Lucan: Medusa, from `Pharsalia´, Book Nine, 727 – 861
Why fertile thus in death the pestilent air Of Libya, what poison in her soil Her several nature mixed, my care to know Has not availed: but from the days of old A fabled story has deceived the...
View ArticleH.P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald: Out of the Aeons
(Ms. found among the effects of the late Richard H. Johnson, Ph.D., curator of the Cabot Museum of Archaeology, Boston, Mass.) It is not likely that anyone in Boston—or any alert reader elsewhere—will...
View ArticleHenry Kuttner: The Salem Horror
‘Originally published in Weird Tales, May 1937. When Carson first noticed the sounds in his cellar, he ascribed them to the rats. Later he began to hear the tales which were whispered by the...
View ArticleRobert E. Howard: Haunting Columns
The walls of Luxor broke the silver sand When stars were golden lepers in the night, And, granite monsters in the pallid light, They lurched like drunken Titans through the land, With giant strides,...
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