Clark Ashton Smith (1893-1961), perhaps best known today for his association with H.P Lovecraft and the Cthulhu Mythos, is in his own right a unique master of fantasy, horror and science-fiction. Highly imaginative, his genre-spanning visions of worlds beyond, combined with his profound understanding of the English language, have inspired an ever -increasing legion of fans and admirers.
For most of his life, he lived in physical and intellectual isolation in Auburn, California (USA). Predominantly self-educated with no formal education after grammar school, Smith wore out his local library and delved so deeply into the dictionary that his richly embellished, yet precise, prose leaves one with the sense that they are in the company of a true master of language.
Though Smith primarily considered himself a poet, having turned to prose for the meager financial sum it rewarded, his prose might best be appreciated as a "fleshed" out poetry. In this light, plot and characters are subservient to the milieu of work: a setting of cold quiet reality, which, mixed with the erotic and the exotic, places his work within its own unique, phantasmagoric genre. While he also experimented in painting, sculpture, and translation, it is in his written work that his legacy persists.
During his lifetime, Smith's work appeared commonly in the pulps alongside other masters such H.P. Lovecraft, Robert E. Howard, August Derleth, and E. Hoffmann Price and like many great artists, recognition and appreciation have come posthumously. In recent decades though, a resurgence of interest in his works has lead to numerous reprintings as well as scholarly critiques.
The Eldritch Dark is a site to facilitate both scholars and fans in their appreciation and study of Clark Ashton Smith and his works.
Re: A Possible Source for "The Hound"
7 Apr, 2025 4:12PM by Knygatin
“Kipling, thanks for the tip. Thank you also for the details about Poe's "Eureka" earlier in the thread.
I am probably not anxious enough about those illustrations to invest in another volume. But I admit being quite curious. The cover of the Hippocampus Press book The House of Sounds shows part of an illustration for The… ”
Re: A Possible Source for "The Hound"
7 Apr, 2025 12:20PM by Kipling
“Knygatin Wrote:
> I have read a handful of his short stories, the
> most famous ones. I have enjoyed them well enough,
> especially liking their artistic intensity.
> "Huguenin's Wife" is a favorite. I may agree that
> his stories "rely on twists and turns in the plots
> too much"; Poe is perhaps more natural and organic
>… ”
7 Apr, 2025 9:31AM by Two Witnesses
“Current link below
link
Remember this is coded… ”
7 Apr, 2025 9:30AM by Two Witnesses
“We invoke Jerusalem Cross/Salem Cross & Aleister Crowley said it was
Baphomet
We invoke Freemasonry & Child Microchips
We invoke Mormonism Utah/Mexico/Freemasonry/Beehives
We invoke LDS Mormon temple garment/Freemasonry
We invoke Angel Studios
We invoke Angel Studios website/Larimar Stone/Witchcraft
We invoke Harmon Brothers
We invoke The Chosen
We invoke Jonathan Roumie & Knights Templar & Skulls/Bones & Vatican & Rosary
We invoke David Amito & Antrum… ”
Re: A Possible Source for "The Hound"
5 Apr, 2025 11:10AM by Kipling
“Kyngatin: J.J. Cameron's 20 illustrations for The Purple Cloud are in an oversized softcover book issued by A. Reynolds Morse in 1979, titled "The Empress of the Earth and The Purple Cloud" (plus some short stories), all reproducing the original magazine appearances. There is a stunning full page illustration for "Huguenin's Wife", a favorite of… ”