.
Possibly same person as Lawrence Hardingham, who was buried in Oakland, California, in 1971 and was recorded as being born in 1897.
A L. H. Hardinghan, "wireless engineer" serving aboard a ship, wrote about his experiences in a short article published in a New Zealand newspaper in 1920 and is likely the same as L. H. Hardingham, "radio operator" mentioned in a trade journal in 1930. In latter case he had just moved from a Seattle radio station to a new job in Richmond, California.
There's also L. H. Hardingham, who is reported to have arrived from UK to USA in 1923 and being born in 1898.
So Bertram Russell was one of the best mathematicians and philosophers of his generation, and also wrote Lovecraft-eque horror? I had no idea...another great one, Ian!
Apparently not, (different guy, Bertrand Russell,) yet somehow I feel that wouldn't necessarily have surprise me. if it had been the Symbolic Logic bloke.
It would seem strangely in character; he was more than a bit like a horror story protagonist himself even if you just look a the old photos of him.
If there's something strange
In your neighborhood
Who you gonna call?
Bertrand Russell,
If there's something weird
And it don't look good
Who you gonna call?
Bertrand Russell,
@@Eris123451 If you've ever tried to navigate the Principia Mathematica, you have a good sense of all of those incomprehensible eldritch tomes. (I'm saying this with a degree in mathematics.)😆
I've never tackled the Principia , (my math isn't nearly good enough,) but I have had a good look at Symbolic Logic and I agree with you completely.
Who you gonna call?
Two very similar names, easily confused!
@@HorrorBabble
Principia Mathematica and Necronomicon ?
Yo Warren wake up New HorrorBabble just dropped . . . Warren?
You Fool! Warren cannot come to the phone right now. But if you'll leave your name and number, he'll get back to you as soon as he can. Thanks. *Beeeeep!*
@@ryangreen6255Good one 😂
Only clever use of this comment trope I have ever seen, kudos
@@ryangreen6255 Thanks man this was hilarious
Is Warren ok?
This new, haunting piece of music during the introduction, and the cadence of Russell's words is just exquisite. Also that cheeky "The night was exceptionally dark..." made me grin. Fun read!
what's cheeky about "The night was exceptionally dark..."?
@@GreenTeaViewer It sounds to me almost like a fourth wall break both on the author's and Ian's side. It's not really a straight line to my ears, but it is super fun.
@@szabolcsmezei4088 could be...I'm not saying you're wrong to see it that way. But this was pulp writing from 1924, I don't think they did a lot of camp intentionally, and it's not a particularly outrageous line to me.
@@GreenTeaViewer oh it's my subjective listening experience. It may not be an intentionally camp or meta line for Russell, but to me, and in Ian's delivery
it comes across as such, and better for it.
@@szabolcsmezei4088 enjoy your weird fiction in post modern fashion with my blessing, Magyar bro.
I really liked the 80s sounding horror intro music. The story was quite exciting! It was very war of the worlds in a sense.
The manuscript calling the master the “devourer” was a good twist. 😱💚
Thank you to you all at HorrorBabble for being a fantastic guide to apsolufe gems of the weird genre. I learnt about Cthulu Mythos through you, and i am eternally grateful for this. 😊🎉
What a wonderful gift this was. Thank you for sharing this amazing story with us Brother!😊👍
Missed the premiere. At least i have some time to listen as i wind down for the evening. A story I'm looking forward to, with a narrator i respect. Good end to the day. Thank you!
The weird tales are the best .👍
Ian... Thank you SO much for this... This!!!
Such great writing, read with your terrific voice! ✨
Excellent reading as always
Love the narrations over here.
I enjoyed the previous Bertram Russel story i heard.
Glad to hear another one courtesy of HB. 👍🏽
Yessss let’s gooooooo ! Drawing ✍️
Sweet thanks g Man you're the best bro 😊
Cheers, Anthony!
@@HorrorBabble likewise
I can’t believe I found this channel/podcast on the 1st of October. The spirits of Spooky Season have given me such a gift.
Welcome!
BRILLIANT. NICE ONE IAN THANKS 😊 👍
Another epic video as always many thanks Ian!😊
Cool! This is going to be a great series
Enjoyed the story while working; especially the open ending!
Im back at this story once more i fell asleep last time as i was so tired after work but im gonna listen till the end as i do xo cheers and thankyou so much Ian Gordon
Thank you so much Ian
What an amazing story! And also very well read. It made me feel uneasy and unsettled
Great job Ian!
I hope Warren's bad case of deceasement gets better...some fresh air might do him good!
Warren's not dead he's just resting. 😊
We get that pet shop reference.😂
Don’t be a fool
He’s pining for the fjords.
The LONG nap.
Dirt nap.
I just love your voice its very hypnotic and haunting, reminds me of Vincent Price.
This was a great addition to the Cthulu mythos!
Fun fact. Back just after ww2 the military who set the buoy's during the war didnt have the funding or the man power to set up sonar stations all throughout the oceans. So they "let" commercial companies world wide do it for them as they traded from country to country. The military had access to them and the commercial companies got paid to set up the routes and sonar stations. Thats when we picked up the "bloop" look it up if your interested. Thats how i found out that sound could kill someone by liquifying you. An ice berg from the polar caps ground off Almost the size of road island and the people ten miles out went deff for about 10 minutes as the sound wave made its way across the water. They said if they were closer then 1 mile or so they would have been killed
nice - thank you
Thank you ❤
What an interesting Tale. Reminds me of more modern stories about confronting the supernatural with guns and bombs...
Well, it was a victory over the ancient beasts. We should celebrate and thank Ian for this story.
I distinctly remember always dreaming about water. Even in waking moments, feeling a strange cool water like sensation that went through my body. Never could explain how and why. So this story really got me together haha
Been hoping youd read this one 😊
I love these mythos expanding stories and have definitely been jonesing for new ones. Gives me hope we might here an Eihort story at some point!
It isn't beyond the realm of possibility.
@HorrorBabble lol don't tease me like that Ian!
Brilliant as ever Ian 😄
Man that story got so confused at the end, like he just didn't know what to do with it and wanted to get it over with ASAP. Why focus on the attack from the ocean? Well, because that's where you've described B'Moth.
What's he attack with? Well, since he's in the ocean, a bunch of giant fish-like things, I guess. What do they do? Do they just attack ships? Nah, they gotta go on land to threaten people, somehow. Okay, I guess it's just amphibious sea monsters. Alright.
The attack comes, and he just decides to not describe them any further. Where do they attack? He describes the Presidio at San Francisco. Somehow, this apparently-intelligent attack targets a naval fort. Why? Who knows. I guess because it's the only way the narrator can describe enough firepower in one place to take the horde on.
So what's been the point of all those human cultists? I guess to summon him, because it clearly was not to gain knowledge of what weaknesses and strengths human civilization has. After all, B'Moth didn't seem to know any better what to attack and not to attack. Speaking of which, where'd the cultists go in the attack? Were they all feverish in bed, like Prendergast? What about all those ones at the meetings? Why was no warning sent out the week beforehand to stay on watch for the cultists? Aren't the human B'Moth followers that you've described as being so wide-spread a problem? Why not have them seize some armories? Nope, they seem simply forgotten.
What happened to the attack in the rest of the world? Well, I guess it was just turned back everywhere. When it wasn't the ocean, it came from the jungle. No real explanation as to how the African nations turned back the attacks from the jungle in the early 1900s, of, y'know, animals much more capable of launching an attack on land: they just did; and that's not to mention the attacks from the ocean in places where they didn't have such powerful bases... they just did. I guess. (Or is it that they had decided to just launch everything in the world's ocean at San Francisco??)
LOOK, THE MOVIE RAN OUT OF BUDGET!
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
THE END
the opening music is great
Thanks!
Most enjoyable ! Living on the coast as I do.I can say that we are well used to weird, bizarre and unusual creatures turning up on the beaches. Strange things they are, at first appearing to have a covering of deathly pale and unhealthy skin, that so vile looking it makes you feel quite ill to look at it. After a while though, their skin takes on a vibrant red colour and they give out loud animalistic groans and angry sounding cries if anything ( including one of their own species ) should touch them. Eventually though, as if called by some unknown demonic force, they disappear back to whatever evil nether region it is that they call home, leaving a horrible detritus behind them. This happens at least once every year, so we are, as I have said, used to it. Holiday Makers I believe they are called...
I fell asleep listening to this only to be woken up in a feverish sweat to the sound of loud chanting. Turns out a nearby school was having its sports day and all of the children were cheering for their respective houses. 😂😅
Yikes!
From the get-go,I read the title as Vermouth - and kept hearing it at first as such too!😅
The eldritch horror of the wet martini?
@@tamlandipper29
Brrrrrrrrrrr........................
Fabulous tale x
For the algorithm.
this one was fun! should be made into a movie!
And a lot of people are currently freaking out over a baby pygmy hippo - coincidence... or B'Moth?!?
New opening music for spooky times!
OK so my favorite weird/horror story ?
The one that sprung immediately and unbidden to mind, (which is an indication of how good and how memorable it is,) is, was The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis" by Clark Ashton Smith.
There's a reason why Lovecraft, Ashton-Smith, Howard, Hope-Hodgeson, James, Blackwood, Bierce, et al are all still remembered so well and with so much regard and affection; that's because their stories are so good and were constantly much better than those of other writers of the genre, (pat and current,) nonetheless although the other more obscure writers remain interesting and indeed many of them had their, "moments of genius, as well stories such as The Vaults.... come close to something like perfection.
That's what I think anyway.
Yoh-Vombis is a terrifying tale indeed.
Warren is alive & well. I saw him on a Ldn bus to Green Park yesterday.
That was most likly his much less well known twin bother from Scotland, Harley Sporran.
He was eating a bacon roll & I gave him a look of astonished surprise just seeing him like that when all presumed him dead..
Thanks
Thank you very much!
More mythos!!
Loving the intro music too 🤗
The beeping (right on my threshold of hearing) @0:53 made me think a truck was backing up outside or that I had some electronics alarming though.. had me pausing playback to listen a couple times.
That music at the beginning slapped
Playing Dark Souls 3, and what an excellent story to have on in the background
A sacrifice to the Al Gor Ithm 🙌🏻
Old Warren's dead, but Gordon's alive
Well this looks very interesting im going to be up all night with this one xo
‘You dead, Warren is a fool”
🙏🙏
While on a trip around a local baked goods factory Warren tripped and fell into vat of dough - the foreman yelled out in an anguished voice,
‘Warren is bread!!!!!!!’
Me: A fool
Warren: Dead
Hotel: Trivago
Cthulu!!!!
Great story! But I briefly wondered why such an esteemed philosopher dabbled in horror!😲😂👻🐙😉
I think we can rest easy knowing that the two are completely unrelated.
This is a great little tale-not a huge fan of the ending wherein the militaries of the world beat back the horde since that feels a little less than traditional Lovecraft (definitely prefer the ‘Dunwich Horror’ kind of victory where it’s a small group of people) but beyond that the description of creeping insanity at the start is delightful!
EARLY! Just in time for bed! :)
Warren, don't get on that flying saucer, you fool!
Thanks most informative.(UK). When first using it how many times a day would you recommend?😊 Is a scoop close to a heaped tablespoon.Regards Jonathan
Is this written by the philosopher Bertrand Russel?
I wondered the same thing. Turns out no, these are different people from the early 20th century. It is quite difficult to find anything else about Bertram Russell since he was so obscure.
Not quite. 'Bertram'.
Something Something talons gripping tender flesh. Splashes of sound filter through the crying of the gulls. It's singing, as by a children's choir. I carefully straighten my collar and walk briskly to the railing of the boardwalk. In the distance, I can make out the smoke streaming from a huge ocean liner hanging on the blue horizon.
❤❤lovely
Didn't Godzilla fight this big moth critter back in the 60's. I was just a little kid but seems like the big moth thing had two little tiny girls singing it's praise throughout the movie.
It was Mothra and the two princesses, I 🤔
@@lovely1762Thanks have a great day .
My brain keeps making B’Moth into B’Mothman when I hear it. The B’Mothman is far scarier than either one and I can’t stop thinking about it. Nothing has helped this idea go away. You now bear this curse. Enjoy.
I know what I'll be listening to on my cycle to work!
Amazing there is room for dead Warrens in the ocean between Bmoth, Cthulhu, Big Willy Hope Hodgson's chatty crabs, rats, kraken and naughty mould... actually Big Willy is the main culprit, let's face it :)
How many times must Warren die ?!?!
So, the protagonist just happens to have a friend who not only knows all about a secret, millennia old, ritual, but also has seen it while on a cruise trip?
This can certainly be made into a Hollywood movie now, it’s got a big enough plot hole to quality.
I hope you record 'The Lurker At The Threshold' by August Derleth at some point
Derleth's stuff isn't in the public domain, but you never know...
@@HorrorBabble that's a shame. I didn't realize that
By any chance did you ever do a reading of “the grinning ghoul” it’s a story about a doctor treating a patient who has a reoccurring nightmare about a cemetery and so the doctor decides to bring him to the cemetery to prove its nonsense. I’ve been looking everywhere for the story after listening to it a while back by can’t find it anywhere.
It's a great story. Not sure about its copyright status though.
Am I the only one here that was rooting for thwe wildlife in the end?
Man, B'Moth got its shit pushed in. Shouldn't have waited until humans were armed to the teeth
Does anyone remember one involving somthing like a circus and the mai guy "hair" becomes worm like tentacles?
Never underestimate the psychotic hairless apes...and their guns.
This.
You fool! Warren is Ned!
I feel oddly better-informed than the 'doctors' in this story. Is it really so far a leap from 'B'moth' to the biblical 'Behemoth'?
Just to add - the doc finally reached the biblical reference after I commented, but it took *such* a roundabout route. Imagine me as a stereotypical librarian tut-tutting as this guy spends three hours in the 'Forbidden Tomes' room when the KJV is sitting out on a second-floor public lectern.
Warren is undead
Chapter 9: Jaws Jaws Jaws of the jungle... Watch out for that tree.
i bet cthulhu could take him. ; D
Guy just called the secret service
B'moth ate Warren
is this from THE Bertram Russell?
💀
Can someone fill me in on the HorrorBabble lore and explain to me as to whomst this “Warren” is??
...
@@HorrorBabble don't be a cunt blud
Good evening horror babble heads!
I'm misread as S'more of B'moth...
I truly love you narrations but I hate the fact that you pronounce both g's in the word ringing lol
Ukwales❤