The Vampyre by John Polidori

  Рет қаралды 22,348

Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker

Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker

Ай бұрын

John William Polidori, an Italian-English physician and writer born in 1795, was a notable figure associated with the Romantic movement. As the eldest son of Gaetano Polidori, an Italian scholar, and Anna Maria Pierce, a governess, Polidori was exposed to intellectual pursuits from a young age. He received his medical degree from the University of Edinburgh in 1815 at the remarkably young age of 19. Polidori's literary talents and connections led him to serve as personal physician to the renowned poet Lord Byron, embarking on a European tour with him in 1816.
During their travels, Polidori found himself in the company of other literary luminaries, including Mary Shelley and Percy Bysshe Shelley. It was during this time, at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva, that the idea for "The Vampyre" took shape. Inspired by a fragment of a story by Lord Byron, Polidori penned his own tale, which would go on to become the first vampire story in English literature. Originally published in April 1819 in the New Monthly Magazine, "The Vampyre" was falsely attributed to Lord Byron, likely to capitalize on his fame. This misattribution persisted for years, causing confusion over the true authorship of the story.
Polidori's "The Vampyre" introduced several key features of the vampire archetype that would influence vampire literature for generations to come. Notably, his portrayal of Lord Ruthven, the titular vampyre, departed from the traditional folkloric depictions of vampires as grotesque creatures. Instead, Polidori's vampyre was an aristocratic figure, seductive and charming, preying on high society. Lord Ruthven's aristocratic allure, coupled with his predatory nature and mysterious aura, set the template for the modern vampire, ushering in a new era of vampire fiction characterized by sophistication and allure.
Exclusive Videos For You!
"Hey everyone! Are you a fan of The Classic Ghost Stories Podcast and looking for a way to access exclusive content and perks? Well, you're in luck! By signing up as a member on our KZfaq channel, you'll have access to members-only perks such as exclusive videos, behind-the-scenes footage, and much more. Don't miss out on this opportunity to take your ghost story experience to the next level. Sign up as a member today by following this link:
/ @classicghost
And thank you to all our members who already have!"
Music by The Heartwood Institute
[bit.ly/somecomeback]
/ @classicghost

Пікірлер: 141
@brograb898
@brograb898 Ай бұрын
I’ve always been curious about this novella but never read it. Now it’s read for me-thanks!
@BrookeReadsBooks333
@BrookeReadsBooks333 Ай бұрын
Yes!!! Last week I was trying to find a KZfaq audiobook on this but didn’t like the narrator at all. I was thinking at the time “I wish Tony comes out with this” Happy Friday to Meeeeee!! Thank you so much 🤍🖤🧛🏻‍♂️
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
That's very weird. You must have magicked me into doing it.
@yesterdayitrained
@yesterdayitrained Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost🤣
@Mysha-1789
@Mysha-1789 Ай бұрын
Hello, Tony. Thank you for including this novella in your outstanding collection. Even though I’m a retired English professor, I was never given a chance to read the piece during all my years of undergraduate and postgraduate work. This was before the days of easy Internet access, of course. One thing I’d like to clarify. We often discussed John Polidori’s novella, “the year without a summer,” and the assemblage at Villa Diodati during 1816’s cold and dreary days. The unseasonable weather was indeed due to a volcanic eruption. However, that eruption was not in Iceland. Instead, the eruption was that of Mount Tambora, in what was then known as the Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia). The eruption began on 5 April 1815 and lasted for about 10 days. Mount Tambora’s blast remains the most severe volcanic eruption in history. So great was the volume of ash in Earth’s atmosphere that the Northern Hemisphere was radically affected in 1816. There have been subsequent eruptions, two in the 19th Century, and several more recent incidents of tremors. Mount Tambora can be visited today, although it’s still active. I, for one, am content to view it online! Thanks again for including “The Vampyre” amongst all of your splendid readings. Sincerely, Alix Long, Ph.D., Memphis, Tennessee, USA
@franken-pattern
@franken-pattern Ай бұрын
Well, this is a delicious way to kick off the weekend! Thank you, Mr. Walker! 🎉
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@donaldmccleary9015
@donaldmccleary9015 Ай бұрын
This is an amazing story! Whoa! One of the first, and best, storues on the subject. What a wonderful and chilling story. Fantastic narration, Tony! They needed the two main characters from "Four Wooden Stakes" in the scene! Your picture for this story is amazing, and I think the look of it fits the time period well.
@yesterdayitrained
@yesterdayitrained Ай бұрын
Yes, agree! He somehow picks the most fitting images for the stories. They add a visual representation of the subject, the mood, the place- which always complement the stories perfectly.
@snowysnowyriver
@snowysnowyriver Ай бұрын
Always the best from Tony Walker! Very few narrators can manage Victorian prose and imbue it with the voice of the author. Mr Walker is a master at this.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Very kind
@ropeburnsrussell
@ropeburnsrussell Ай бұрын
I quite liked the grim ending. Good doesn't always triumph.
@nicoleniko5505
@nicoleniko5505 Ай бұрын
Spoiler alert would've been nice prior to your comment! 🫥
@LucicPower
@LucicPower Ай бұрын
James Mason played a great Polidori
@debra333
@debra333 Ай бұрын
I do appreciate all the vampire stories. Thank you for your amazing talent shared, my dear Tony. ❤
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
More to come i think too
@applthorn
@applthorn Ай бұрын
Thank you, I love it! I'm very familiar with this story. I never noticed before that it must have been written to be read aloud. Terrific!
@lyndabrennan4560
@lyndabrennan4560 Ай бұрын
What a great story, thank you Tony, much appreciated 👏👏
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 Ай бұрын
Just as captivating narration, this time around. Listening with new ears, enjoying the language structure, adoring its complicated sentences, flowery adjectives and using ten words of boringly merely one. Also your informative "ramblings". Thank you so much for all of your hard work for us!!!!
@Story-Voracious66
@Story-Voracious66 Ай бұрын
Hi Tony, Absolutely loving the vampire thread, but having to stop and start a bit lately. ( very frustrating! ). Carmilla was enchanting and this deserves more attention than I can give it right now. Looking forward to work, so I can put headphones on again without censure. Thank you for your wonderful work. 🦇
@alexiswilliamsinc
@alexiswilliamsinc Ай бұрын
Why is the full theme song at the end such a bop? 😅❤ Aubrey was such a tragic character - I was delightfully devastated at the hovel scene. If he hadn’t lost track of time, it feels like his innocent friend wouldn’t have been out apparently following him after the troubling conversation with her parents..? But if it were me, I’d have lost track of time, too, because that’s who I am as a person. It’s what I do. I’d learned about penny dreadfuls but never had them connected so nicely to the newly literate working class of the time. Fascinating context of how economics change form and access of/to literature. I hated the end but such that I will remember it bitterly, the way the author intended. Had there been a “good” ending, I might be happier but it also wouldn’t have been so neat of a total loss, perfectly wrapped with bow on top. That said, I so hoped Aubrey was gonna stab Ruffianstiltskin with his ceremonial dagger after going after Aubrey’s sis. 😡 The audacity! 🤔 …or… the aubracity! Ok I’ll leave.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
That was funny. I liked the end :)
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
The end of your comment I mean. Aubracity!
@yesterdayitrained
@yesterdayitrained Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhostYes! 🤣🤣🤣
@djkelleher3557
@djkelleher3557 Ай бұрын
Can't wait to listen this evening 😍 🇮🇪🍀
@ProleCenter
@ProleCenter Ай бұрын
Yn wir!
@AndreaDingbatt
@AndreaDingbatt Ай бұрын
From Start to Finish this is a 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟 Narration!! I was just going to listen as I was falling asleep.... But,, this has me on tenterhooks!! So,,, I'm going to be intently listening 💯%,!! Thank you Tony, for keeping us company,,,,, as insomnia grips me because I'm moving house!! Namasté 🙏🕊️💞 Andréa and Jasper. . ..XxX...
@allysonlewis1576
@allysonlewis1576 Ай бұрын
I love vampire stories can’t get enough of them. Thanks Tony
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
I’m going to do a bit of Varney soon
@lunarbloom3587
@lunarbloom3587 Ай бұрын
Thanks Tony always enjoy your narration and chat 👍🏻
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Thank you very much :)
@meganmcnelis7136
@meganmcnelis7136 Ай бұрын
I love his descriptive language in this story! It was translatable to modern vocabulary and conveyed the story with great detail. Gothic is one of my favorite Ken Russell films, about the night that inspired the Vampyre and Frankenstein.
@yesterdayitrained
@yesterdayitrained Ай бұрын
Fantastic story and narration! Also, really enjoyed the chat after the story. I love you’ve pointed out where, how, and when the certain characteristics of the vampire were acquired, leading to the present vampire lore. I love vampire stories (sparked mainly by Bram Stoker’s Dracula 1992 film - which portrayed a vampire with ethos, depth- and pure and true emotion (love). Francis Ford Coppola gave the vampire humanity, and therefore, sympathy and empathy). Thank you for an engaging narration of a story about a vampire with none of these traits!
@janemaas4225
@janemaas4225 Ай бұрын
What a great story!!!
@amgroves76
@amgroves76 Ай бұрын
Little known fact, Ruthven is Scottish and pronounced Riven (sounds like driven) Great reading sir
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
I researched this because I was familiar with that pronounciation. However I checked reddit (the source of wisdom) and a load of Scots people were saying definitely Ruthven. Those were Glaswegians about Ruthven Street. then I I found Ruthven in Angus was /rivven/ so I decided I could go either way and preferred ruth-ven. I also knew that if I pronounced it rivven it would get lots of comments telling me I was wrong. See the threads about Dr Jekyll and the town Albany in New York. Which have guarded lots of furious and bitter debate. however, I only reply to this to let you know that I do think about how I pronounce the names. (mostly) you will also see elsewhere, possibly my pronunciation of impious as Impeeus rather than im-pie-us. that did not get the amount of comments that I’d hoped I was following someone whose name I can’t remember who is narrating Milton Paradise Lost and I really liked im-pee-us so I used it to the odd person chagrin. Don’t get me started on the pronunciation of chagrin. do we get go with the French 🇫🇷 or the Oxford dictionary? I bet you’re glad you raised this now.
@amgroves76
@amgroves76 Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost hahaha knew I'd push someone's buttons, hope I didn't annoy you with it. Yep I'd only ever heard of rivven pronunciation as clan Ruthven, lowland clan. Don't you just love our English language, it's so full of weirdness!!!! Like I said, hope I didn't annoy you. Love this story by pollydolly, and you can see the development of vampires till Dracula with it more or less following that spiritualist movement and interest in scientifically exploring the supernatural. 💚🇬🇧
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
@@amgroves76 No I wasn’t annoyed . Did you see i’d done an Anne Rice vampire recently?
@janedoefamily6458
@janedoefamily6458 Ай бұрын
This is one of my favorites! ❤️ Thank you for uploading it. 😊 🌷
@libertycowboy2495
@libertycowboy2495 Ай бұрын
Always heard of this one, but never got to actually read it. Thanks again Tony! From Texas
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Nice to see you
@Cat_festation
@Cat_festation Ай бұрын
Aaaaand I got into the locked door- away we go.
@WillBTeeVee
@WillBTeeVee Ай бұрын
Looking forward to this - I particularly enjoyed "Dracula" which I thought you narrated superbly and remains a great pleasure. I've had an idea recently for a vampire story (been getting back into writing again lately) and I like the idea of a mixture of the monstrous and the noble, but done in a particular way. A combination of the raw and monstrous, almost alien perhaps, combined with seduction and intrigue. Looking forward to seeing where it takes me, and It's great to hear these older vampire stories being brought back to life and how the genre has been shaped over the years. Keep up the great work Tony.
@fiercest_calm
@fiercest_calm Ай бұрын
So excited!! Listening now. Love the thumbnail!!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Hope you like it!
@Story-Voracious66
@Story-Voracious66 Ай бұрын
@fiercest_calm, I just noticed your handle ; very cool. A Tori Amos reference?
@ajcbng8289
@ajcbng8289 Ай бұрын
Omg! I can't wait to to listen to this! 🤗
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Hope you like it!
@biangelboy21
@biangelboy21 Ай бұрын
Thank you 🙂
@veganleigh4817
@veganleigh4817 Ай бұрын
Thank you for this upload.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
You're welcome
@biacampbell676
@biacampbell676 Ай бұрын
Love your channel your readings are just sublime. Thank you so much Tony you’re amazing. Cheers 🙏
@mamacypress
@mamacypress Ай бұрын
Fantastic! Loved it!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@BlueBamboo62
@BlueBamboo62 Ай бұрын
LUV the 🧛‍♂️ vampire audio books! Perfect for falling asleep!
@mistydevillier2197
@mistydevillier2197 Ай бұрын
Ah, oui, mon favorite. Vampyres❤
@susanmercurio1060
@susanmercurio1060 Ай бұрын
I don't have an educated opinion so I liked it the way it was.
@mn-nf3dd
@mn-nf3dd Ай бұрын
Such a good story, in its way, and well read, thank you.
@jpmonkman
@jpmonkman Ай бұрын
So well read. I enjoy longer stories and the subject matter is enjoyable. Thank you
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@northernlights8126
@northernlights8126 Ай бұрын
One of my favourite stories.I loved hearing this.
@jaceek2030
@jaceek2030 Ай бұрын
Spoiler My brain knew this would not end happily, but my heart held out hope. Which is ironic, as I will never be confused with Pollyanna. 🤷😆 Excellent reading, as always!
@keyofgames2301
@keyofgames2301 Ай бұрын
The artwork for this is very eye catching. ❤ the story itself was wonderful too. Thank you!!!! 🙏
@lorihogue5015
@lorihogue5015 22 күн бұрын
High time I listened to this. Thank you for the reading. Great story!
@Suggest_Me_Books
@Suggest_Me_Books Ай бұрын
Loved this! Great artwork choice too!
@lesleykaygosson315
@lesleykaygosson315 Ай бұрын
Wow, this was fantastic. No one can make a story come to life the way you can. ❤
@spews1973
@spews1973 Ай бұрын
That was really, really good.
@judithl.morton9178
@judithl.morton9178 Ай бұрын
Listening to it again. I like it. 😊
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Thank you again
@kitsorcerer
@kitsorcerer Ай бұрын
Omg yes. This story was written in the same writing competition as "modern day prometheus"
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Nanowrimo 1818
@edf777
@edf777 Ай бұрын
Thank you sir😊❤
@starclone4
@starclone4 7 күн бұрын
Your narration is excellent !!!! Thank you
@leonaheraty3760
@leonaheraty3760 Ай бұрын
Thank you! 😊
@tricivenola8164
@tricivenola8164 22 күн бұрын
Wow, what a ride! Thanks for another dark fantasy!
@thurayya8905
@thurayya8905 Ай бұрын
It is no wonder that a physician of the early 19th century would conceive of the vampire as the question of reliable anatomy and the mystery of blood were predominant subjects. Still, since the vampire is a parasite, I have never been able to think of them as sophisticated or as attractive. It is only a tick, a big zombie tick, which is too large to pop.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
You are old school
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
not necessarily a bad thing !
@Hex_tarot
@Hex_tarot 6 күн бұрын
So glad i found your channel. I absolutely love your research at the end. Going to be an avid listener from here on in. Thank you for your hard work.❤
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost 5 күн бұрын
Thank you thank you thank you. I was having a bad patch after some comment I read. So you really helped.
@cmcg9035
@cmcg9035 Ай бұрын
It reads like Don Juan. Byron had gonorrhea and possibly syphilis, which Polidori probably knew about. Syphilis is one of the diseases that vampirism is based on. We can also see something of Renfield in Aubrey. Thanks for a great read!
@DevonExplorer
@DevonExplorer Ай бұрын
I really enjoyed that and I love how it reflects the time it was written in. I hadn't heard of the author before so that was interesting. Personally, I don't feel that characters have to 'be rounded out', as it were, as it's not really necessary in a story like this. I think there's too much of getting inside people's heads, lol, when we just want the character to be ominous or scary, etc. I started watching a film on Netflix called Spaceman the other night, as I love Sci-Fi, but it wasn't Sci-fi at all; just one of those social thingies where the astronaut was battling depression and loneliness because his wife was about to leave him. Pfft! How boring, lol. Anyway, that's just me! Loved this and your rendition as always, Tony. Cheers. :)
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Funnily enough that’s how i found True Detective. too much time exploring peoples inner problems and not enough story
@DevonExplorer
@DevonExplorer Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost Ah, I haven't seen that. Now I know not to watch it. Cheers, Tony. :)
@ciskaverster6979
@ciskaverster6979 Ай бұрын
Really good voice
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Thank you
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 Ай бұрын
Tak!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Again very generous so thank you again Marti
@tigerbunny6778
@tigerbunny6778 Ай бұрын
I always thought Polidori, in describing the ruination of the sister, was directly referencing Lord Byron and the ruination of all the women he destroyed, as well. Byron was a voracious sexual predator. Its not beyond belief Polidiri made the Vampyre in Byron's image. Perhaps, too, why Byron (sick perversion/revenge) took credit for the work. Not coincidental, too, that Polidiri at age 25, withered and depressed, died just like the brother in the story. Was it over a young girl he, too, could not save?
@sudanemamimikiki1527
@sudanemamimikiki1527 29 күн бұрын
few corrections: the vampyre is very much based on byron. and he wasnt really a sexual predator as much as he was just a casanova with quite a lot of paramours. he was also a known feminist was an advocate againts classism, polidori however didnt actually create the vampyre. neither did byron steal the credit for the work. during the summer of 1816 where him, byron and the shelleys were rooming together, byron proposed a competition for everybody to write short stories and the best one would win. mary shelley wrote the story that would become frankenstein, byron wrote a draft of the vampyre , and i dont know what shelley wrote and what polidori wrote is highly debated (but all who heard it said it was rather boring, involving a woman peering through a keyhole at something horrific) polidori later on asked byrons permission to write a full story based on byrons work and byron gave him the go ahead. later on the publisher attributed the work to byron, either due to this fact, or just to sell better. both byron and polidori did try to correct the issue to no avail. and it was seen that the novel only became popular because it was attributed to lord byron. the two did hate each other in real life (polidori and byron, with byron viewing polidori as a boring prick, and polidori believing byron to be a snob) polidori also killed himself because he had wanted to become a writer, and his only real success in writing was by taking something byron had made and expanding on it, while his only other published novel (based on the short story he wrote during the summer of 1816) was met with negative reviews and absolutely no sales at all.
@tigerbunny6778
@tigerbunny6778 29 күн бұрын
@@sudanemamimikiki1527 Thanks!
@angelaroberts2803
@angelaroberts2803 Ай бұрын
One I don't know .Thank you for your information.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
You're welcome
@jamesblahut5008
@jamesblahut5008 Ай бұрын
Good image choice!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@amandine512
@amandine512 Ай бұрын
This reminds me of one of my favorite books. 🙁
@judithl.morton9178
@judithl.morton9178 Ай бұрын
Well, yes 😊
@aholuthedistinguishedgentl929
@aholuthedistinguishedgentl929 Ай бұрын
New here. This is so refreshing to hear a HUMAN BEING narrating. Instead of all these lazies using A.I. 👏🏿👏🏿
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Thank you . Those AI channels are exploding at the moment . I guess that i’d you are only using the voice to fall asleep to it doesn’t matter if it’s AI. They mispronounce all the names anyway
@ProleCenter
@ProleCenter Ай бұрын
Gogoniant!
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Gogoneddus!
@WesaTwoRivers
@WesaTwoRivers Ай бұрын
There is a movie from "86 called Gothic that tells the story of how this story and Frankenstein were written. Timothy Spall played Polidori and Julian Sands played Shelly. It's pretty good, if a bit disturbing.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
That's the Ken Russell film I think. very good too
@usedscar
@usedscar Ай бұрын
This is the story that I got my son's name from- Aubrey not Lord Ruthven.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Though Lord Rivven (see previous comments) would have been a fun name. Though it might of caused some chaffing at school.
@usedscar
@usedscar Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost "Aubrey" for a boy born in 1989 was bad enough!
@yesterdayitrained
@yesterdayitrained Ай бұрын
@@usedscarI love the name!
@kathymcguire8287
@kathymcguire8287 Ай бұрын
❤😮😮😮❤
@angelariley.9963
@angelariley.9963 Ай бұрын
I’m just listening to London Horror Stories on Spotify. I’m really enjoying it. Did you write the stories yourself?
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Those are my own, yes . Thank you
@angelariley.9963
@angelariley.9963 Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost They are really well written. You have a true talent and the narration was so good. I wanted more stories at the end.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
@@angelariley.9963 That’s good! I’m doing some more right now
@angelariley.9963
@angelariley.9963 Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost Wonderful. I will look forward to that.
@HypatiaMuse
@HypatiaMuse Ай бұрын
The O.G. vampire story but Frankenstein was the o.g. Science Fiction story ❤️
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
have you heard my Frankenstein? i loved the story after narrating it
@missmouse20
@missmouse20 Ай бұрын
I just listened to The Midnight Folk part 1&2. Is there a 3?
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
No, I gave up due to lack of interest unfortunately. hardly anyone listened
@missmouse20
@missmouse20 Ай бұрын
@ClassicGhost Cats and foxes who talk, secret passages, witches who dance, and hidden treasure!!!!!! How on earth could listeners not be mesmerized????? I'll search out the book, but would love so much to hear you read it to me xoxox
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
@@missmouse20 The book is great. one of my favourites. I don’t know why but it bombed
@MrMonkfiish
@MrMonkfiish Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost maybe you should re-upload it tony sometimes the algorithm just buries things arbitrarily, in this way it could get a second chance. I'm sure folk would like it if they can see it. Your readings are good and i'm sure your channel has grown, it would be fun to showcase some of your favourite works and get an insight into your personal tastes.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
@@MrMonkfiish Thank you . Your comment and advice seem very sensible
@edf777
@edf777 Ай бұрын
Sound very low...had to put earphones sound quite high
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
Be careful of your hearing
@edf777
@edf777 Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost thank you I was careful..an really enjoyed the story.love your voice I do.
@gabriellecunningham7196
@gabriellecunningham7196 Ай бұрын
🌹🖤🇦🇺
@kkuro7054
@kkuro7054 Ай бұрын
I don't know how Europeans pronounced "giaour" in their day, but the Turkish word it's a borrowing of sounded like "jah-WOOR" (pardon for the ad-hoc phonetic spelling!)
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
I struggled with that one so thanks
@denisemckay330
@denisemckay330 Ай бұрын
Sounds like Vincent price
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
I’ll take that as a compliment
@ropeburnsrussell
@ropeburnsrussell Ай бұрын
Oh Tony, stay far away from politics. People have gone mad, its not like when we were young.
@IanMcFerran
@IanMcFerran Ай бұрын
I know this is an old story but, seriously... 10 minutes and nothing has happened. Sorry, this story does nothing for me.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
;)
@KristinChoruby
@KristinChoruby Ай бұрын
Fact check: Edward Cullen was not sexy.
@jeanniemullinder9038
@jeanniemullinder9038 Ай бұрын
Nothing interesting after 7 mins 41 seconds so didn't listen further. Seems rather boring.
@ClassicGhost
@ClassicGhost Ай бұрын
I admire your precision in nailing down where the fun stops
@yesterdayitrained
@yesterdayitrained Ай бұрын
@@ClassicGhost🤣
@AndreaDingbatt
@AndreaDingbatt Ай бұрын
​@@yesterdayitrained😂💯% Agreed!!😎👍👍
@tommyedwards9231
@tommyedwards9231 Ай бұрын
What a great story!!!
Who Knows? by Guy du Maupassant
47:06
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 4,7 М.
The Black Widow by John Glasby #audiobook
1:06:14
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 25 М.
одни дома // EVA mash @TweetvilleCartoon
01:00
EVA mash
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
Balloon Pop Racing Is INTENSE!!!
01:00
A4
Рет қаралды 14 МЛН
INO IS A KIND ALIEN😂
00:45
INO
Рет қаралды 21 МЛН
The Bloodlands / Exclusive vampire story by: RICOstories / Teamfear /
1:08:51
Dead Man Talkings Forest Of Fear
Рет қаралды 29 М.
The Hanover Court Murder by Basil Thomson #audiobook
55:31
Classic Detective Stories
Рет қаралды 24 М.
The Thirst Within Pinegrove: Audiobook Horror Story
25:06
Midnight Whispers
Рет қаралды 2,8 М.
EP227 - Creatures of Darkness: Real Life Vampire Encounters!
1:02:58
Paranormal Round Table
Рет қаралды 63 М.
Brickett Bottom by Amyas Northcote
44:55
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 11 М.
The Black Veil by Charles Dickens - Full Audiobook | Mysterious Short Stories
31:56
Classic Audiobooks with Elliot
Рет қаралды 19 М.
Green Tea by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu #audiobook
1:44:00
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 21 М.
Good Lady Ducayne by Mary E Braddon
1:22:34
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 29 М.
Behind The Stumps by Russell Kirk
45:15
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 14 М.
Victorian Ghost Stories For Winter Nights #audiobook
3:29:06
Classic Ghost Stories Podcast - Tony Walker
Рет қаралды 134 М.
БЕДНЫЙ БОБИК
0:20
МАКАРОН
Рет қаралды 1,6 МЛН
I forgive you.
0:20
OHIOBOSS SATOYU
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
Мереке құтты болсын,жігіттер!
25:40
QosLike / ҚосЛайк / Косылайық
Рет қаралды 364 М.
Rika Bermain kejar kejaran
0:19
YAN OFFICIAL
Рет қаралды 25 МЛН
Who has a birthday coming up? 😻😈
0:20
YANA CHIRKINA
Рет қаралды 30 МЛН