I listen, and re-listen often. Tony, your readings, and choice of tales, are simply timeless. I can't begin to tell you of the tricky difficult times you've helped me through. Just thought I'd send a little bouquet of gratitude. Hope all is well for you and for those you love.
@ClassicGhost4 ай бұрын
thank you’ll. I’m glad you are here . Thanks for your kind comment
@timothyhopkins69603 жыл бұрын
This is a wonderful old tale I just love you reading it . Thank you .
@CoLLectiNgCAtS-q2q3 ай бұрын
I'm addicted to your excellent channel! Obsessed at listening to one after the other since finding your channel 3 days ago. You were meant to read and bring to life most wonderfully these stories. Love it. Thank yiu!❤❤❤❤❤❤
@ClassicGhost3 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@manzanitakatznellenbogen28702 ай бұрын
Now this one is superb! I just love the decay and horridness of that coach. I could almost smell the wood rot and damp.
@puca79083 жыл бұрын
So beautifully narrated! I have listened to a couple of your narrated stories recently from books I actually own and have read, like M.R. James and Bram Stoker. It is so peacefully entertaining to listen to you narrate these stories! You almost make me happy that winter will come again so I can sit in our cozy living room with black cherry tea, a soft throw and a kitty on my lap listening to you as the snow falls quietly outside. Thank you so much, I really enjoy listening to you read!
@ClassicGhost3 жыл бұрын
The sound of your winter makes me wish it were here. We get little snow but I can at least try black Cherry tea :) thank you
@kathywilkins55463 жыл бұрын
Sir, you are good at what you do! So natural and near perfect are your narrations that I almost forget I'm not there in the story but only enjoying a retelling the tale. Please continue to entertain us.
@ClassicGhost3 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@shahabhussain51209 күн бұрын
Brilliant as usual Tony. One that I was lucky enough to red first, then hear your incredible narration. My take is that the ‘student’ was not doubting or questioning the Magi’s theories, just truly intrigued and thankful to be safe and warm. Absolute madness to risk his life again, just to spare his sweetheart a few extra hours of anguish. What brutes the host and servants were though, to set him up like that…….
@tinahale92522 жыл бұрын
The wonder of my childhood awakens again within me. This is truly lovely 🌹
@amarasara86663 жыл бұрын
Hello, I have just discovered your channel. I am so elated to hear your voice in particular to read these old ghost stories, I can not properly convey. Please please please do more. I really very seriously enjoy it so much. Thank you so much. Thank you,.
@rattyrachel43163 жыл бұрын
Wow! What a ride! From beginning to end you never know what’s going to happen next! Thanks for serving as our faithful guide to hell and back.
@ClassicGhost3 жыл бұрын
I'm very fond of that story. I like her description of the snowy moors and the alchemist
@kaatteey3 ай бұрын
Wonderful. I had just listened to this story by Ian Gordon and loved both, my favourite narrators 😊
@creative27163 жыл бұрын
Delightful reading. You gave the accents a vivid reality. And all the names you pronounced... very impressive indeed.
@thelaughingtiger1463 жыл бұрын
Bravo! Beautifully read. Thank you for the upload. I enjoyed the pace of the reading and the accents.
@TrishSzymanskiArtist2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for introducing me to new authors in this genre!
@mijiyoon55753 жыл бұрын
This story always gives me the creeps; I luv Amelia Edwards
@Embrabrummie3 жыл бұрын
What a gripping story - and so beautifully read, thank you.
@roddmatsui35543 жыл бұрын
Very high quality reading of an excellent atmospheric spook story. Superb
@donaldmccleary9015 Жыл бұрын
Great story and narration! I love this one. I like the description of the coach when he gets in. As you mentioned in your ramble, this is set in an older time, and I like that. Stories set in this time frame, especially ghost and horror stories, are awesome. Thanks for narrating this gem for us, Tony!
@scathatch3 жыл бұрын
I actually really liked that story. It was very evocative The images it created in the mind of the listener were very strong and powerful. Maybe because the characters are so archetypal.
@allanbryan-tansley60102 жыл бұрын
Sounds a bit like Arch Bishop Sharp's phantom coach, which is said to haunt Magus Miur near St.Andrews in Fife. It is said to pick up lone travellers, then plunge into the sea in St.Andrews bay.
@ClassicGhost2 жыл бұрын
Didn’t know that one. Thanks, Allan
@Bpl5413 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed your reading and the story is very good. I have been wanting to read Amelia B Edwards's , A Thousand Miles up the Nile so am going to look for it on youtube. Thankyou
@Tipi_Dan3 жыл бұрын
This one I've read. Excellent rendering.
@fatherchristmas2998 Жыл бұрын
On my grandparents there.were swords from the English in the blacksmiths forge .there were long hay wagons old threshers and top hats from the 1800s so I'm connect to many centuries .I wonder if young can understand any thing of classic ghost stories. Wene we listen to the phantom coach we can feel the ice in our veins and that we are a few degrees in temperature.from dying. By the way Tony I saw some thing you would love .the other day at a funeral a real white white horse drawn hearse at a funeral and of course my mind instantly wene to the phantom coach in a Christmas carol
@mausercawley3 ай бұрын
Love it. Well read.
@carolinemiles45282 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@ClassicGhost2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Caroline
@emnorfolk55592 жыл бұрын
Well written, well read! 😁 thanks!
@hindleygj3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for these.
@ClassicGhost3 жыл бұрын
My pleasure!
@Charles-oo8bq2 жыл бұрын
This being my overall, all time favorite short story that I've read countless times ,I must say you my brother truly mastered its narrative. I wonder if you'd consider reading the "rhyme of the ancient mariner "?. You would join a handful of masters that are worthy in my opinion to have left your mark conjoined to the legacy of that master piece.
@ClassicGhost2 жыл бұрын
I have done the rime of the ancient mariner indeed. Search KZbin for it and my name and you should find it
@Charles-oo8bq2 жыл бұрын
@@ClassicGhost amazing. I'll look. THANKS
@thurayya8905 Жыл бұрын
Nice straightforward tale. At first, I thought the barrister was going to spend a wonderful night of conversation, get back to his wife the next day, only to find no one knew of this genius on the moor. He goes back to the house and finds it an abandoned wreck. But no, there's the title. We must have a phantom coach! And so we do. It is such a pity that female writers of the day had to pretend they were male to be published.
@earndoggy2 жыл бұрын
Quite the arrogant chappie is our protagonist! Shouldering his way into someone's house and DEMANDING to be served. Tsk tsk.
@toadyuk83912 жыл бұрын
I decided to leave you my own “breadcrumbs” as I work through your “oeuvre” which is a word I associate with eggs rather than body of work (go figure?). Anyway, hopefully you will start to understand my playful tone and “bants”. I find this story rather disjointed given its three or really four part setup. Again like much ghost fodder this is a meta-fiction with a frame. I have a great story to tell you one day when we sit in those studded deep leather armchairs, aside the low beams and crackling jolly log fire (maybe peat) and nurse a mug of tea in my case and whatever your favourite tipple or refreshment. On that day Tony I will recount to you many wondrous tales. One of those tales will however be how I met Paul the Anarchist at my first University when studying English And American Lit. How Paul was a graduate doing a PhD on philosophy of novels ! How the two hours we shared a conversation he altered my life completely. I entered a teenage boy and emerged, something else. I want to say a magus but that would sound pretentious. Let me say that Paul gave me a gift, he helped me to see the world as it is. A side effect (fully intended) of his chat with me was to enable me to get a good 2:1 (just off first) without any work, no lectures and no effort. The whole story is for another time. But what gets me now as a fifty year old looking back is this “why did he do this ?”. It still bugs me that I only gained this insight recently on recounting the weird meeting. Why did a graduate bother to chat to a wet behind ears undergrad and in space of less than two hours change his view on reality and help him with study ? Anyway I will let you ponder that. It would take a while to try and explain what he told me, it’s no mystery and I’m totally happy to share it. However you have to have a certain mind, some base knowledge of literature and novels (which you do and hence me dropping this here). I have had only perhaps one or two paranormal experiences ever, this wasn’t one. But I find myself still wondering about much surrounding this experience. To add to it the guy who introduced me to Paul told me he would do precisely what he did do. How the heck did he know this ? As I say when we finally get a chance to speak and I’m sure we will one time or another I will take delight in this recount. I know you like literary theory, meta fictions and stories. Adieu for the present
@ClassicGhost2 жыл бұрын
I think it's the 'oeuf' You made me go and look up the etymology. Uva is egg and Oeuvre is from Opera. I didn't know the -p- did that in French. Have you read The Zelator by Mark Hedsel? It sounds like your meeting with Paul. That an House of Leaves are two books I may never get rid of.
@shahabhussain51209 күн бұрын
Sounds like a Roald Dahl short story, your meeting with Paul. Where’s the wicked twist?