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Lord of Samarcand and Other Adventure Tales of the Old Orient (The Works of Robert E. Howard) PDF

478 Pages·2005·1.42 MB·English
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Preview Lord of Samarcand and Other Adventure Tales of the Old Orient (The Works of Robert E. Howard)

1 2 3 4 LordofSamarcand 5 andOtherAdventureTales 6 oftheOldOrient 7 8 9 10 11 12 [First Page] 13 [-1], (1) 14 15 16 Lines: 0 to 21 17 18 ——— 364.3999pt PgVar 19 * 20 ——— 21 Normal Page 22 * PgEnds: PageBreak 23 24 [-1], (1) 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagei//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard 1 2 3 4 TheWorksofRobertE.Howard 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 [-2], (2) 14 15 16 Lines: 21 to 31 17 18 ——— 389.8099pt PgVar 19 * 20 ——— 21 Normal Page 22 * PgEnds: PageBreak 23 24 [-2], (2) 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageii//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard 1 2 3 Lord of Samarcand 4 5 and Other Adventure Tales 6 7 8 of the Old Orient 9 10 11 12 RobertE.Howard 13 [-3], (3) 14 15 16 Lines: 31 to 65 17 18 ——— 22.59999pt PgVar 19 * 20 ——— 21 Normal Page 22 * PgEnds: PageBreak 23 EditedbyRustyBurke 24 Withanintroductionby [-3], (3) 25 PatriceLouinet 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 UniversityofNebraskaPress 34 Lincoln 35 36 KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageiii//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard 1 ©2005byREHProperties,Inc. 2 Introduction©2005byPatriceLouinet 3 Allrightsreserved.ManufacturedintheUnited 4 StatesofAmerica.SetinFredSmeijers’ QuadraatbyKimEssman.DesignedbyRichard 5 Eckersley.Printedandboundby 6 EdwardsBrothers,Inc. 7 (cid:1)(cid:1) 8 LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData 9 Howard,RobertErvin,1906–1936. 10 LordofSamarcandandotheradventuretales 11 oftheoldOrient/RobertE.Howard; 12 editedbyRustyBurkewithanintroductionby 13 PatriceLouinet. p.cm. isbn0-8032-2422-2(cl.:alkalinepaper)– [-4], (4) 14 isbn0-8032-7355-x(pbk.:alkalinepaper) 15 1.Orient–Sociallifeandcustoms–Fiction. 16 2.Adventurestories,American. i.Burke, Lines: 65 to 118 17 Rusty. ii.Title. 18 ps3515.0842a62005b 813'.52–dc22 ——— 205.1839pt PgVar 19 2004026473 * 20 ——— 21 Normal Page 22 * PgEnds: PageBreak 23 24 [-4], (4) 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageiv//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard 1 2 3 contents 4 5 6 IntroductionbyPatriceLouinet vii 7 Tales 8 RedBladesofBlackCathay 3 9 (WithTravisClydeSmith) 10 HawksofOutremer 32 11 TheBloodofBelshazzar 60 12 TheSowersoftheThunder 89 13 LordofSamarcand 129 [-5], (5) 14 Timur-lang 165 15 TheLionofTiberias 166 16 TheShadowoftheVulture 195 Lines: 118 to 202 17 GatesofEmpire 234 18 ——— TheRoadoftheEagles 270 0.2pt PgVar 19 20 HawksoverEgypt 306 ——— 21 TheRoadofAzrael 344 Normal Page 22 Miscellanea PgEnds: TEX 23 TheSlavePrincess 24 (Synopsis) 385 [-5], (5) 25 TheSlavePrincess 26 (Unfinisheddraft) 387 27 TwoagainstTyre 28 (Unfinisheddraft) 407 29 TheTrackofBohemund 30 (Unfinisheddraft) 421 31 TheShadowoftheHun 32 (Unfinisheddraft) 439 33 “HeknewdeBracy...” 34 (Untitledfragment) 455 35 “ThewindfromtheMediterranean...” 36 (Untitledfragment) 456 KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagev//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard Contents 1 RecapofHowardLamb’s“The 2 WolfChaser” 457 3 “ThePersianshadallfled... 4 (Untitleddraft) 458 5 SourceAcknowledgments 461 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 [-6], (6) 14 15 16 Lines: 202 to 210 17 18 ——— 376.16672pt PgVar 19 * 20 ——— 21 Normal Page 22 * PgEnds: PageBreak 23 24 [-6], (6) 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 vi KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagevi//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard 1 patrice louinet 2 3 Introduction 4 5 6 7 8 “Thereisnoliterarywork,tome,halfaszestfulasrewritinghistoryin 9 the guise of fiction. I wish I was able to devote the rest of my life to 10 that kind of work. I could write a hundred years and still there would 11 bestoriesclamoringtobewritten,bythescores.Everypageofhistory 12 teemswithdramasthatshouldbeputonpaper.Asingleparagraphmay 13 bepackedwithactionanddramaenoughtofillawholevolumeoffiction [-7], (7) 14 work,”explainedRobertE.Howardin1933.Heimmediatelyaddedthat 15 he“couldnevermakealivingwritingsuchthings,though;themarkets 16 aretooscanty,withrequirementstoonarrow,andittakesmesolongto Lines: 210 to 244 17 completeone.”Indeed,by1933Howard’shistoricalfictionwasbehind 18 him; between 1930 and 1933 he had completed only eleven Oriental ——— 0.0pt PgVar 19 tales.Severalofthese,however,areregularlymentionedonlistsofhis 20 bestfiction.Itisnocoincidencethatthosefouryearsalsocorrespondto ——— 21 thedatesofpublicationoftheFarnsworthWright–editedpulpmagazine Normal Page 22 OrientalStories. PgEnds: TEX 23 FarnsworthWright,aseditorofWeirdTales,theera’smostinfluential 24 weirdfictionmagazine,hadinlargemeasurecontributedtotheascension [-7], (7) 25 ofHoward’scareer.UnderWright’stutelage,Howardblossomedfroman 26 amateurTexaswritertooneofthemagazine’smostimportantcontribu- 27 tors.ItwaspartlythankstoWright’swillingnesstolethisauthorsexplore 28 newformsoffictionthatHowardwasallowedtodevelopthestoriesof 29 KullofAtlantisandlaterofConantheCimmerianwhichweresomarkedly 30 differentandoriginal.InJune1930,whenWrightinformedHowardthat 31 thecompanywaslaunchingOrientalStories,henaturallyaskedtheTexan 32 tocontribute.Howardwassufficientlyinterestedatthisprospecttocome 33 back home from vacation to start working on a tale, or so he wrote a 34 friend.Howardhadbeeninterestedinhistoricalfictionsinceatleast1921, 35 whenhediscoveredAdventure,thebestadventurefictionmagazineofits 36 time.ItwasinthepagesofthismagazinethatHowardfirstencountered KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagevii//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard Introduction 1 thewritingsofseveralauthorswhoweretoinfluencehishistoricalfiction, 2 most notably Harold Lamb. However, Howard had never succeeded in 3 selling fiction to Adventure, and Wright’s proposition must have been a 4 welcomeone. 5 After a few false starts, and after writing an adventure story set in 6 an eastern locale, Howard hired his friend Tevis Clyde Smith to do the 7 researchonhisfirsthistoricaltale,“RedBladesofBlackCathay.”Soon 8 after these two stories had been accepted, Howard completed his first 9 soloOrientalstory.Heevidentlyappreciated–andtookadvantageof– 10 thecreativefreedomheknewhecouldfindinaWright-editedmagazine. 11 Commentingonthatstory,hewrote:“IlatelysoldataletoOrientalStories 12 inwhichIcreatedthemostsombercharacterIhaveyetattempted.The 13 storyiscalled‘HawksofOutremer,’andIgot$120forit.Thecharacteris [-8], (8) 14 CormacFitzgeoffrey....OneofthemainthingsIlikeaboutFarnsworth 15 Wright’smagazinesisthatyoudon’thavetomakeyourheroessuchutter 16 saints.ItookCormacFitzgeoffreyintotheEastonaCrusadetoescapehis Lines: 244 to 262 17 enemiesandamconsideringwritingaseriesoftalesabouthim.” 18 ——— Howard’s series about the exploits of Cormac Fitzgeoffrey was an 7.69997pt PgVar 19 abortive one, as only one other tale was completed (a third was begun 20 ——— butleftunfinished).ThisisaninterestingfeatureofHoward’sOriental 21 Normal Page tales. Although he is best known for his series centered on characters 22 PgEnds: TEX suchasKull,Conan,BranMakMorn,orSolomonKane,inthiscasehe 23 soon realized that the times, places, and historical events that held his 24 interestwerefartoonumerousandscatteredforasinglecharacter;the [-8], (8) 25 possibilitiesweretoointerestingtoignore.In1931,justaftercompleting 26 “TheSowersoftheThunder,”hewroteafriendaboutpossiblesubjects 27 forOrientaltales: 28 29 AndBabartheTigerwhoestablishedtheMogulruleinIndia–and 30 theimperialphaseinthelifeofBaibarsthePanther,thesubjectof 31 mylaststory–andtheriseoftheOttomans–andtheconquestof 32 ConstantinoplebytheFifthCrusade–andthesubjugationoftheTurks 33 bytheArabsinthedaysofAbuBekr–andthegradualsupplanting 34 oftheArabmastersbytheirTurkishslaveswhichculminatedinthe 35 conquest of Asia Minor and Palestine by the Seljuks – and the rise 36 of Saladin – and the final destruction of Christian Outremer by Al viii KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageviii//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard Introduction 1 Kalawun–andthefirstCrusade–GodfreyofBouillon,Baldwinof 2 Boulogne,Bohemund–SigurdtheJorsala-farer–Barbarossa–Coeur 3 deLion.Yegods,Icouldwriteacenturyandstillhaveonlytappedthe 4 reservoirofdramaticpossibilities.IwishtoHellIhadadozenmarkets 5 forhistoricalfiction–I’dneverwriteanythingelse. 6 From mid-1931 to late 1932, Howard wrote the best of his Oriental 7 tales, all aimed at Farnsworth Wright’s magazine. “The Sowers of the 8 Thunder”waswritteninJune1931,“LordofSamarcand”aroundOctober 9 ofthatyear,“TheLionofTiberias”inJune1932,and“TheShadowofthe 10 Vulture” in the fall of 1932. The other stories in this volume were also 11 writtenaboutthesametimebutwereeitherleftunfinishedorrejectedby 12 Wrightandsoldonlyyearslater. 13 ReadingthesestoriesandexaminingHoward’slistofthesubjectsand [-9], (9) 14 characters that interested him, one can see the strong affinity between 15 Howard’sandHaroldLamb’sfiction.Inthetalesofbothmenthefavorite 16 Lines: 262 to 283 subjectistheconfrontationbetweentheEastandtheWest.Whetherthe 17 18 protagonistsbeCrusaders,Cossacks,orrenegades;thetimestheeleventh ——— 19 ortheseventeenthcentury;theplacesAleppo,Damas,orVienna,these 6.89998pt PgVar 20 stories are linked by a common denominator: all take place near that ——— 21 symbolicandever-fluctuatinglinethatmarksthefrontierbetweenanEast Normal Page 22 andaWestforevergrapplingateachother’sthroats. PgEnds: TEX 23 ItwasthusnotacoincidencethatHoward’sfirstattemptatwritingan 24 OrientalstorywascontemporarytohisreadingLamb’s“TheWolfChaser” [-9], (9) 25 (AdventureMagazine,April30,1922).Lamb’staledealswithanexilewho 26 leavesChristendom,tryingtofindreliefinthelandoftheTatars,fighting, 27 dyingandfindingredemptioninthewarswhichtearthoselands–themes 28 dear to Howard’s Oriental stories. The Texan first wrote a short recap 29 ofLamb’sstory,thenproceededtowriteashortstory,orratheroutline 30 of a story, which apparently didn’t go beyond the second page. These 31 fascinatingdocumentswereidentifiedassuchonlyveryrecently(theyare 32 notlistedinTheLastCelt,GlennLord’sauthoritativebiographyofHoward) 33 andarepublishedinthisvolumeforthefirsttime. 34 OneshouldnotmistakeHoward’sconceptionofthisfrontierforthatof 35 Kipling,however:thelinedrawnbytheTexanissignificantlymuddierand 36 darker.Howard’svisionisapessimisticone,tosaytheleast.HisCrusades ix KimE—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageix//LordofSamarcandandOtherAdventureTalesoftheOldOrient/RobertE.Howard

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For five centuries of Crusades, European armies of believers, fanatics, and mercenaries warred with the followers of the Prophet for control of Asia Minor and Palestine. From Jerusalem to Vienna, the frontier between West and East saw battle and bloodshed, treachery and butchery on a scale hitherto
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