Echoes from an Iron Harp

Echoes from an Iron Harp is a collection of poems by Robert E. Howard with illustrations by Alicia Austin. It was published in 1972 by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc. in an edition of 1,079 copies. Two of the poems previously appeared in Fire and Sleet and Candlelight, edited by August Derleth.

Echoes from an Iron Harp
Dust-jacket from the first edition
AuthorRobert E. Howard
IllustratorAlicia Austin
Cover artistAlicia Austin
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenrePoetry
PublisherDonald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc.
Publication date
1972
Media typePrint (Hardback)
Pages109 pp
OCLC402778

Contents

  • Introduction, by Glenn Lord
  • "Age Comes to Rabelais"
  • "Belshazzar"
  • "But the Hills Were Ancient Then"
  • "Cimmeria"
  • "A Dawn in Flanders"
  • "The Day That I Die"
  • "Dreams of Nineveh"
  • "The Dust Dance"
  • "The Dweller in Dark Valley"
  • "Earth–born"
  • "Fables for Little Folk"
  • "'Feach Air Muir Lionadhi Gealach Buidhe Mar Or'"
  • "Futility"
  • "Heritage"
  • "Illusion"
  • "John Ringold"
  • "Kid Lavigne Is Dead"
  • "The Kissing of Sal Snooboo"
  • "A Lady's Chamber"
  • "The Last Day"
  • "Lost Altars"
  • "Memories"
  • "A Moment"
  • "Moonlight on a Skull"
  • "Not Only in Death They Die"
  • "Private Magrath of the A.E.F."
  • "Reuben's Brethren"
  • "Roundelay of the Roughneck"
  • "The Sands of Time"
  • "The Sea"
  • "The Skull in the Clouds"
  • "Skulls and Dust"
  • "Skulls over Judah"
  • "Slumber"
  • "A Song of Defeat"
  • "The Song of Horsal's Galley"
  • "A Song of the Legions"
  • "A Song for Men That Laugh"
  • "A Sonnet of Good Cheer"
  • "Sonora to Del Rio"
  • "Surrender"
  • "Tarantella"
  • "Thor's Son"
  • "Timur–Lang"
  • "To Certain Orthodox Brethren"
  • "A Vision"
  • "A Warning"
  • "Where Are Your Knights, Donn Othna?"
  • "Who Is Grandpa Theobald?"
  • "The Years Are as a Knife"
  • "Headings"
gollark: We do *need* large-scale things. I feel like that's quite important.
gollark: > December 2012, a massive solar storm knocks out the power grid. Three hundred million Americans are suddenly faced with a survival situation. They have no water, electricity or fuel. Food rapidly disappears from the store shelves, not to be replaced. Only three percent will survive. Those three percent will have much in common. What does it take to be one of them?
gollark: * e
gollark: Economics tend to happen regardless of your opinion on them.
gollark: Being fictional, that cannot actually tell you what would happen.

References

  • Chalker, Jack L.; Mark Owings (1998). The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998. Westminster, MD and Baltimore: Mirage Press, Ltd. pp. 321–322.


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