"A Night of Horror" by Dick Donovan / A HorrorBabble Production

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  • Опубліковано 17 тра 2024
  • "A Night of Horror" is a short story by the British writer, Dick Donovan. The tale, which first appeared in Donovan’s 1899 collection, TALES OF TERROR, is a classic ghost story, set in a haunted castle in the remote hills of Wales.
    00:00 - Introduction
    00:44 - A Night of Horror
    40:52 - Further Listening
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    Narrated by Ian Gordon for HorrorBabble
    Music and production by Ian & Jennifer Gordon
    Artwork a development of an image by Grace Zhu:
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    This is an ORIGINAL HorrorBabble Production.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 106

  • @RolandWieffering1
    @RolandWieffering1 21 день тому

    Indeed are British Ghoststories the best ghost stories in existence. But I must admit that American ghost/horror stories are a favorite of mine too. From E. A. Poe to The Lovecraft Circle and on, are in my view just as good. And now there is a new generation of very good writers to enjoy.
    Greetings from Holland.

  • @Eris123451
    @Eris123451 Рік тому +36

    “ And for two whole days the sleek, lazy cats of Ulthar would touch no food, but only doze by the fire or in the sun.”

    • @DocZ82
      @DocZ82 Рік тому +3

      Cats, not touch food?? Don't know about that lolz. My little fella trys to get onto my bloody dinner plate!
      Gotta love a cute, cheeky little kitten. I have a perfect little specimen staring at me currently.

    • @melfreemans
      @melfreemans Рік тому +3

      @@DocZ82 same at my house. Spoiled dang siamese trying to sleep on my head.

    • @thefisherking78
      @thefisherking78 Рік тому +2

      We get it already, HorrorBabble fans have read about the cats of Ulthar

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Рік тому

      @@thefisherking78 Well anyway, there's not much left to go so it will soon be over.

    • @DocZ82
      @DocZ82 Рік тому

      @@melfreemans Nice lolz! Gotta love that.

  • @craigbounous2948
    @craigbounous2948 Рік тому +8

    Listened to this with the family while heading to Mirror Lake in the mountains of Utah. Now my 12 year old won't go to sleep.... Thanks Ian. 🙂

  • @maryknapp5360
    @maryknapp5360 Рік тому +6

    A very enjoyable story I loved your read ,and you did it efforetly. Thank you GOOD IGHTGOD BLESS

  • @jimjohhnston9992
    @jimjohhnston9992 Рік тому +10

    What a wonderful old yarn All the descriptions and details really add to the depth and texture of the story You did another first rate job of telling the tale Thank you for it

  • @1971thedoctor
    @1971thedoctor Рік тому +5

    This is a great story, gave me chills on how descriptive it was. Truly could envision the murders.

  • @gemtel54
    @gemtel54 Рік тому +5

    Great story thanks for sharing!!

  • @blynch2117
    @blynch2117 Рік тому +12

    Greetings from the U.S. These british ghost stories are my absolute fave!!! Keep up the good work 👍👍👍😍😍😍

    • @GuukanKitsune
      @GuukanKitsune Рік тому

      They're Victorian/turn of the century ghost stories. Half the authors are American. But the fact this delightful British reader reads them out gives them all such delightful sound.

  • @bold810
    @bold810 Рік тому +3

    That is a seriously cool landscape background.

  • @Nanosuit37
    @Nanosuit37 Рік тому +1

    Excellent. Very good. Thank you Mr. Gordon and Horror Babble.

  • @jdwest34
    @jdwest34 Рік тому +1

    Thanks

  • @anthonybarnwell6909
    @anthonybarnwell6909 Рік тому +2

    Cool thanks man

  • @michaelkottler
    @michaelkottler 11 місяців тому +1

    HorrorBabble's production of "A Night of Horror" (from English author Dick Donovan's 1899 Tales of Terror anthology) is a passionately gratifying, luxuriously well-detailed tale indeed and a welcome addition to the what I'm coming to think of as "The HorrorBabble Literary Classics Library". Excellent again, HB!

  • @XadrumLtd
    @XadrumLtd Рік тому +2

    A great gothic ghost story. Thank you!

  • @donaldmccleary9015
    @donaldmccleary9015 9 місяців тому +1

    Great story and narration.
    I really liked this one!

  • @seanmurphy6480
    @seanmurphy6480 9 місяців тому

    EXCELLENT AS ALWAYS ❤

  • @MrsCaranAmy
    @MrsCaranAmy Рік тому +7

    This was an amazing tale tonight. I really enjoyed it a lot. I loved the mystery , castle, ghost and descriptive setting. Thank you very much. Have a marvelous day 💖 🌟 😊

  • @Whalewraith
    @Whalewraith Місяць тому

    Low key, but very enjoyable. 👍

  • @thomasturner2007
    @thomasturner2007 Рік тому

    This guy has some monster stones on him. Not only did he go bad to his bedroom but got in bed and went back to sleep!
    Got to admit if it was me I'd be driving fast and half way to London

  • @seanjustinkvalsvig1581
    @seanjustinkvalsvig1581 Рік тому +1

    Always
    Love

  • @shirleypearl2166
    @shirleypearl2166 Рік тому +3

    That was defo my cup of earl gray. My fav has always been haunted castle thank u Ian 💜🙏💜🙏

  • @alswann2702
    @alswann2702 Рік тому +2

    Poor Warren

  • @ernestweaver9720
    @ernestweaver9720 Рік тому +2

    Another Excellent read. Yes I believe this story could have truth to it.
    Well done. Extraordinary Narrative .

  • @peapod4962
    @peapod4962 Рік тому +7

    Absolutely Phenomenal!.makes one wonder if there could be more innocent folks bricked up in the walls of other old homes🤔 really a rather unsettling thought....
    Thank you Sir👻

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Рік тому +1

      Apparently it used be quite a, "thing," during the middle ages.

    • @blixten2928
      @blixten2928 Рік тому

      Spoiler alert. But I think we all guessed...

  • @felipesants8936
    @felipesants8936 Рік тому

    GREAT

  • @exoblivione6086
    @exoblivione6086 Рік тому +5

    It’s kinda hunting to think that we’ve heard him talk for hours but never breathe once. Great work!

  • @MichaelLaneMonkeywrench
    @MichaelLaneMonkeywrench Рік тому

    So good!

  • @lordtachanka903
    @lordtachanka903 Рік тому +3

    I don’t know if it’s the algorithm or what, but I feel like I haven’t seen a video from y’all in forever; either way I’m glad that you’ve maintained the impeccable quality that has always been your hallmark, and I can’t wait to listen to the back catalogue of other new readings I’ve missed as well as my old favorites. PS: if you still enjoy it and can find the time please write more original works too, that one about the old man in the wheelchair still sticks with me as one of the few ghost stories that’s stayed in the back of my head to scare me later, and I’m a fully grown man too 😂😂

  • @nw133
    @nw133 Рік тому +2

    I'm loving every new story you post. THANK YOU xx

  • @matbroomfield
    @matbroomfield Рік тому +5

    That was unimaginatively told. Your narration was excellent as always, but the actual story was more like the recounting in a high school writing class, of a classic story, but with none of the heart.

    • @lead.farmer
      @lead.farmer Рік тому +1

      i second that. your reading was great, but i knew the whole story once i heard that the previous owner had said his wife and child moved to london. it was highly predictable.

  • @askwhy2030
    @askwhy2030 Рік тому +2

    Sounds like a classic. Thanks much!!

  • @soulreaver1983
    @soulreaver1983 Рік тому +3

    Outstanding as always many thanks Ian 😎👍

  • @mrg6185
    @mrg6185 Рік тому +5

    Your a really good narrator! I really enjoy your readings..
    I remember in another comment, I simply referred to you as the 'old man' lol..
    I now have seen your name is Ian.
    Great stuff seriously..
    This channel is a lot more classy then most other horror channels out there.
    Keep up the great work guys

  • @dirkbruere
    @dirkbruere Рік тому +17

    Must have been a scary story for the Victorians.
    I would like to go back in time and show them a copy of The Exorcist in the local cinema, then count the dead bodies being carted out

    • @EricDaMAJ
      @EricDaMAJ Рік тому +2

      Modern people have a different experience of the supernatural than Victorians. Modern people see supernatural events on TV, in movies, an on the internet all the time. They don’t even have to be horror fans to see ghosts in TV commercials. This is why even the most hardened skeptic today can still tell you exactly how to kill a vampire despite not believing in them in the least. But they hear of supposedly real supernatural events only in passing. Which is why even believers in the supernatural often dismiss them.
      Victorians by contrast _heard_ about supernatural events all the time. Most were Christians so every church service provided a supernatural tale even if they never listened to fire side ghost stories or read penny dreadfuls. But they rarely ever _saw_ anything supernatural at all. Guys like the protagonist’s hard headed skeptical friend were common enough back then because supernatural sights were so rare. So when Victorians saw something they believed genuinely supernatural or read even an account of one they got quite a fright. Even if that same account today wouldn’t frighten the most sheltered modern teen.

    • @EricDaMAJ
      @EricDaMAJ Рік тому

      @@speurtighearnamacterik8230 Wrong. Supernatural events are real and occur. I've witnessed them IRL. Again, they're rare - I've only witnessed two in my entire 50 + year life. And generally that's true for most believers. Even for believers, someone who claims ghosts, fairies, and such are part of their daily life is suspect. And that's an important consideration in ANY era.
      As for you, you've fallen into a very modern era fallacy. You believe that because people in past times occasionally believed foolish things that they are somehow naturally inferior to your own intellect. Are astrolabes, pyramids, cathedrals, samurai swords, and steam engines the product of stupid people? You are not inherently better than a Victorian just because you inherited (sometimes from discoveries they made!) updated and improved science. I can tell by your tone you're an atheist who probably believes in the Theory of Evolution. Remind me: what era did Charles Darwin live in? You also mistake emotional weakness for mental weakness. It's emotional weakness to bent out of shape by finding out you're related to negroes. A "special snowflake because my feelings" moment from another era. Mental weakness is not being able to think straight and the Victorians were very strong on that front. Or they tried to be and tried harder than modern people. Google the Washington Post article featuring an 1895 grade school test. I know college sophomores who couldn't pass it.
      Finally, if people in the past were our mental inferiors because they believed in supernatural things, how do you explain our superiority from your own world view knowing so many of your modern peers believe in the same supernatural things? Or even sillier things besides the supernatural? Hell, racism is still a thing in the 21st century and in some surprising areas enjoying a revival.

    • @melfreemans
      @melfreemans Рік тому +2

      If you really wanted to terrify them make them watch a few episodes of Keeping Up With the Kardashians....

    • @miskatonicuniversityavclub202
      @miskatonicuniversityavclub202 Рік тому

      The thing would be better

    • @melfreemans
      @melfreemans Рік тому +1

      @@miskatonicuniversityavclub202 Alien!!!! That would be the best!

  • @AcornElectron
    @AcornElectron Рік тому +6

    “At one time he threatened to abandon the expedition if I remained insistent; a threat which proved effective, since he alone held the key to the *thing* ……….
    Keep up the good work Jen & Ian and, as always, stay safe!
    Tiny shoutout to Eris too!

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Рік тому +1

      Raspberry ripple ice Cream.
      400 ml Freshly exsanguinated human blood, (any blood type will do)
      5g pectin
      Add sugar to taste and set aside
      I litre vanilla ice cream
      Remove the ice cream from the freezer and whisk until slightly slushy. Return to a plastic container and swirl the red sauce through to make a ripple effect. Freeze again until firm and ready to serve.

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Рік тому

      @cak01vej
      Well it's from Granny Scruples, Popular recipes from the Home Counties and the West Country (1873) but your point is well made particularly concerning the shelf life and the flavor.
      Apparently 1873 was an unusually bad year for raspberries.

  • @jeffashley5512
    @jeffashley5512 Рік тому +2

    Horrorbabble is on at the arcade!!! Several listeners today. 💀

  • @GodOfPlague
    @GodOfPlague Рік тому +1

    Nice thumbnail art

  • @joz6683
    @joz6683 Рік тому +2

    Great story, all the best from 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @andreasfilis9001
    @andreasfilis9001 Рік тому +2

    What a pitty that today castles are not haunted. They are just cold. A very nice story although, may take us back to times that the castles used to be castles.

  • @rachelmckitterick
    @rachelmckitterick Рік тому +1

    Your videos are seriously amazing!

  • @lifewladye
    @lifewladye Рік тому +2

    🥰🥰🥰 yu can always count on Ian for a good story you've never heard 💜💜💜

  • @bertramgunn
    @bertramgunn Рік тому +1

    Great story Bravo 👏 🙌 👍

  • @pikeb.3993
    @pikeb.3993 Рік тому

    Wonderful story!

  • @anthonybarnwell6909
    @anthonybarnwell6909 Рік тому

    🤗🤗

  • @rneustel388
    @rneustel388 Рік тому

    Thank you for your excellent reading of this very good ghost story!

  • @judithl.morton9178
    @judithl.morton9178 Рік тому

    I would say that this is one of my most favorite stories I realize that this is a new one but it was really really really really good thank you so much I wish I had money to give you but I don't I live on a fixed income but just know that you have my support and prayers it was an excellent story and excellent scary story.

  • @mattropolis99
    @mattropolis99 Рік тому +3

    warren is still dead

  • @mwilson7842
    @mwilson7842 Рік тому +2

    Haunted castles are my favorite
    Would love to explore one someday soon. Any recommendations in Scotland, Ireland, England, Wales?

  • @exileinderby51
    @exileinderby51 Рік тому

    Thanks for reading a real Victorian ghost story, I love the atmosphere they create.

  • @jennyteaganballejo733
    @jennyteaganballejo733 Рік тому

    Hey Mr Gordon can Warren come out to play?

  • @teddydog6229
    @teddydog6229 Рік тому

    "I'm of a romantic nature so I brought my point." Come again ??

  • @Firecracker66
    @Firecracker66 Рік тому

    Bravi

  • @awarningtothecuriouswerewolves

    Thank Cthulhu I'm the one who died -- Could you imagine starting every tale with "You fool, Dick is Dead!" Cheers Warren, who is stopping right here!

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Рік тому +1

      Indeed, It doesn't bear thinking about.

    • @awarningtothecuriouswerewolves
      @awarningtothecuriouswerewolves Рік тому +1

      @@Eris123451 -- Unbearable, if not Unnameable! Warren!

    • @miarencrowsdaughter6434
      @miarencrowsdaughter6434 Рік тому +2

      Wouldn't it be 'You fool, Randy is dead!'? Not that it would be much better, lol.

    • @awarningtothecuriouswerewolves
      @awarningtothecuriouswerewolves Рік тому

      @@miarencrowsdaughter6434 -- lol, it took me a moment to realize you were talking about Carter! Cheers Warren, whose mind, if not in the gutter, is in the Underworld!

  • @angelaverbowski995
    @angelaverbowski995 Рік тому

    #880-✅👍🏻

  • @ScullyPopASMR
    @ScullyPopASMR Рік тому +1

    Babble on, my fellow narrator.

  • @frankmcgovern5445
    @frankmcgovern5445 Рік тому

    OK, minor beef. I’m a professional writer and a fairly imaginative dude. I don’t like the Victorian stereotype that people who believe in supernatural stuff are like sensitive, imaginative, artistic types with romance in their souls, while skeptics are close-minded, hard-headed bores who have no poetry or wonder in their lives.
    That’s nonsense. Being skeptical and rational is in no way some barrier to awe and joy and wonder and artistic participation in the universe. Not to be harsh, but that’s a myth created by credulous people who want to conflate gullibility with artistic sensitivity. Skepticism gives me a richer, fuller appreciation and love of the world around me. It’s a universe I can appreciate for the real mysteries it offers, not antiquated superstitions I have to pretend are a thing as a prerequisite to finding wonder in the universe or whatever.

  • @richardstrachmesserschmiti4979

    Iv noticed the British tell the best stories by far .
    It’s a gift that seems to be prolific and though the categories from horror to sci - fi.
    Unfortunately this greatness is eclipsed by their fall after Cromwell to current political and legal authority.
    Oxymoronic , self annihilation and bringing European nations down as mercenaries, into the abyss of banking and Babylonian Talmud tradition.
    Odd
    Very strange indeed
    Like loving your enemies and hating your own family.
    However, Enfield motorcycles, Vickers cars and Merlin engines also reflected true greatness.
    Then I hear Jack London
    People of the Abyss- and just wonder wtf - about England
    Great stories- by far
    Nobody comes close to - maybe a few American or Russian authors can pull this stuff off, However not as eloquently.

    • @richardstrachmesserschmiti4979
      @richardstrachmesserschmiti4979 Рік тому +1

      No , I don’t think Romans built any of that great architecture
      Not London, not roads , not any of it.
      That’s English/ British and Anglo to the bone.
      Why let an official narrative say Romans built it !?!?
      No way
      Romans killed and extortion and never built anything. Greeks might have built Rome in fact
      I just can’t figure it out
      Mechanical engineering and literature match the architecture
      Then ... oh never mind
      Something is going on

    • @Eris123451
      @Eris123451 Рік тому +3

      Ambrose Bierce ?

    • @richardstrachmesserschmiti4979
      @richardstrachmesserschmiti4979 Рік тому

      @@Eris123451
      The British are good
      I imagine a few others , however, listen and you’ll hear a a distinction.
      They got this down to a science.
      The Alien series where British too
      HG Wells
      Sir Arthur Conan Doyal
      On and on and on
      It’s almost a Write of Passage
      I’ll be listening to something ans think : that’s good
      And it will be British 8 outta 10 times
      I watched
      Lawrence of Arabia last night
      Another one
      In the theater of the mind- excellent
      In real world goals- not so good
      Almost self hating / self destructive and a magnet pulling everyone else down while elevating their enemies.
      Once you see it , it’s difficult to deny
      Definitely infected America
      My guess , it’s a Spell -cast - as in cast system- over the consensus
      I could write a book about it
      But , the spell would make it unacceptable/ and nobody would read it
      Haunted Culture- guilt trip ?
      Germany should have won that dam war.
      Watching this is like watching Netflix and it’s commercials- unwatchable
      My guess is that certain people have vast wealth and it benefits them to destroy their own culture- they feel bad about it and strive to add some literary genius to counteract their ignorance.
      Really
      Like - sell out your neighbors and build an art gallery

  • @christosvoskresye
    @christosvoskresye Рік тому

    Not a bad story, but not a great one, either. It is one thing to pad a story with exposition, but it is quite another to tell the story of the murders before the haunting, then have them depicted during the haunting, AND THEN REMIND THE READERS OF THE STORY AFTERWARDS, AND THEN REPEAT IT. Maybe he was paid by the word, but by treating his reader as an idiot, Donovan diminishes his story.

  • @peterpuleo2904
    @peterpuleo2904 Рік тому

    Elegantly written and narrated, but now after 123 years, the story is rather predictable.

  • @williamfawkes8379
    @williamfawkes8379 Рік тому

    If I were to visit this demense, I would be not up to dick, if you know what I mean.

  • @stevedavenport2975
    @stevedavenport2975 Рік тому

    You need a lot of patience for these Victorian stories

  • @EricDaMAJ
    @EricDaMAJ Рік тому

    Yoshi lay prone in the bushes outside the wall and waited until the sentry passed. At the count of 100 he jumped up and dashed across the moonlit field to the wall. He scrambled up using chinks between the bricks scarcely longer than his finger tips. He slid over the rampart and crouched low listening as he breathed slowly though his black mask. Only the chirp of night insects and a distant dog’s howl. He rolled to the wall’s edge, gripped it, and dropped lightly to the ground, inside the castle at last. Slinking from shadow to shadow, he made his way into the palace complex, freezing occasionally for a passing guard, servant or drunken courtier. There! The entrance to the Daiyamo’s quarters. Yoshi sidled to it and with a deft motion pulled the sliding door open and slipped inside, closing it noiselessly behind him. Creeping down the dim corridor, avoiding nightingale spots spies warned him of, he spotted the floral print of his target’s room. Knowing the door would be alarmed with bells, Yoshi took a bold approach. He eased his ninja-to from its sheath, a centimeter per minute, taking deep, slow, measured breaths, listening carefully. Satisfied, almost as one movement he slashed open the silk partition and burst inside. He fell upon the blanketed figure on the floor and stabbed it expertly through the brain. With a wicked twist he withdrew the blade and whipped the blanket aside to sever the head. A ripe melon with a goofy expression inked on it stared back at him dumbly, juice running from the hole Yoshi made between its eyes. Grimacing beneath his mask, Yoshi leaped up and back into a defensive stance. Behind him he heard, _”You FOOL! Warren is DEAD!”_
    Yoshi didn’t speak English so he had no idea what that meant.