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Classic Ghost Stories

The Nameless Offspring by Clark Ashton Smith

Classic Ghost Stories

Tony Walker

Fiction, Drama, Science Fiction

4.9686 Ratings

🗓️ 22 July 2022

⏱️ 70 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Clark Ashton SmithClark Ashton Smith was an American writer born in Long Valley, California in 1893 who died in Pacific Grove, California in 1961, aged 68.  They are actually four hundred and twenty eight miles apart which is longer than the whole of England.  For comparison I have only made two hundred yards from the place I was born to the place I now live. He lived most of his life in the small town of Auburn, California. He was madly neurotic, agoraphobic and as with Lovecraft, the existential unease he no doubt felt in life, intrudes into his stories, giving them their unsettling quality, I would guess.Because of his nerves, he was educated at home and was intelligent with a fantastic memory and educated himself by reading, including The Encyclopaedia Britannica all volumes cover to cover more than once.He taught himself French and Spanish and translated poetry from those languages, including Baudelaire’s The Flowers of Evil. Naturally.Clark was a weird poet and one of the now defunct West Coast Romantics. I can see him playing guitar for Mazzy Star (if he’d been spared). He was one of the ‘big three’ authors of Weird Tales, the others being Robert E Howard and H P Lovecraft. As a teen (though in those days I wouldn’t have been familiar with that word) I lapped up all three, though I preferred Ashton Smith. There is something more poetic and less rude about his style than either the barbarous, muscle-bound stories of Howard and the off-kilter, prolix and baroque tales of H P.  Though, as I say, I read them all, aye. All.We have done an Ashton Smith story before: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSkA3Hq8qIU (The Maker of Gargoyles).This story: The Nameless Offspring is another tomb story. We seem to have done a run of these recently: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pSp2_ZPOyA (The Catacomb), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eC9epxbb-JU (The Secret of The Vault). And previously we did The https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iC-kCEb_oTE (Fall of the House of Usher).It was published in Strange Tales in 1932, and in those days publishing in these pulp magazine was the standard process.  Many of the writers of pulps purveyed Cosmic Horror. Of course the primary voice here is H P Lovecraft and his  taste seems to have stamped itself on his followers and his approval, given them a significant advantage. Lovecraft was a great admirer of Ashton Smith.You will recall that to write a classic story in this period: first set it somewhere obscure either in time or distance from your average reader> Make the weather bad. Have a gothic edifice: a castle, though in this case and old (Cornish from the name) Manor House will do. Have an aged retainer, an obscure history that is not fully discussed, an aristocrat, poor light then you just need a monster and you’re on. This tale has it all. And let’s face it what Hollywood producers say (though not to me) ‘We want more of the same, but different.”  This is what we have. Smith is great with descriptions. I prefer his prose to Lovecraft. IT was the fashion to use obscure words and lots of them, but he does it in a less awkward way than Lovecraft and one that is not as open to parody.The story begins with a little background that makes sense of what is to follow along with a warning that he never foresaw the terrible truth, etc. he goes on a trip and inadvertently comes across the evil Tremoth Hall. How likely is that actually? The place receives few visitors in common with nearly every Manor House in all the stories we have read. None of them are open to the National Trust. I read one recently by Sarah Perry (author of Melnoth the Wanderer and the Essex Serpent) iSupport the showVisit us here: www.ghostpod.orgBuy me a coffee if you're glad I do this: https://ko-fi.com/tonywalkerIf you really want to help me, become a Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/barcudMusic by The Heartwood Institute: https://bit.ly/somecomeback Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Everybody dies, don't they?

0:10.5

Everybody come back, isn't that so?

0:14.4

You tried to get into the locked drawer today, didn't you?

0:17.1

How do the dead comeback, mother?

0:19.9

What's the secrets of dead come back?

0:21.7

The Nameless Offspring by Clark Ashton Smith.

0:27.9

Many and multiform are the dim horrors of earth, infesting her ways from the prime.

0:35.8

They sleep beneath the unturned stone.

0:39.3

They rise with a tree from its roots.

0:42.3

They move beneath the sea and in subterranean places.

0:48.3

They dwell in the inmost Adita.

0:51.3

They emerge betimes from the shudden sepulchre of haughty bronze and the low grave

0:59.0

that is sealed with clay. There may be some that are long known to man and others as yet unknown

1:08.0

that abide the terrible latter days of their revealing.

1:12.6

Those which are the most dreadful and the loathliest of all are happily still to be declared.

1:20.6

But among those that have revealed themselves aforetime and have made manifest their veritable presence.

1:30.3

There is one which may not openly be named for its exceeding foulness.

1:38.3

It is that spawn which the hidden dweller in the vaults has begotten upon mortality.

1:46.4

From the necronomicon of Abdul al-Hazred.

1:51.4

In a sense, it is fortunate that the story I must now relate

1:55.3

should be so largely a thing of undetermined shadows

1:58.8

of half-shaped hints and forbidden inferences.

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