Title
|
Lines
|
Opening line
|
Place of publication
|
Publication date
|
Alternative title(s)
|
Source text
|
Notes
|
References
|
"I am a Devon oak" (Lord 1976, p. 303) |
20 |
I am a Devon oak |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Devon Oak; Untitled ("I am a Devon oak") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 303) |
Lord 1976, p. 303 Herman 2006, p. 162
|
"I am an actor ..." |
12 |
I am an actor and have been an actor from birth |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Actor, The; Untitled ("I am an actor ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 300) |
Lord 1976, p. 300 Herman 2006, p. 147 Thom, Herman & Woods, § A
|
I am MAN from the primal, I |
7 |
I am MAN from the primal, I |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: I am MAN from the primal, I |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 223); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 223
|
I am the Spirit of War! |
9 |
I am the Spirit of War! |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: I am the Spirit of War! |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, January 30, 1925 (Herman 2006, p. 223); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 223
|
I Call the Muster of Iron Men |
|
I call the muster of iron men |
Argosy All-Story Weekly |
July 20, 1929 |
Untitled: ("I call the muster of iron men") |
|
From an early draft of the short story "Crowd-Horror"; titled with the first line in COLLECTED POETRY |
|
"I can recall a quiet sky ..." |
8 |
I can recall a quiet sky once more |
The Howard Collector #5 |
Summer 1964 |
Dawn in Flanders, A; Untitled ("I can recall a quiet sky ...") |
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 172 Herman 2006, p. 160
|
"I carved a woman out of marble when" |
14 |
I carved a woman out of marble when |
Poet's Scroll |
Jan 1929 |
Flaming Marble; Untitled ("I carved a woman out of marble when") |
Wikisource |
PDL; Pen name: Patrick HowardO (Herman 2006, p. 168) |
Herman 2006, p. 168
|
"I caught Joan alone upon her bed" |
4 |
I caught Joan alone upon her bed |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Prelude; Untitled ("I caught Joan alone upon her bed") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 309) |
Lord 1976, p. 309 Herman 2006, p. 193
|
"I cut my teeth on toil and pain" |
12 |
I cut my teeth on toil and pain |
The Ghost Ocean and Other Poems of the Supernatural |
1982 |
When the Glaciers Rumbled South; Untitled ("I cut my teeth on toil and pain") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 313) |
Lord 1976, p. 313 Herman 2006, p. 238
|
I do not sing of a paradise |
4 |
I do not sing of a paradise |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: ("I do not sing of a paradise") |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. January 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 224); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 224
|
"If life was a thing that money could buy" |
2 |
If life was a thing that money could buy |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: ("If life was a thing that money could buy") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, ca. October 1927; contained in the story "The Fastidious Fooey Mancucu"; parody of an old saying whose second line is usually some variant of "The rich would live and the poor would die" |
|
I hate the man who tells me that I lied |
24 |
I hate the man who tells me that I lied |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: I hate the man who tells me that I lied |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 224); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 224
|
"I heard the drum as I went ..." |
14 |
I heard the drum as I went down the street |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Drum, The; Untitled ("I heard the drum as I went ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 303) |
Lord 1976, p. 303 Herman 2006, p. 164
|
I hold all women are a gang of tramps |
10 |
I hold all women are a gang of tramps |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: I hold all women are a gang of tramps |
Wikisource |
PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 224
|
I knocked upon her lattice — soft! |
8 |
I knocked upon her lattice — soft! |
Lewd Tales |
1987 |
Untitled: I knocked upon her lattice — soft! |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 224); From:T Songs of Bastards, Act 1, Scene 1 |
Herman 2006, p. 224
|
I lay in Yen's opium joint |
7 |
I lay in Yen's opium joint |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: I lay in Yen's opium joint |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, January 30, 1925 (Herman 2006, p. 224); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 224
|
I Praise my Nativity |
10 |
Oh, evil the day that I was born, like a tale that a witch has told |
Fantasy Book #23 |
Mar 1987 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated (Herman 2006, p. 175) |
Herman 2006, p. 175
|
"I saw the grass on the hillside bend" |
16 |
I saw the grass on the hillside bend |
Weirdbook #12 |
1977 |
Dance Macabre; Untitled ("I saw the grass on the hillside bend") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 302) |
Lord 1976, p. 302 Herman 2006, p. 160
|
"I stand in the streets of the city" |
8 |
I stand in the streets of the city |
Night Images |
1976 |
King of the Ages Comes, The; Untitled ("I stand in the streets of the city") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
I tell you this my friend ... |
9 |
I tell you this my friend ... |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: I tell you this my friend ... |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, August 6, 1925 (Herman 2006, p. 224); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 224
|
"I too have strode those white-paved roads" |
4 |
I too have strode those white-paved roads that run |
The Howard Collector #17 |
Autumn 1972 |
Roads; Untitled ("I too have strode those white-paved roads") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 184) |
Lord 1976, p. 184 Herman 2006, p. 199
|
"I was a chief of the Chatagai" |
21 |
I was a chief of the Chatagai |
Night Images |
1976 |
Thousand Years Ago, A; Untitled ("I was a chief of the Chatagai") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 311) |
Lord 1976, p. 311 Herman 2006, p. 214
|
"I was a prince of China, lord of a million spears ..." |
18 |
I was a prince of China, lord of a million spears |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
Prince and Beggar; Untitled ("I was a prince of China, lord of a million spears ...") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 182) |
Lord 1976, p. 182 Herman 2006, p. 194
|
"I, was I there" |
10 |
I, was I there |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Was I There?; Untitled ("I, was I there") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 313) |
Lord 1976, p. 313 Herman 2006, p. 237
|
"I was once, I declare, a grog-shop man" |
28 |
I was once, I declare, a grog-shop man |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Ballad of Beer, A; Untitled ("I was once, I declare, a grog-shop man") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. July 1930 (Herman 2006, p. 152); Originally untitled (Herman 2006, p. 152) |
Herman 2006, p. 152 Thom, Herman & Woods, § B
|
Illusion |
26 |
I stood upon surf-booming cliffs |
The Daniel Baker CollegianG |
15 March 1926 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 177 Herman 2006, p. 175
|
I'm more than a man... |
|
I'm more than a man ... |
n/a |
n/a |
Untitled: I'm more than a man ... |
|
From the draft of the story Yellow Laughter (Herman 2006, p. 225); Never published (Herman 2006, p. 225) |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
In the Ring |
47 |
Over the place the lights go out |
Robert E. Howard's Fight Magazine #4 |
Oct 1996 |
Untitled("Over the place the lights go out") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 175
|
Incident of the Muscovy-Turkish War, An |
14 |
Many were slaughtered in that final charge |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 175
|
Insomnia |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Invective |
4 |
There burns in me no honeyed drop of love |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
Untitled ("There burns in me ...") |
"Invective" |
|
Lord 1976, p. 177 Herman 2006, p. 175
|
Invocation |
14 |
Break down the world and mold it once again! |
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
Part 5 of 5 in the Black Dawn cycle (Herman 2006, pp. 154, 175); Never published separately (Herman 2006, p. 175) |
Herman 2006, p. 175
|
The Invocation |
4 |
Baal, lord Baal, of the ebon throne |
Yesteryear #4 |
Oct 1989 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. February 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 187); First poem in the cycle "The Mysteries" |
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Iron Harp, The [poem cycle] |
134 |
1. The blind black shadows reach inhuman arms / 2. Now in the gloom the pulsing drums repeat / 3. Ten million years beyond the sweep of Time / 4. The great black tower rose to split the stars / 5. A roar of battle thundered in the hills |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Echoing Shadows; Voices of the Night |
|
A group of five poems: "The Voices Waken Memory" (24 lines); "Babel" (19 lines); "Laughter in the Gulfs" (18 lines); "Moon Shame" (34 lines); and "A Crown for a King" (39 lines); Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated, beginning "The Seeker thrust ..."; Does NOT include the individual poem "The Iron Harp," which is, confusingly, the fourth poem in the BLACK DAWN cycle! |
Lord 1976, p. 174 Herman 2006, p. 166
|
Iron Harp, The (2)N |
32 |
They sell brown men for gold in Zanzibar |
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
Part 4 of 5 in the Black Dawn cycle—NOT part of the "Iron Harp" poem cycle! (Herman 2006, pp. 154, 175–176); Never published separately (Herman 2006, pp. 175–176) |
Herman 2006, pp. 175–176
|
The iron harp that Adam christened Life |
18 |
The iron harp that Adam christened Life |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: The iron harp that Adam christened Life |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. April 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 225); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
Isle of Hy-Brasil, The |
52 |
There's a far, lone island in the dim, red West |
The Ghost Ocean and Other Poems of the Supernatural |
1982 |
Hy-Brasil |
|
Shares lines with Ships (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 176
|
Ivory in the Night |
8 |
Maidens of star and of moon |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 176); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 176
|
Jack Dempsey |
24 |
Through the California mountains |
The Right Hook, vol. 1, #2I |
1925 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 176
|
Jackal, The |
15 |
Lean is the life that the jackal leads |
Omniumgathum |
1976 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 176
|
"A jackal laughed from a thicket still ..." |
24 |
A jackal laughed from a thicket still, the stars were haggard pale |
Witchcraft & Sorcery |
May 1971 |
Flight; Untitled ("A jackal laughed from a thicket still ...") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. September 1927, earlier, shorter version (Herman 2006, p. 168) |
Lord 1976, p. 175 Herman 2006, p. 168
|
James J. Jeffries |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Jimmy Barry |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Joe Gans |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
John Brown |
24 |
You stole niggers, John Brown |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. May 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 176);the first of "Three Sketches" |
Herman 2006, p. 176
|
John Kelley |
30 |
I hesitate to name your name |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 2: 1930-1932 |
Oct 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. May 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 176); PDL; the third of "Three Sketches" |
Herman 2006, p. 176
|
John L. Sullivan |
36 |
Bellowing, blustering, old John L. |
The Right Hook, vol. 1, #2I |
1925 |
|
Wikisource |
|
Herman 2006, p. 176
|
John Ringold |
14 |
There was a land of which he never spoke |
The Howard Collector #5 |
Summer 1964 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 178 Herman 2006, p. 176
|
The Jubilee |
8 |
There was ham and lamb |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Gilhooley's Supper Party; |
|
Mnemonic reconstructionV of "Gilhooley's Supper Party"; Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, March 17, 1927; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
Ju-ju Doom |
14 |
As a great spider grows to monstrous girth |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("As a great spider grows to monstrous girth") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 176
|
Kabrane the Greek |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
THE HOUSE OF HELL |
|
LostU; the two titles are listed as alternatives in the Otis Adelbert Kline agency's list of Howard poems still unaccounted for |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Kandahar |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Keep women, thrones and kingly lands |
4 |
Keep women, thrones and kingly lands |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: Keep women, thrones and kingly lands |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. January 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 225); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
Kelly the Conjure-man |
4 |
There are strange tales told when the full moon shines |
Echoes From An Iron HarpA |
1972A |
|
|
Epigraph:S Kelly the Conjure-man (Lord 1976, p. 204) |
Lord 1976, p. 204 Herman 2006, p. 176
|
Keresa, Keresita |
24 |
Keresa, Keresita |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Untitled ("Keresa, Keresita") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 177) |
Herman 2006, p. 177
|
Kid Lavigne is Dead |
28 |
Hang up the battered gloves; Lavigne is dead |
The Ring |
Jun 1928 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 178 Herman 2006, p. 177
|
King Alfred Rides Again |
20 |
I marched with Alfred when he thundered forth |
Poet's Scroll |
Apr 1929 |
Dreaming on Downs |
Wikisource |
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 177
|
King and the Mallet, The |
28 |
Long golden-yellow banners break the sky |
The JuntoH |
Jul 1929 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 177
|
King and the Oak, The |
24 |
Before the shadows slew the sun the kites were soaring free |
Weird Tales |
Feb 1939 |
|
"The King and the Oak" |
There are two versions of this poem, the published one and a slightly longer draft version (Herman 2006, p. 177) |
Lord 1976, p. 178 Herman 2006, p. 177
|
King Bahthur's Court |
106 |
When the clamor of the city ... |
The Collected Letters Of Robert E. Howard, Volume 3: 1933–1936 |
n/aA |
2008 |
|
A play, written entirely in verse |
Herman 2006, p. 177
|
King Kelka Rode From Komahar |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
King of the Ages Comes, The |
8 |
I stand in the streets of the city |
Night Images |
1976 |
Untitled ("I stand in the streets of the city") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
King of the Sea |
14 |
Neptune was king of old |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
King of Trade, The |
8 |
There ere the mighty hosts might clash their swords |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
Incomplete, only the final eight lines survive (Lord 1976, p. 307)/(Herman 2006, p. 178) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Kings of the Night |
4 |
The Caesar lolled on his ivory throne |
Always Comes EveningA |
1957A |
Song of Bran, The |
|
Epigraph:S Kings of the Night (Lord 1976, p. 204) |
Lord 1976, p. 204 Herman 2006, pp. 208, 178
|
Kiowa's Tale, The |
28 |
All day I lay with the sun at my back |
Fantasy Crosswinds #1 |
1 November 1974 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Kissing of Sal Snooboo, The |
20 |
A bunch of girls were whooping it up |
The TattlerD |
6 January 1925 |
|
Wikisource |
A parody of "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" by Robert W. Service (Lord 1976, p. 178)/(Herman 2006, p. 178); PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 178 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Kolumbar, Piper of Sadness |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Krakorum |
4 |
A thousand years ago great Genghis reigned |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("A thousand years ago great Genghis reigned") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 305); An introduction by Howard states that he was 17 when he wrote this poem (Herman 2006, p. 178) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Kublai Khan |
8 |
Who hath heard of Kublai Khan |
The Golden CaliphI The Last Celt |
1922/1923 1976 |
|
|
Conflict:M Lord (1976, p. 178), The Last Celt, 1976/Herman (2006, p. 178), The Golden Caliph, 1922/23; An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 178) |
Lord 1976, p. 178 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Ladder of Life, The |
4 |
Life is ladder of cynical years |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("Life is a ladder ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Lady's Chamber, A |
17 |
Orchid, jasmine and heliotrope |
American Poet |
Apr 1929 |
|
Wikisource |
Pen name: Patrick HowardO (Lord 1976, p. 169)/(Herman 2006, p. 178); PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 169 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Lalun of Lucknow |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Lament For Jesse James |
4 |
It wuz on a starry night, in the month of July |
The Howard Collector #6 |
Spring 1965 |
Alternate title: Untitled ("It wuz on a starry night, in the month of July ..."); Title is Howard's only to the extent that it is referred to thus in the text. |
|
A barroom song taken from the Sonora Kid story "Knife, Bullet and Noose" (aka "Knife, Gun and Noose"),
Variation on a very common theme, probably with adjustments by Howard. Probably never published separately. ||
|
The Land of A Grey Dawn |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Land of Mystery, The |
15 |
Ancient of nations as the pyramid |
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
Epigraph:S The Land of Mystery (Lord 1976, p. 315); Never published separately (Herman 2006, p. 179) |
Lord 1976, p. 315 Herman 2006, p. 179
|
Land of the Pioneer |
8 |
The wild bees hum in the tangled vines |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("The wild bees hum ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 305) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 179
|
Last Day, The |
14 |
Hinged in the brooding west a black sun hung |
Weird Tales |
Mar 1932 |
|
|
Similar to The Last Hour (Lord 1976, p. 178); Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1931 (Herman 2006, p. 179) |
Lord 1976, p. 178 Herman 2006, p. 179
|
Last Hour, The |
14 |
Hinged in the brooding west a black sun hung |
Weird Tales |
Jun 1938 |
|
"The Last Hour" |
Similar to The Last Day (Lord 1976, p. 179); Fifth poem of five from the Sonnets Out of Bedlam cycle; (Herman 2006, p. 179) |
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 179
|
The Last Ride (aka "Boot Hill Payoff") Contains an embedded mnemonic reconstruction of "Brady" (q.v.). The story is a collaboration with Chandler Whipple (Robert Enders Allen), who wrote chapters 1–6, then turned it over to Howard to finish.
|
Last Words He Heard, The |
14 |
The chariots were chanting |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Untitled ("The chariots were chanting ...") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. December 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 179) |
Herman 2006, p. 179
|
Laughter |
2 |
Laughter's the lure of the gods; therefore must ye laugh |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, April 14, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 179); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 179
|
Laughter in the Gulfs |
18 |
Ten million miles beyond the sweep of Time |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
An Echo of Laughter in the Gulfs; Voices of the Night |
"Laughter in the Gulfs" |
Poem 3 of the Voices of the Night cycle (Herman 2006, p. 179); Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated (Herman 2006, p. 179) |
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 179
|
Laughter in the Night |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Legacy of Tubal-Cain, The |
10 |
"No more!" they swear; I laugh to hear them speak |
The Howard Collector #18 |
Autumn 1973 |
Untitled ("'No more!' they swear ...") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 179) |
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Legend |
8 lines, plus a 142-word prose introduction |
Against the blood red moon a tower stands |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: Against the blood red moon a tower stands |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. Aug/Sep 1927 (Herman 2006, p. 218); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 218
|
Legend, A |
14 |
I was a swordsman in the Pharaoh's days |
Writer of the Dark |
1986 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Legend of Faring Town, A |
28 |
Her house, a moulting buzzard on the Hill |
Verses in Ebony |
1975 |
A Rhyme of Faring Town |
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 180 Howard 2008, p. x
|
L'Envoi (1)N |
12 |
Live like a wolf then |
The Right Hook,I vol. 1, #1 |
Spring 1925 |
|
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 180
|
L'Envoi (2)N |
8 |
Harlots and choir girls |
The Right Hook,I vol. 1, #2 |
1925 |
|
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 180
|
L'Envoi (3)N |
7 |
Twilight striding o'er the mountain |
The Right Hook,I vol. 1, #3 |
1925 |
Twilight Striding O'er the Mountain |
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 180
|
L'Envoi (4)N |
12 |
Now flapper ridden |
|
|
|
|
From KING BAHTHUR'S COURT, a play written entirely in verse in an undated letter to Tevis Clyde Smith |
Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Lesbia (1)N |
56 |
From whence this grim desire? |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Earlier version than (2) (Herman 2006, p. 180); Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. June 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 180); PDL; the first two appearances were shorter by a few lines, and a couple words different |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Lesbia (2)N |
56 |
From whence this grim desire? |
Desire and Other Erotic Poems |
1989 |
|
|
Later version than (1) (Herman 2006, p. 180); the first two appearances were shorter by a few lines, and a couple words different |
Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Let it rest with the ages mysteries |
4 |
Let it rest with the ages mysteries |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 2: 1930-1932 |
Oct 2007 |
Untitled: Let it rest with the ages mysteries |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1931 (Herman 2006, p. 225); Not actually written by Howard, but a quote from WHERE CANNIKANS CLINKED by Charles Nichols Webb, which, to confuse matters, Robert Louis Stevenson also cited in a poem |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
"Let me dream by a silver stream" |
4 |
Let me dream by a silver stream |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 3: 1933-1936 |
2008 |
Untitled: ("Let me dream by a silver stream") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated |
Did NOT get included in the first edition of COLLECTED POETRY
|
Let me live as I was born to live |
4 |
Let me live as I was born to live |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: Let me live as I was born to live |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 225); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
Let the Gods Die |
16 |
Shatter the shrines and let the idols fall |
Weirdbook #10 |
1976 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Let us up in the hills ... |
|
Let us up in the hills ... |
Lewd Tales |
1987 |
Untitled: Let us up in the hills ... |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 225); From:T Songs of Bastards, Act 1, Scene 2 |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
Libertine |
4 |
I set my soul to a wild lute |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 179); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Lies, The |
23 |
Nothing from us can you gain, say the Lies |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Life (1)N |
14 |
About me rise the primal mists |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. January 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 181); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Life (2)N |
24 |
They bruised my soul with a proverb |
The Howard Collector #18 |
Autumn 1973 |
Youth Spoke - Not in Anger |
Wikisource |
Letter:K R. H. Barlow, June 14, 1934 (Herman 2006, p. 181) |
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Life is a cynical, romantic pig |
5 |
Life is a cynical, romantic pig |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 2: 1930-1932 |
Oct 2007 |
Untitled: Life is a cynical, romantic pig |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. February 1930 (Herman 2006, p. 225); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
"Life is a ladder ..." |
4 |
Life is ladder of cynical years |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Ladder of Life, The; Untitled ("Life is a ladder ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 178
|
Life is a lot of hooey |
4 |
Life is a lot of hooey |
Lewd Tales |
1987 |
Untitled: Life is a lot of hooey |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 225); From:T Songs of Bastards, Act 2, Scene 1 |
Herman 2006, p. 225
|
Life is the same ..." |
5 |
Life is the same, yet of many phases |
Unaussprechlichen Kulten #2 |
Jul 1992 |
Phases of Life, The; Untitled ("Life is the same ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308); FrenchP (Herman 2006, p. 192) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 192
|
Lilith |
16 |
They hurled me from the mire |
The Ghost Ocean and Other Poems of the Supernatural |
1982 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. October 1927 (Herman 2006, p. 181) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Limericks to Spank By |
15 |
There was a young girl from Siberia |
Desire and Other Erotic Poems |
1989 |
Untitled ("There was a young girl from Siberia") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305); Three 5-line limericks (Herman 2006, p. 181) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Lines to G. B. Shaw |
16 |
Oh, G.B.S., oh, G.B.S |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 181); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Lines Written in the Realization That I Must Die |
24 |
The Black Door gapes and the Black Wall rises |
Weird Tales |
Aug 1938 |
|
"Lines Written in the Realization That I Must Die" |
|
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Lion of Tiberias, The |
4 |
The rider on the wind with stars in his hair |
Echoes From An Iron HarpA |
1972A |
|
|
Epigraph:S The Lion of Tiberias (Lord 1976, p. 204) |
Lord 1976, p. 204 Herman 2006, p. 181
|
Listlessness |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Little Bell of Brass |
23 |
Tingle, jungle, dingle, tingle, hear my brazen tones |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("Tingle, jingle, dingle, tingle ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Little Brown Man of Nippon |
36 |
Little brown man of Nippon who apes the ways of the West |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("Little brown man from Nippon ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 305); Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. April 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 182) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Living Marble |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Lizzen my children and you shall be told |
6 |
Lizzen my children and you shall be told |
Robert E. Howard: Selected Letters: 1923-1930 |
Oct 1989 |
Untitled: Lizzen my children and you shall be told |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. September 1931 (Herman 2006, p. 226) |
Herman 2006, p. 226
|
Long Ago (1) |
|
|
Writer of the Dark |
1986 |
|
|
Somewhat different from version 2; last line is "Saw you, lighting with surprize." |
|
Long Ago (2) |
14 |
Long ago, long ago |
Writer of the Dark |
1986 |
|
|
Somewhat different from version 1; last line is "Ah, the rose in your dark hair." |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
"Long ere Priapus ..." |
14 |
Long ere Priapus pranced through groves Arcadian sunlight kissed |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
Gods of Easter Island, The; Untitled ("Long ere Priapus ...") |
"The Gods of Easter Island" |
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 176) |
Lord 1976, p. 176 Herman 2006, p. 171
|
"Long were the years ..." |
22 |
Long were the years, lifelong and deathly-bare |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Ecstasy of Desolation, The; Untitled ("Long were the years, life-long and deathly-bare. ...") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. October 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 166) |
Herman 2006, p. 166
|
Longfellow Revised |
12 |
Tell me not in senseless numbers |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Longing |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
The Long Trail |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Lost Altars |
4 |
Dust on column and carven frieze |
Wayfarer #4 |
1969 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Lost Antiquity |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Lost Galley, The |
28 |
The sun was brazen in the sky |
Singers in the Shadows |
1970 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Lost Mine, The |
|
|
|
|
The Lost San Saba Mine |
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Lost San Saba Mine, The |
60 |
Under the grim San Saba hills |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
The Lost Mine; Untitled: ("Under the grim San Saba hills") |
|
Letter:K H. P. Lovecraft, April 23, 1933 (Herman 2006, p. 182) |
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Love |
14 |
I have felt your lips on mine |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. January 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 182) |
Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Love is singing soft and low |
4 |
Love is singing soft and low |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: Love is singing soft and low |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. December 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 226); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 226
|
Love's Young Dream |
28 |
I saw the evil red light gleam |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
|
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Lunacy Chant |
32 |
Hear the brazen bugles rattle |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Lust |
12 |
I am a golden lure |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 182); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 182
|
Mad Meg Gill |
44 |
I found and altar in a misty land |
Up John Kane! and Other Poems |
1977 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 305 Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Madame Goose's Rhymes |
41 |
Hark, hark, the jackals bark |
Fantasy Crossroads #7 |
Feb 1976 |
Untitled ("Hark, hark, the jackals bark ...) |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Madhouse Ballads |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Madness of Cormac, The |
15 |
Lock your arm of iron |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated (Herman 2006, p. 183); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Mahomet |
|
Mahomet! Man of Mecca! |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("Mahomet! Man of Mecca!") |
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Maiden of Kercheezer, The |
20 |
She was snoozing on her sweezer |
The ProgressJ |
1 February 1924 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Man, A |
16 |
I tore a pine from the mountain crag |
Raucher Sand und Wilde Eichen |
1993 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. January 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 183); GermanP (Herman 2006, p. 183) |
Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Man Am I |
18 |
Man am I, and less than a beast, man, and more than a god |
The Ghost Ocean and Other Poems of the Supernatural |
1982 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 183
|
The Man in the Myth |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU; REH sent a copy of this poem to H. P. Lovecraft, who complimented it in a reply; the copy of the poem sent with the letter is also gone |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Man, The Master |
10 |
I saw a man going down a long trail |
Robert E. Howard Foundation Newsletter Volume 5 Number 3 |
Fall 2011 |
Song at Midnight (2) (SPURIOUS?) |
Wikisource |
PDL Alternative only mentioned in Herman (2006, p. 183) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Mankind |
72 |
The world has changed |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("The world has changed") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Many fell at the grog-shop wall |
2 |
Many fell at the grog-shop wall |
Robert E. Howard: Selected Letters: 1923-1930 |
Oct 1989 |
Untitled: Many fell at the grog-shop wall |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1931 (Herman 2006, p. 226) |
Herman 2006, p. 226
|
Marching Song of Connacht, The |
18 |
The men of the East are decked in steel |
The Howard Collector #16 |
Spring 1972 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. May 1930 (Herman 2006, p. 183) |
The version in the letter to TCS was fourteen lines long, later expanded to 18, and revised somewhat. Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 183
|
Marching Song of Connacht, The |
14 |
The men of the East are decked in steel |
|
|
|
|
|
Mark of the Beast |
24 |
Kissing the lips of the morning |
Weirdbook #9 |
1975 |
After a Flaming Night |
|
This poem is at the start of Act II, Scene ii of "Songs of Bastards"; From a letter to Tevis Clyde Smith, ca. March 1929 |
Lord 1976, p. 300 Herman 2006, p. 148 Thom, Herman & Woods, § A
|
Martin Luther |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Master-Drum, The |
27 |
The Master beat on his master-drum |
Night Images |
1976 |
Untitled ("The Master beat on his master-drum") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
"Master beat on his master-drum, The" |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Match a toad with a far-winged hawk |
58 |
Match a toad with a far-winged hawk |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: Match a toad with a far-winged hawk |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. undated (Herman 2006, p. 226); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 226
|
Mate of the Sea |
28 |
The stars beat up from the shadowy sea |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
The Heart of the Sea's Desire |
"The Heart of the Sea's Desire" |
Title created by Dale Hart for an untitled version but another draft was later found with the title Mate of the Sea (Herman 2006, p. 173) |
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
Medallions in the Moon |
(331 words) |
There is a gate whose portals are of opal and ivory, and to this gate I went one silent twilight ... |
Etchings in Ivory (Chapbook) |
1968 |
|
|
Third "prose poem" in the Etchings in Ivory cycle |
|
Memories (1)N |
24 |
I rose in the path of a hurtling dawn and I heard the ocean say |
Shangri L'Affaires |
1 April 1968 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
Memories (2)N |
16 |
Shall we remember, friend of the morning |
Fantasy Tales |
Autumn 1988 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. October 1927 (Herman 2006, p. 184); BritishP (Herman 2006, p. 184) |
Herman 2006, p. 184
|
Memories of Alfred |
18 |
Here in old time King Alfred broke the Danes |
The Ghost Ocean and Other Poems of the Supernatural |
1982 |
|
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
Men are toys on a godling's string ... |
4 |
Men are toys on a godling's string ... |
Lewd Tales |
1987 |
Untitled: Men are toys on a godling's string |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 226); From:T Songs of Bastards |
Herman 2006, p. 226
|
Men Build Them Houses |
56 |
Men build them houses on the street |
Verses in Ebony |
1975 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
"Men I have slain with naked steel" |
24 |
Men I have slain with naked steel |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Sword of Lal Singh, The; Untitled (Men I have slain with naked steel) |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 311); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 311) |
Lord 1976, p. 311 Herman 2006, p. 212
|
Men of the Shadows |
34 |
From the dim red dawn of Creation |
Always Comes EveningA |
1957A |
Untitled ("From the dim red dawn of Creation") |
"Men of the Shadows" |
From:T Men of the Shadows (Lord 1976, p. 180); Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 180) |
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
"Men say my years are few; yet I am old" |
20 |
Men say my years are few; yet I am old |
Science-Fantasy Correspondent #1 |
Dec 1975 |
Guise of Youth, The; Untitled ("Men say my years ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 172
|
Men That Walk with Satan |
24 |
The men that walk with Satan, they have forgot their birth |
Singers in the Shadows |
1970 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 184
|
The Mermaid |
5 7-line verses and a 6-line chorus repeated after each one |
The first came up / Was a little cabin boy |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Oh, The Stormy Winds; Untitled: ("The first came up / Was a little cabin boy ...") |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcAPJ77WfCs |
Mnemonic reconstructionV of an old folk song Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, February 4, 1925; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
A Mexican Girl |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Mick in Israel, A |
32 |
Old King Saul was a bold old scut |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 184); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 184
|
Mihiragula |
24 |
Out of the East the stark winds rise |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
Letter:K Harold Preece, c. October–November 1930 (Herman 2006, p. 185) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Mine But to Serve |
91 |
The moonlight glimmered white across the sands |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("The moonlight glimmered white ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Mingle my dust with the burning brand |
12 |
Mingle my dust with the burning brand |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: Mingle my dust with the burning brand |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. August 28, 1925 (Herman 2006, p. 226); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 226
|
Miser's Gold |
14 |
"Nay, have no fear. The man was blind," said she |
Fantasy Crossroads #8 |
May 1976 |
|
Wikisource |
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Mississippi Gals |
30 lines—one missing from source |
Come all you Mississippi girls and listen to my noise ... |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
|
|
Mnemonic reconstructionV; virtually identical to original; Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, March 17, 1927; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
"Mist and madness and mockery rule" |
4 |
Mist and madness and mockery rule |
THE COLLECTED LETTERS OF ROBERT E. HOWARD, VOLUME 2: 1930–1932 |
2007 |
Untitled: ("Mist and madness and mockery rule") |
|
Letter:K From a letter to Tevis Clyde Smith, ca. May 1930 |
INADVERTENTLY LEFT OUT OF COLLECTED POETRY
|
Misty Sea, A |
6 |
There is a misty sea beneath the earth |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("There is a misty sea ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Modest Bill |
132 |
Back in the summer of '69 |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Moment, A |
16 |
Let me forget all men a space |
The Howard Collector #13 |
Autumn 1970 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Monarchs |
4 |
These be kings of men |
The Cross Plainsman |
Aug 2004 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 185); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 185
|
The Moon |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
"The moon above the Kerry hills ..." |
22 |
The moon above the Kerry hills |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
Retribution; Black Michael's Story; The Song of Murtagh O'Brien; Untitled ("The moon above the Kerry hills ...") |
"Retribution" |
Titled Retribution from an untitled draft, Howard's original title The Song of Murtagh O'Brien was found on a later copy (Herman 2006, p. 196) |
Lord 1976, p. 183 Herman 2006, p. 196
|
Moon Mockery |
14 |
I walked in Tara's Wood one summer night |
Weird Tales |
Apr 1929 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 185 Howard 2008, p. x
|
Moon Shame |
34 |
The great black tower rose to split the stars |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
The Moon Woman; Voices of the Night |
"Moon Shame" |
Verse 4 of Voices of the Night (Herman 2006, p. 185); Two drafts exist (Herman 2006, p. 185); Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated (Herman 2006, p. 185) |
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Moon Woman, The |
|
|
|
|
Moon Shame |
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 180 Herman 2006, p. 186
|
Moonlight and shadows barred the land |
8 |
Moonlight and shadows barred the land |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: Moonlight and shadows barred the land |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. late 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 227); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 227
|
"The moonlight glimmered white ..." |
91 |
The moonlight glimmered white across the sands |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Mine But to Serve; Untitled ("The moonlight glimmered white ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 185
|
Moonlight on a Skull |
16 |
Golden goats on a hillside black |
Weird Tales |
May 1933 |
Futility |
"Moonlight on a Skull" |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1931 (Herman 2006, p. 186); Similar to Futility (Lord 1976, p. 181) |
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 186
|
Moor Ghost, The |
16 |
They haled him to the crossroads |
Weird Tales |
Sep 1929 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 186 Howard 2008, p. x
|
"Moses was our leader ..." |
64 + a 12-line revision |
Moses was our leader |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Odyssey of Israel, The; Untitled ("Moses was our leader ...") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 189); In multiple parts, part of a projected longer work (Herman 2006, p. 189) |
Herman 2006, p. 189
|
Mother Eve, Mother Eve, I name you a fool |
4 |
Mother Eve, Mother Eve, I name you a fool |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: Mother Eve, Mother Eve, I name you a fool |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. January 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 227); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 227
|
Mottoes of the Boy Scouts, The |
16 |
If you lie not on the grass |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. Aug/Sep 1927 (Herman 2006, p. 186); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 186
|
Mountains of California, The |
12 |
Grass and the rains and snow |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 186); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 186
|
Murky the night |
7 |
Murky the night |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled: Murky the night |
|
Unfinished (Lord 1976, p. 312) |
Lord 1976, p. 312 Herman 2006, p. 227
|
Musings (1)N |
10 |
The little poets sing of little things |
Witchcraft & Sorcery #5 |
Jan-February 1971 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 186 Howard 2008, p. x
|
Musings (2)N |
12 |
To every man his trade |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 186) |
Herman 2006, p. 186
|
My brother he was an auctioneer |
56 |
My brother he was an auctioneer |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: My brother he was an auctioneer |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November–December 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 227); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 227
|
"My brothers are blond and calm of speech" |
16 |
My brothers are blond and calm of speech |
Verses in Ebony |
1975 |
Alien; Untitled ("My brothers are blond and calm of speech") |
|
Tentative titleB |
Lord 1976, p. 300 Herman 2006, pp. 148–149 Thom, Herman & Woods, § A
|
My Children |
18 |
Now God be thanked that gave me flesh and thew |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. December 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 187); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
My empty skull is full of dust |
56 |
My empty skull is full of dust |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
A Poet's Skull |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, undated (Herman 2006, p. 193) |
Herman 2006, p. 193
|
"My heart is a silver drum tonight" |
14 |
My heart is a silver drum tonight |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Call of Pan, The; Untitled ("My heart is a silver drum tonight") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 156) |
Herman 2006, p. 156 Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
"My name is Baal ..." |
57 |
My name is Baal; I walked the earth of yore |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Baal; Untitled ("My name is Baal ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 301) |
Lord 1976, p. 301 Herman 2006, p. 151 Thom, Herman & Woods, § B
|
My Old Beaver Cap |
48 lines, with a 2-line refrain repeated twelve times |
I'll sing you a song as I go long |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
|
https://www.loc.gov/collections/todd-and-sonkin-migrant-workers-from-1940-to-1941/?q=beaver+cap |
Mnemonic reconstructionV of a folk song; Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, February 15, 1926; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
My Sentiments Set to Jazz |
|
Tum, tum, slam the drum! |
The Right Hook, vol. 1, #3I |
1925 |
|
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Mysteries, The |
14 |
|
Yesteryear #4 |
Oct 1989 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. February 1929 (Herman 2006, p. 187); Cycle of three poems: "The Invocation" (4 lines), "The Chorus of the Chant" (2 lines), and "The Sacrifice" (8 lines) |
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Mystic |
7 |
There is a strange and mystic land |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 187); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Mystic Lore |
4 |
A wizard who dwelt by Drumnakill |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("A wizard who dwelt in Drumnakill") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Myth, The |
24 |
Sages have said we leave our sex on earth |
Desire and Other Erotic Poems |
1989 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Nancy Hawk - A Legend of Virginity |
148 |
Nancy Hawk spread wide her knees |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 187); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Native Hell |
20 |
As I was born in the slaughter yards |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Nectar |
24 |
Where I stand at the gates of Paradise |
The JuntoH |
Sep 1929 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Negro Girl, A (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
8 |
Favored child of a lucky star, born in a tolerant land |
Desire and Other Erotic Poems |
1989 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Nelly Till (?) |
24 |
Down by the cane brake ... |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
|
http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/09/down-in-canebrake-lyrics-sound-file.html |
Mnemonic reconstructionV of "Down by the Canebrake" (aka "Nancy Gill," "Come, Love, Come"); Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, April 9, 1926; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
Neolithic Love Song |
8 |
Fast fall the years as / Leaves of the autumn time |
Neolithic Love Song |
1987 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 8, 1923 (Herman 2006, p. 187) |
Herman 2006, p. 187
|
Never Beyond the Beast |
16 |
Rise to the peak of the ladder |
The Ghost Ocean and Other Poems of the Supernatural |
1982 |
Untitled ("Rise to the peak of the ladder") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, pp. 187–188
|
Niflheim |
34 |
Grim land of death, what monstrous visions lurk |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
A Nigger Is Hanged |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Night |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU; two different versions listed, one 24 lines, one 32 lines |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
"Night falls" |
18 |
Night falls |
Weirdbook #11 |
1977 |
Nocturne; Untitled ("Night falls") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
"Night in the county of Donegal" |
28 |
Night in the county of Donegal |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Farewell, Proud Munster; Untitled ("Night in the county of Donegal") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 304); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 304) |
Lord 1976, p. 304 Herman 2006, p. 168
|
Night Mood |
8 |
It is my mood to walk in silent streets |
Singers in the Shadows |
1970 |
Night-Mood |
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
The Night the Nanette Sank |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Night Winds, The |
32 |
The night winds whisper across the grass |
Verses In Ebony |
1975 |
Untitled ("The night winds whisper ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
"The night winds whisper ..." |
32 |
The night winds whisper across the grass |
Verses In Ebony |
1975 |
Night Winds, The; Untitled ("The night winds whisper ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 306) |
Lord 1976, p. 306 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
Nights to Both of Us Known |
28 |
The nights we walked among the stars |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
|
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. June 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 188) |
Herman 2006, p. 188
|
Nisapur |
20 |
The day that towers, sapphire kissed |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
Untitled ("The day that towers ...") |
"Nisapur" |
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 181) |
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
No Man's Land |
28 |
Across the wastes of No Man's Land, the grey-clad slayers came |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("Across the wastes of No Man's Land ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
No More the Serpent Prow |
8 |
The House of Asgard passes with the night |
The Howard Collector #14 |
Spring 1971 |
Untitled ("The House of Asgaard passes ...") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 181) |
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
"'No more!' they swear ..." |
10 |
"No more!" they swear; I laugh to hear them speak |
The Howard Collector #18 |
Autumn 1973 |
Legacy of Tubal-Cain, The; Untitled ("'No more!' they swear ...") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 179) |
Lord 1976, p. 179 Herman 2006, p. 180
|
Noah was my applesauce |
24 |
Noah was my applesauce |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: Noah was my applesauce |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 227); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 227
|
Nocturne |
18 |
Night falls |
Weirdbook #11 |
1977 |
Untitled ("Night falls") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
Not Only in Death They Die |
20 |
The old man leaned on his rusty spade |
Magazine of Horror #28 |
Jul 1969 |
|
|
PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 188
|
Now and Then |
9 |
Twas twice a hundred centuries ago |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("'Twas twice a hundred centuries ago") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308); Unfinished (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, pp. 188–189
|
"Now anthropoid and leprous shadows lope" |
18 |
Now anthropoid and leprous shadows lope |
Amazing Stories |
Mar 1986 |
All Hallows Eve; Untitled ("Now anthropoid and leprous shadows lope") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 300) |
Lord 1976, p. 300 Herman 2006, p. 149 Thom, Herman & Woods, § A
|
Now bright, now red, the sabers sped among the ... |
8 |
Now bright, now red, the sabers sped among the |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: Now bright, now red, the sabers sped |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1923 (Herman 2006, p. 228); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 228
|
"Now come the days of high endeavor ..." |
98 |
Now come the days of high endeavor and / The blare of brazen trumpets through the land. |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
A Fable for Critics; Untitled ("Now come the days of high endeavor ...") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, ca. November–December 1928 |
|
"Now hark to this tale of long ago" |
19 |
Now hark to this tale of long ago |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
When Men Were Bold; Untitled ("Now hark to this tale of long ago") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 313); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 313); Unfinished (Lord 1976, p. 313) |
Lord 1976, p. 313 Herman 2006, p. 238
|
"Now is a summer come out of the sea" |
24 |
Now is a summer come out of the sea |
Amra (vol. 2, no. 8) |
Nov-December 1959 |
But the Hills Were Ancient Then; Untitled ("Now is a summer come out of the sea") |
Wikisource |
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 171); Title created by George Scithers (Herman 2006, p. 156); PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 171 Herman 2006, p. 156 Thom, Herman & Woods, § B
|
"Now that the kings have fallen" |
32 |
Now that the kings have fallen |
The Howard Collector #11 |
Spring 1969 |
Where Are Your Knights, Donn Othna?; Untitled ("Now that the kings have fallen") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 191) |
Lord 1976, p. 191 Herman 2006, p. 239
|
"Now the stars are all gleaming ..." |
32 |
Now the stars are all gleaming |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: ("Now the stars are all gleaming ...") |
|
Mnemonic reconstructionV Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, May 14, 1928; Howard's rendition of "a song I heard once some time ago and have heard only once," sung to him by a "wandering willy" to whom he'd given a lift; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY
|
Nun |
4 |
I have anchored my ship to a quiet port |
The Cross Plainsman |
Aug 2006 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 189); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 189
|
O the Brave Sea-Rover |
4 |
Oh, the rover hides in Aves when he runs |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
Untitled: O THE BRAVE SEA-ROVER |
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 189
|
Oaks, The |
5 |
The great grey oaks by the banks of the river |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("The great gray oaks ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 189
|
An Oath |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Ocean-Thoughts |
19 |
The strong winds whisper o'er the sea |
The Cross Plainsman |
Aug 2006 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, August 21, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 189); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 189
|
Odyssey of Israel, The |
64 + a 12-line revision |
Moses was our leader |
Shadows of Dreams |
1989 |
Untitled ("Moses was our leader ...") |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. March 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 189); In multiple parts, part of a projected longer work (Herman 2006, p. 189) |
Herman 2006, p. 189
|
"O'er lakes agleam ..." |
8 |
O'er lakes agleam the old gods dream |
Always Comes Evening |
1957 |
Chant of the White Beard; Untitled ("O'er lakes agleam ...") |
|
From:T Men of the Shadows (Lord 1976, p. 172); Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 172); From:T Men of the Shadows (Herman 2006, p. 157) |
Lord 1976, p. 172 Herman 2006, p. 157 Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Oh, Babylon, Lost Babylon |
23 |
Bab-ilu's women gazed upon our spears |
|
|
Empire's Destiny—minus one line |
Wikisource |
"Empire's Destiny" is slightly different, one line longer; the appearance in NIGHT IMAGES is the first complete appearance; PDL; Pen name: Patrick HowardO |
Lord 1976, p. 181 Herman 2006, p. 189
|
Oh, the road to glory lay |
4 |
Oh, the road to glory lay |
n/a |
n/a |
Untitled: Oh, the road to glory lay |
|
From:T The Pit of the Serpent (attributed to Mushy Hansen) (Herman 2006, p. 228); Never published separately (Herman 2006, p. 228) |
Herman 2006, p. 228
|
Oh, The Stormy Winds |
5 7-line verses and a 6-line chorus repeated after each one |
The first came up / Was a little cabin boy |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
The Mermaid; Untitled: ("The first came up / Was a little cabin boy ...") |
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcAPJ77WfCs |
Mnemonic reconstructionV of an old folk song Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, February 4, 1925; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
Oh, we are little children marching on to Hell! |
2 |
Oh, we are little children marching on to Hell! |
|
|
Untitled: Oh, we are little children marching on to Hell! |
|
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 228); From:T People of the Winged Skulls (Herman 2006, p. 228) |
Herman 2006, p. 228
|
"Oh, ye who tread the narrow way" |
4 |
Oh, ye who tread the narrow way |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Exhortation' Untitled ("Oh, ye who tread the narrow way") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 304); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 304) |
Lord 1976, p. 304 Herman 2006, p. 167
|
Old Ballad |
12 |
They trapped the Lion on Shamu's plain |
Always Comes EveningA |
1957A |
One of 5 chapter headings for the CONAN tale "The Scarlet Citadel" |
|
Epigraph:S The Scarlet Citadelt (Lord 1976, p. 206) |
Lord 1976, p. 206 Herman 2006, p. 189
|
An Old Border Ballad |
5 |
Mike O'Mara rode up from Sonora |
The VulturesA |
1973A |
|
Embedded in the story "Showdown at Hell's Canyon" (aka "The Judgment of the Desert"); possible mnemonic reconstruction, but as yet, no antecedent has been found |
|
|
Old Faro Bill was a man of might |
20 |
Old Faro Bill was a man of might |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
Untitled: Old Faro Bill was a man of might |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. November 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 228); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 228
|
Old Gods Brood, The |
44 |
The mallet clashes on the nail |
Fantasy Book #21 |
September 1986 |
And Man Was Given the Earth to Rule; For Man Was Given the Earth to Rule |
|
Listed as "And . . ." in Fantasy Book;"The Old Gods Brood" is from Glenn Lord's title to an untitled typescript. |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 169
|
Old Ones, The |
8 |
They lumber through the night |
Echoes From An Iron HarpA |
1972A |
The Thing on the Roof; Out of the Old Land |
|
Justin GeoffreyR (Herman 2006, pp. 213–214); This is the published title, The Old Ones was the draft title, from The Thing on the Roof(Herman 2006, p. 214) |
Lord 1976, p. 206 Herman 2006, pp. 191, 213–214
|
Old Rime |
3 |
One fled |
|
|
Rogues in the House (verse heading) |
|
This poem has only appeared with the story |
|
On the Beach |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
On the Lakes of the Pontchartrain |
16 |
I asked her if she'd marry me |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 1: 1923-1929 |
Jun 2007 |
|
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ad8RVexRUoQ |
Mnemonic reconstructionV of an old folk song; Letter:K Robert W. Gordon, February 15, 1926; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
On the Lakes of the Pontchartrain |
12 |
'Twas on one bright March morning |
A Means to Freedom: The Letters of H. P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard Volume 2: 1930–1932 |
2011 |
|
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ad8RVexRUoQ |
Mnemonic reconstructionV of an old folk song; Letter:K H. P. Lovecraft, ca. October 1932; NOT INCLUDED IN COLLECTED POETRY |
|
On With the Play |
14 |
Up with the curtain, lo, the stage is set |
The Howard Collector #17 |
Autumn 1972 |
Untitled ("Up with the curtain, lo, ...") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 182) |
Lord 1976, p. 182 Herman 2006, p. 190
|
One Black Stain, The |
45 |
They carried him out on the barren sand where the rebel captains died |
The Howard Collector #2 |
Spring 1962 |
|
Wikisource |
A Solomon Kane poem; PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 182 Herman 2006, p. 190
|
One Blood Strain |
22 |
Now autumn comes and summer goes |
The Collected Letters of Robert E. Howard, Volume 2: 1930-1932 |
Oct 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. September 1932 (Herman 2006, p. 190) PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 190
|
"One slept beneath the branches dim" |
44 |
One slept beneath the branches dim |
Red Shadows |
1968 |
Return of Sir Richard Grenville, The; Untitled ("One slept beneath the branches dim") |
|
Originally untitled (Lord 1976, p. 183); A Solomon Kane poem |
Lord 1976, p. 183 Herman 2006, p. 196
|
One Who Comes at Eventide |
16 |
I think when I am old a furtive shape |
Modern American Poetry |
1933 |
|
Wikisource |
PDL |
Lord 1976, p. 182 Herman 2006, p. 190 Howard 2008, p. x
|
Only a Shadow on the Grass |
4 |
The tribes of men rise up and pass |
Weirdbook #13 |
1978 |
Untitled ("The tribes of men rise up and pass") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 190
|
Open Window, An |
4 |
Beyond the Veil what gulfs of Time and Space? |
Weird Tales |
Sep 1932 |
|
"An Open Window" |
From:T The House in the Oaks (Lord 1976, p. 182); Justin GeoffreyR (Lord 1976, p. 182) |
Lord 1976, p. 182 Herman 2006, p. 191 Howard 2008, p. x
|
Open Window, The |
20 |
I remember my sister Eve |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
|
|
Pen name: Patrick HowardO (Lord 1976, p. 299) |
Lord 1976, p. 299 Herman 2006, p. 191
|
Opium Dream, An |
100 |
God is God and Mahommed his prophet |
Altars and Jesters; Opium Dream, A |
1974 |
Altars and Jesters |
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 300 Herman 2006, p. 149 Thom, Herman & Woods, § AHerman 2006, p. 191
|
Orientia |
14 |
Castinet, castanet! / When the floating sun has set |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
|
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, June 23, 1926 (Herman 2006, p. 191); PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 191
|
Out in front of Goldstein's |
8, plus seven additional 2-line choruses—22 lines total |
Out in front of Goldstein's |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Untitled: Out in front of Goldstein's |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, c. December 1928 (Herman 2006, p. 228); In addition to the opening 8-line song parody of "East Side, West Side (The Sidewalks of New York)," there are also seven two-line choruses scattered throughout the letter; PDL |
Herman 2006, p. 228
|
Out of Asia the tribesmen came |
4 |
Out of Asia the tribesmen came |
The Cross Plainsman |
Aug 2004 |
Untitled: Out of Asia the tribesmen came |
Wikisource |
Letter:K Tevis Clyde Smith, July 30, 1923 (Herman 2006, p. 229); PDL; |
Herman 2006, p. 228
|
Out of the Deep |
24 |
The blind black shadows reach inhuman arms |
The Fantasy Fan |
Sep 1934 |
A Drum Begins to Throb; Voices Waken Memory, The |
Wikisource |
PDL; Part 1 of the Voices of the Night cycle |
Lord 1976, p. 190 Herman 2006, p. 237
|
Out of the Old Land |
8 |
They lumber through the night |
Echoes From An Iron HarpA |
1972A |
The Thing on the Roof; The Old Ones |
|
Justin GeoffreyR (Herman 2006, pp. 213–214); This is the published title, The Old Ones was the draft title, from The Thing on the Roof(Herman 2006, p. 214) |
Lord 1976, p. 206 Herman 2006, pp. 191, 213–214
|
"Out of the Texas desert ..." |
31 |
Out of the Texas desert, over the Rio Grande |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Bandit, The; Untitled ("Out of the Texas desert ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 301); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 301) |
Lord 1976, p. 301 Herman 2006, p. 153 Thom, Herman & Woods, § B
|
The Outbound Trail |
|
|
n/a |
n/a |
|
|
LostU |
Thom, Herman & Woods, § C
|
Outcast, The |
12 |
Forth from the purple and feats of the palace |
The Grim Land and Others |
1976 |
Untitled ("Forth from the purple ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 191
|
Outgoing of Sigurd the Jerusalem-Farer, The |
23 |
The fires roared in the skalli-hall |
Verses in Ebony |
1975 |
|
|
|
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 191
|
Outworn Story, An |
21 |
There come long days when the soul turns sick |
Fantasy Tales |
Summer 1987 |
Untitled ("There come long days ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308); BritishP (Herman 2006, p. 184) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 191
|
"Over the hills the winds ..." N |
14 |
Over the hills the winds of the seas |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Winds of the Sea, The (1); Untitled ("Over the hills the winds ...") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 314) |
Lord 1976, p. 314 Herman 2006, p. 240
|
"Over the hills the winds ..." N |
16 |
Over the hills the winds of the seas |
The Last of the Trunk Och Brev I Urval |
Mar 2007 |
Winds of the Sea, The (2); Untitled ("Over the hills the winds ...") |
|
|
Herman 2006, p. 240
|
Over the Old Rio Grandey |
12 |
Over the old Rio Grandey |
A Rhyme of Salem Town and Other Poems |
2002 |
Untitled ("Over the old Rio Grandey") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 308); An early workC (Lord 1976, p. 308) |
Lord 1976, p. 308 Herman 2006, p. 192
|
"Over the place the lights go out" |
47 |
Over the place the lights go out |
Robert E. Howard's Fight Magazine #4 |
Oct 1996 |
In the Ring; Untitled ("Over the place the lights go out") |
|
Tentative titleB (Lord 1976, p. 307) |
Lord 1976, p. 307 Herman 2006, p. 175
|