Saturday, January 31, 2026

The Sorcerer Departs

I pass… but in this lone and crumbling tower,
Builded against the burrowing seas of chaos,
My volumes and my philtres shall abide:
Poisons more dear than any mithridate,
And spells far sweeter than the speech of love…
Half-shapen dooms shall slumber in my vaults
And in my volumes cryptic runes that shall
Outblast the pestilence, outgnaw the worm
When loosed by alien wizards on strange years
Under the blackened moon and paling sun.

—fragment of an unfinished poem by Clark Ashton Smith (Spring, 1944)

As The Ensorcellment of January draws to a close, I find myself with a sense of unfinished business. Unlike last year’s The Shadow Over August, this series proved more difficult to bring into focus and I can’t quite shake the feeling that I did not do as good a job with it as Clark Ashton Smith deserves. I think that speaks to the particular challenge Smith presents as a subject. His work is less immediately graspable than Lovecraft’s, less defined by a single mythos or set of ideas, and more rooted in atmosphere, language, and sensibility. Smith’s influence is more easily felt rather imitated, which makes it harder to point to clean lines of descent, especially in something like roleplaying games.

I would be less than honest, too, if I didn’t acknowledge that this January has been a more distracted one than I had anticipated. An unexpected family matter demanded time and attention, inevitably affecting not just this series but all my projects over the past few weeks. Such things have a way of reshaping one’s plans, even when one would prefer otherwise. If The Ensorcellment of January sometimes felt less cohesive and expansive than I had originally hoped, the reasons lie as much there as anywhere else.

Still, I hope the series has had some value. If it has prompted even a few readers to seek out Smith’s stories or poems or to look again at familiar fantasy and science fiction through the lens of his luxuriant imagination, then it has served its intended purpose. Clark Ashton Smith remains one of the great wellsprings of the fantastic, a writer whose visions of decadence, desolation, and dark wonder continue to resonate in subtle but enduring ways.

Naturally, the end of this series does not spell the end of Smith's appearances on Grognardia. His influence on fantasy, weird fiction, and the hobby of roleplaying games is too deep and too strange to be confined to a single month. If, as I suspect, The Ensorcellment of January has fallen short of fully doing his unique genius justice, perhaps that is only fitting. Smith, after all, cannot easily be contained and that, in no small part, is why I return to him and his works again and again. I hope more of you will now do the same.

10 comments:

  1. I've really enjoyed this series, and fwiw spotted nothing incohesive about it. I've read through a Penguin anthology of CAS stories before, but as a result of your posts I'm planning to get a least one collection of a complete cycle. I've particularly enjoyed the wee excerpts of his writing like the one you posted here. Thanks for doing the series - I hope your family matters are resolved

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  2. You did well, though you concentrated on his fantasy works (which makes sense considering the name you gave to your overview). Maybe next year you could do an overview of his modern and science fiction stories.

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  3. Jim Hodges---
    Nah, ya done good, man. I have come now to know much more about this writer and his works and his style than I did, and it's strictly because of your efforts here. So thanks!

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  4. Thanks for focusing on Smith this January. It's been great! I hope you and your family are well.

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  5. I have enjoyed your CAS writings immensely! I think you are right about the challenge of writing about Smith as a poet. Indeed he must be felt instead of heard or read.

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  6. I agree with everyone else here. This series was fantastic. I have enjoyed CAS’s works since James introduced me to him back during the first age of this blog. I really wanted James to spend more time digging into CAS’s works in detail. That’s why I voted in favor of James’s focusing on CAS when he put it to a vote last year.

    I got my wish. It was a GREAT month’s worth of reading, retrospective, and analysis. Bravissimo!!

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  7. Great month and great work, James. Yet, I share the same sense you do. It is uncanny. CAS is a slippery subject, almost as if the attempt to encapsulate his works itself results in the attempt sliding subtly and inextricably astray ever so slightly. He is as a form seen writhing in one’s peripheral vision, yet when one attempts to stare directly at him and his works…something…pulls your vision aside so that it rests not squarely upon its subject.

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  8. "If it has prompted even a few readers to seek out Smith’s stories or poems or to look again at familiar fantasy and science fiction through the lens of his luxuriant imagination, then it has served its intended purpose."

    I have the The Eldritch Dark permanently bookmarked. Purpose served.

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  9. Same! This series served it's purpose well.

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  10. I think you did splendidly. The series definitely rekindled my desire to read CAS-unlike Howard and Lovecraft, Smith has never made it to the re-read pile. Time to rectify that.

    (Also, I am an English teacher, and did my view any scrivener who manages to excite people about a writer and the ideas in their stories is doing God's work, as my mother, also an English teacher, used to say.)

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