The very short story ‘Skulls and Orchids’ were presented to both Weird Tales and Argosy but didn’t sell. Howard listed it as v.v.s (very short story) but it could probably also be called a prose poem.
Search Results for: collected poetry
Proem
Medallions in the Moon.
A short poetic story starting with (“This is a dream that comes to me often…”)
Alternative title: Untitled (“I carved a woman out of marble when”). Published in Poet’s Scroll January 1929. 14 lines.
A collection of six prose poems, “Proem,” “Flaming Marble,” “Skulls and Orchids,” “Medallions in The Moon,” “The Gods That Men Forget,” and “Bloodstones and Ebony.”
A 579 words long poem.
An article written by Rick Lai about the Legend of El Borak. Best known for his tales of heroic fantasy, Robert E. Howard (1906-36) also wrote contemporary tales of adventure for the pulps. Howard was influenced by Talbot Mundy, a major writer for Adventure in the 1920’s. Mundy’s heroes were American and British adventurers roving around India and the Middle East. Utilizing Mundy’s settings, Howard fashioned his own band of protagonists. Among Howard’s soldiers of fortune, the most famous is Francis Xavier Gordon.