Monday, October 27, 2025

Pulp Fantasy Library: The Cairn on the Headland

Though Weird Tales was without question the premier magazine of the pulp era, it was hardly alone in exploring the strange and macabre. Among its would-be rivals was Strange Tales of Mystery and Terror, edited by Harry Bates, a capable writer himself, best remembered for his 1940 story “Farewell to the Master,” which later inspired the classic film The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951). Strange Tales set out to challenge Weird Tales directly and earned a solid reputation for the high quality of its fiction and the caliber of its contributors, including such luminaries as Clark Ashton Smith and Robert E. Howard. Sadly, the magazine’s ambitions outpaced its fortunes. Its publisher went bankrupt after only seven issues, released between 1931 and 1933.

One of the most intriguing stories to appear in Strange Tales was Robert E. Howard’s “The Cairn on the Headland,” published in the magazine’s final issue in January 1933. The tale stands out not only for its content, which is an imaginative fusion of Norse mythology and Christian legend, but also for what it reveals about Howard’s own enduring fascination with that theme. As he often did, Howard wrote and rewrote versions of this story in his search for a suitable market. Unlike his friend H.P. Lovecraft, who generally shelved a piece once Weird Tales editor Farnsworth Wright rejected it, Howard was relentless in finding new outlets for his fiction. Yet the persistence with which he revisited this particular idea suggests he found something deeply compelling within it and I’m inclined to agree.

The story begin as “Spears of Clontarf,” a historical adventure centered on the Battle of Clontarf  (1014 AD) and featuring Turlogh Dubh O’Brien, one of Howard’s recurring Irish heroes. When he failed to sell it, REH recast the material as “The Grey God Passes,” introducing more overt fantasy and mythic elements to the same historical events. This, too, went unpublished in his lifetime. Finally, Howard returned once more to the subject, transforming it into a modern story of supernatural horror. In this final version of the idea, the Battle of Clontarf becomes a haunting memory intruding into the present, and Howard at last succeeded in finding a publisher. It's this version of the story I want to discuss today, as the final entry in this month's horror-themed Pulp Fantasy Library posts.

The protagonist of "The Cairn on the Headland" is James O’Brien, an Irish-American scholar devoted to medieval Irish history. Fluent in Gaelic and steeped in the great chronicles of his ancestral homeland, O’Brien embodies Howard’s ideal of the learned yet passionate antiquarian. His career, however, is blighted by Ortali, a strange blackmailer who holds false evidence linking O’Brien to a murder. Ortali believes O'Brien will one day unearth some great treasure through his researches and hopes to benefit from them, hence his extortion. Trapped, O'Brien has little choice but to work side by side with Ortali, even as his hatred for him grows.

During a visit to Dublin, the two men explore the titular cairn on a headland overlooking the city. The locals shun it, believing it cursed since the time of Clontarf, when the Irish under King Brian Boru threw off centuries of Viking domination. O’Brien is uncertain whether the cairn commemorates the victors or their foes, but he is certain it should not be disturbed. Ortali scoffs at his superstition, vowing to return at midnight and dig beneath the stones for treasure, mockingly wearing a sprig of holly, which the villagers say must never come near the place.

Later, O’Brien encounters a mysterious woman dressed in archaic clothing who introduces herself as Meve MacDonnal. She gives him the lost Cross of Saint Brandon [sic], insisting he will soon need it. Only later does O’Brien realize that Meve MacDonnal has been dead for centuries, her grave not far away. That night, in troubled sleep, he dreams – or is it remembers? – his former life as Red Cumal, an Irish warrior who fought at Clontarf. In this vision, Cumal helps defeat a one-eyed Viking chieftain who reveals himself as Odin in human form. Wounded by a spear marked with a cross, the god lies helpless, trapped in mortality. Cumal knows that holly must never touch Odin’s body and he and his comrades seal him beneath a cairn.

O’Brien awakens from his dream to find Ortali gone. He rushes to the headland and arrives just as the blackmailer uncovers the body buried within, unchanged after a thousand years. A sprig of holly falls from Ortali’s lapel and the corpse stirs. Odin reawakens, shedding human guise to become a towering, demonic spirit wreathed in auroral light. His first act is to destroy Ortali with a blast of lightning. O’Brien, remembering the cross he'd been given, raises it high. The relic shines with unearthly brilliance, banishing the pagan god in an act resembling an exorcism. At dawn, O’Brien stands alone among the shattered stones, free of both Ortali and Odin.

The story's fusion of Norse myth and Christian legend is unusual, though not entirely without precedent in Howard's writing, especially when one considers his many Solomon Kane yarns. The Battle of Clontarf becomes not just a struggle for Ireland’s freedom but also a cosmic contest between Light and Darkness, Christ and Odin. Howard’s Odin is no noble All-Father but instead a demon, an ancient power of frost and cruelty whose defeat marks the turning of an age. 

Such stark moral contrasts are typical of Howard, but in “The Cairn on the Headland,” they take on an unmistakably theological tone. The story reflects the medieval Christian reinterpretation of pagan gods as fallen angels. Howard’s Odin undergoes precisely this transformation, stripped of his majesty and recast as a malevolent spirit lingering on the edges of history. Yet, for all its moral gravity, the tale remains quintessentially Howardian. O’Brien, though a scholar by nature, is no passive intellectual. Confronted with a supernatural threat, he meets it head-on, triumphing not only over Odin himself but also over the lingering shadow of his own moral weakness and subjugation to Ortali’s blackmail.

“The Cairn on the Headland” may have begun as an unsold historical adventure, but in its final form it stands among Howard’s more distinctive weird tales. It's a compelling fusion of myth, theology, and pulp vitality. It also serves as a kind of bridge between his historical fiction and his horror stories, where the heroic and the haunted intermingle. On the storm-swept coast of Ireland, faith and myth collide and the old gods are finally banished, not by priests or saints, but by a man of courage who embodies Howard’s enduring belief in strength, will, and the indomitable human spirit.

8 comments:

  1. I once got the whole run of Strange Tales, in a series of nice replicas, and read every story in them. Pretty high quality stories.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the Pulp Fantasy Library review, James. Interesting story, almost a proto-Indiana Jones adventure yarn with a two-fisted scholar against a corrupt scholar and a horror out of archeological/occult myth.

    As in Conan, REH's pride of his Irish/Scottish heritage shines through.

    After Strange Tales went bankrupt, the title was acquired by Marvel Comics (then called Atlas) in the 1950s. It was a horror and fantasy anthology comic for a decade until the superhero comicbook craze began in the 1960s. Then it carried stories about Doctor Strange, the Human Torch, Nick Fury - Agent of SHIELD, and others. The title probably inspired Doctor Strange's name. Small world.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I did not know this. Thanks for sharing the information. I feel as if the history of how comic books continued, both literally and figuratively, the traditions of the earlier pulps is not as well understood as it should be.

      Delete
    2. The creators of the first comicbook superheroes grew up on the pulps, so it's only natural that they inspired them.

      Here's a good summation of those inspirations:

      https://comicbookhistorians.com/the-influence-of-pulp-fiction-on-the-golden-and-silver-age-of-comic-books/

      Delete
    3. I never knew that the Marvel Strange Tales was the continuation of a pulp. I own some of the Strange Tales issues from the sixties.

      Delete
    4. Hi Corathon, Sorry I was unclear. Marvel (or Atlas) got the rights to the name "Strange Tales" and used it as the title of their comic. I don't know if that qualifies it as a literal continuation but maybe a spiritual one. :)

      Delete
  3. The interpretation of pagan gods as fallen angels was definitely given an interesting medieval flavor following the Christianization of the Nordic/Saxon pagans.

    However, I would not go so far as to call it a "re-interpretation." After all, not only were the first century Christians explicitly warned that pagan gods were, in fact, demons (and the spirits - disembodied during the Flood - of the descendants of the Fallen Angels of Genesis 6), but the Septuagint (Greek translation of the Old Testament) translates Psalm 96 to identify the "false gods" explicitly as demonic entities. That interpretation predates Christianity (in the Greek translation) by hundreds of years.

    More than that, Deuteronomy (1500 BC? I don't really remember) in Hebrew explicitly states that the generation following the Flood (the days of Peleg, or division into nations) turned to those newly disembodied spirits as gods:

    "They provoked him (YHWH) to jealousy with strange gods, with abominations provoked they him to anger.
    They sacrificed unto devils, not to God (the Creator); to gods whom they knew not, to new gods that came newly up, whom your fathers feared not."

    The medieval twist is definitely in REH's theokinetical adventures, but I would argue that even the Dark Puritan Solomon Kane exposes Howard's labryinthine pathway to deeper ancient truths about the tangible, substantive reality of the ancient counterfeit gods. The wicked sorcerers of Hyborian Age, between the years when the oceans drank Atlantis and the gleaming cities, and the years of the rise of the Sons of Aryas, all point to Howard being more directly influenced by Moses' own reflection on the post-Flood rise of the new pagan gods, descendants of the Older antediluvian heavenly entities and their earthly civilizations (such as Atlantis).

    Side Note: Jack Kirby's "New Gods" were inspired indeed by the "ancient astronaut" books of Erich von Daniken...but he took the name directly from Deuteronomy.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The Battle of Clontarf had an important place in Irish nationalist pseudo-history, which Howard presumably picked up, as the battle in which Ireland defeated the Norse invaders--sometimes specifically Christian Ireland defeating the heathen invaders.

    In reality,

    i) The aristocrats involved on both sides almost certainly saw Ireland and the Irish as possessions over which they were fighting, not as a community to which they owed any obligation.

    ii) One side consisted of the Kingdom of Leinster, the Norse-ruled Kingdom of Dublin, and Norse allies, and the other of the High King of Ireland, his vassals, and Norse mercenaries. So there were native Irish people on both sides, and Norse people on both sides.

    iii) The 'native' and 'foreign' aristocrats were related by marriage--probably more closely than either were to 'their' people. Sigtrygg Silkbeard was the nephew of the King of Leinster, but Sigtrygg was supposedly Norse and the King of Leinster Irish. Brian Boru was married to Gormlaith, Sigtrygg's mother.

    ReplyDelete