These plays and stories have for their continual theme the passing away of gods and men and cities before the mysterious power which is sometimes called by some great god's name but more often "Time." His travelers, who travel by so many rivers and deserts and listen to sounding names none heard before, come back with no tale that does not tell of vague rebellion against that power, and all the beautiful things they have seen get something of their charm from the pathos of fragility. This poet who has imagined colors, ceremonies and incredible processions that never passed before the eyes of Edgar Allen Poe or of De Quincey, and remembered as much fabulous beauty as Sir John Mandeville, has yet never wearied of the most universal of emotions. . . . He can show us the movement of sand, as we have seen it where the seashore meets the grass, but so changed that it becomes the deserts of the world. Only the sand knew and arose and was troubled and lay down again and the wind knew.
3 Books To Know Fantasy Literature
Lord Dunsany, George MacDonald, William Morris, August Nemo
bookFifty-One Tales
Lord Dunsany
bookTales of War
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Strange Journeys of Colonel Polders : A Novel
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Time and the Gods
Lord Dunsany
audiobookEssential Novelists - Lord Dunsany : the father of fantasy
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Three Infernal Jokes
Lord Dunsany
bookBig Book of Best Short Stories - Specials - Fantasy : Volume 7
Kenneth Grahame, Lord Dunsany, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Oscar Wilde, John Kendrick Bangs, August Nemo
bookThe Tents of the Arabs
Lord Dunsany
bookThe Lord Dunsany Collection
Lord Dunsany
bookTales of War
Lord Dunsany
bookFive Plays
Lord Dunsany
book