Among the more interesting aspects of Clark Ashton Smith’s literary output is the way many of his best-known stories fall into a series of loosely connected “cycles.” Each cycle is defined by a shared setting, one that all the stories belonging to it inhabit, even if those stories are separated by vast stretches of time or only lightly connected by recurring names, places, or legends. While these cycles share certain common elements – decadence, black magic, sardonic humor, and a pervasive sense of decline – each nevertheless possesses a character and atmosphere all its own. A story set in Hyperborea feels different from one set in Zothique or Averoigne, not merely in geography but also in tone, mood, and underlying assumptions about history, magic, and humanity’s place in the cosmos.
Since I plan to write about several of Clark Ashton Smith’s settings over the course of the coming month, it seems worthwhile to begin with a short series of introductory posts outlining these worlds for readers who may not yet be familiar with them. Each post will offer a brief overview of a particular setting, highlighting its distinctive features and thematic concerns. I’ll also include a selective bibliography of some of the key stories associated with each setting, many of which I’ve already examined in earlier Pulp Fantasy Library posts. This is by no means meant to be an exhaustive or encyclopedic survey. Rather, I simply wish to establish a shared foundation, one that will make it easier to explore these settings in greater depth in later posts devoted to Smith’s most enduring and influential creations.
In this first installment, I’ll focus on two of Smith’s best-known settings – Averoigne and Hyperborea –with additional settings to follow in Parts II and III of the series.
Averoigne
Averoigne is a fictional region in southern France, with its own unique geography and history. It's a land of walled cities like Vyones (home to a grand cathedral and a scheming archbishop), winding rivers such as the Isoile, dense sinister forests, and ruined castles like Fausseflammes and Ylourgne. Set during the Middle Ages and early modern period, supernatural elements abound in the tales of Averoigne, like sorcery (often practiced covertly, even by clergy), vampires, werewolves, ghouls, and demonic intrusions. The Church holds sway but is frequently helpless or corrupt against these forces, which enables Smith to blend religious satire with elements of horror. The Averoigne stories often explore themes of lust, forbidden knowledge, and the clash between faith and paganism.The major stories in this cycle are:
- "The End of the Story" (1930): The earliest written story of Averoigne, it takes place in the 18th century. In it, a law student uncovers a forbidden tome at Périgon Abbey, leading to a romantic encounter with a lamia in a ruined chateau.
- "A Rendezvous in Averoigne" (1931): A troubadour and his lover stumble into a vampire-infested castle, blending romance with gothic horror.
- "The Maker of Gargoyles" (1932): A lustful stonemason's creations come alive to terrorize Vyones, serving as karmic punishment.
- "The Holiness of Azédarac" (1933): A bishop-sorcerer uses time magic to send a monk back to pagan times, where he finds love and questions his faith.
- "The Colossus of Ylourgne" (1933): A necromancer assembles a giant corpse to ravage the land, stopped by a heroic wizard in an epic tale of dark sorcery.
- "The Beast of Averoigne" (1933): An alien serpent creature arrives via comet, pitting science against religion as a sorcerer battles it.
- "Mother of Toads" (1938): A grotesque witch seduces a young man with potions, leading to horrific revenge.
- "The Enchantress of Sylaire" (1941): A dreamer enters a fairy realm, defeats a werewolf, and chooses eternal love over mortal life.
Hyperborea
Hyperborea is an ancient, lost land roughly where Greenland stands today, existing in a warm prehistoric era (possibly the Miocene or Pleistocene) before glaciers engulfed it. It's a jungle-clad realm of ebony mountains, opulent cities like Commoriom (abandoned due to dire prophecies) and Uzuldaroum, as well as northern locales like Mhu Thulan. Dinosaurs roam alongside mammoths and saber-tooths, while wizards, thieves, and elder gods like Tsathoggua dominate. The themes of cosmic indifference, ironic comeuppance, and the encroaching ice-doom of the land permeate the stories, often with black humor amid the horror. Smith's Hyperborean stories are the most sword-and-sorcery in content and tones of his work.The key stories of this cycle are:
- "The Tale of Satampra Zeiros" (1931): A pair of thieves raid a ruined temple, awakening a monstrous guardian in ironic horror.
- "The Door to Saturn" (1932): Sorcerer Eibon flees to an alien planet, encountering bizarre creatures in a comedic quest.
- "The Testament of Athammaus" (1932): An executioner fails to kill a regenerating criminal tied to ancient gods.
- "The Weird of Avoosl Wuthoqquan" (1932): A greedy lender chases cursed gems into a monster's lair.
- "The Ice-Demon" (1933): Treasure hunters face a malevolent glacier in a tomb city.
- "The Seven Geases" (1934): A hunter endures escalating curses, bouncing through underworlds to a punchline end.
- "The Coming of the White Worm" (1941): A wizard confronts a deceptive iceberg-entity enslaving others.


Jim Hodges---
ReplyDeleteSome of CAS's tales remind me they are spiritual ancestors of Tanith Lee's excellent Paradys series.
I recently read all of the Averoigne stories as preparation for running Castle Amber (in 5E, alas). I noticed two recurring themes: sinister/deceitful clergy (Azédarac and Théophile), and temptresses who are left ambiguous as to whether they have the protagonist's interests at heart (Sephora and Moriamis). I think the latter are fascinating because they are presented in a sort of chivalric romantic fashion but at the same time you get the sense that the hero is doomed. And of course, "Mother of Toads" presents a more explicit version of "sexual horror", though there's no chivalric gloss on that one!
ReplyDeleteYes, Moriamis and Sylaire have more than a little of Circe about them, but the Toad Momma... just gnarley.
DeleteInteresting that there is crossover between his cycles. The Ring and Book of Eibon are mentioned in "The Beast of Averoigne" and Eibon appears in person in "The Door to Saturn". It reminds me of a referee running multiple RPG campaigns in different regions or eras of an ongoing setting.
ReplyDeleteAnd of course, the Book of Eibon (Eibon "is" CAS in the same way that Randolph Carter "is" HPL) is mentioned in various forms in 7-8 of Lovecraft's tales.
DeleteMay I suggest links to the stories' pages on Eldritch Dark so that your visitors can read them?
ReplyDeleteAll the links in previous posts to Eldritch Dark seem to lead to a 404 page at Hippocampus Press.
DeleteNot to me. I can read The Beast of Averoigne: http://www.eldritchdark.com/writings/short-stories/11/the-beast-of-averoigne
DeleteIn 1929, a year before the invention of Avergoine (and before Hyperborea began in earnest), CAS wrote this to Lovecraft:
ReplyDelete"I bought a copy of Amazing Stories not long ago, and was appalled by the increasing pedantry of its contents. I wish there was a real weird magazine, with you, Long, Wandrei and myself on the permanent staff of contributors!"
I've often wondered if the monster in the Tale of Satampras Zeiros is the same man/monster from the Testament of Athammaus.
ReplyDeleteThe Heretic
I just read the latter testament for the first time and I am sure it must be. But that leaves the question of who built that temple to Tsathoggua in the first tale; did the monster do this in the intervening centuries?
DeleteI read somewhere that Smith was criticizing oppressive religion in his Averoigne tales. I've read several of those tales, and they struck me more as criticizing religious hypocrisy. Anyone have thoughts on this?
ReplyDeleteWhat AC for Hyperborean Dinosaur leather armor?
ReplyDeleteAre the pictured volumes recommended anthologies?
ReplyDeleteOr has CAS received critical editions like the Variorum for HPL or the Splatterpress publications for Vance?
So far as I am aware, there are no critical editions of CAS. There was a complete collection of his fiction published in six volumes by Nightshade some years ago, but I think it may be out of print.
DeleteOf the two accompanying illustrations, only the Averoigne one is in print. It's from MIT Press. The other is from the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series edited by Lin Carter in the '70s. You can still find used copies of it, but there are probably other collections available.
I’m partial to the artwork of that Ballantine series, even if in that aspect the Hyperborea volume looks like one of the weaker entries.
DeleteI have the Nightshade books, all hardcovers. Now apparently worth something. :) They are a very complete version of all the CAS stories, including variations and notations on corrections made to try and honor the author's true intent. Unlike Lovecraft, CAS wasn't adverse to revising his prose based upon editor's requests as he really needed the money so he could avoid manual labor to support his parents.
ReplyDeleteI love all of CAS's settings, I thought both of these were well defined and excellent settings. Reading the D&D module Castle Amber after reading all the Averoigne stories makes you realize how much Tom Moldvay loved the stories and wanted to incorporate them.