|
|
| (5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) |
| Line 1: |
Line 1: |
| − | {{Construction|reason=This article is a stub; it should probably be turned into a disambig page since "The King in Yellow" can refer to a tome (as in this case), an entity, a short story, and the anthology containing the story.|date=06:53, 5 July 2022 (UTC)}}
| + | "The King in Yellow" might refer to: |
| | + | * ''[[The King in Yellow (tome)]]'' - the fictional play featured as a running theme in Chambers' anthology |
| | + | * ''[[The King in Yellow (fiction)]]'' - [[Robert W. Chambers]]' anthology of weird stories that inspired the Hastur Mythos |
| | + | * "[[The King in Yellow (story)]]" - a short story from Chambers' anthology |
| | + | * [[King in Yellow]] - a character from Chambers' fictional play, appearing in the anthology |
| | | | |
| − | <blockquote><center>''“Along the shore the cloud waves break,<br>The twin suns sink behind the lake,<br>The shadows lengthen<br>In Carcosa.<br>Strange is the night where black stars rise,<br>And strange moons circle through the skies,<br>But stranger still is<br>Lost Carcosa.<br>Songs that the Hyades shall sing,<br>Where flap the tatters of the King,<br>Must die unheard in<br>Dim Carcosa.<br>Song of my soul, my voice is dead,<br>Die thou, unsung, as tears unshed<br>Shall dry and die in<br>Lost Carcosa.”''<br>Cassilda’s Song, Act I, scene 2<br>English translation, 1895.</center></blockquote>
| + | {{Template:Disambig}} |
| − | | |
| − | This anonymously written play first appeared in France around the year 1895. Originally published in France, it was soon after seized and destroyed by the government. The play is in two acts, and the blandness of the first act only allows the second to shock the reader even more. The English translation is less explicit and the version most often encountered. It was printed in a thin, black octavo, the Yellow Sign embossed on the cover.
| |
| − | The play itself is a dream-like fantasy that leaves readers, actors, and audience subject to dreams sent by Hastur.
| |
| − | | |
| − | ==The Original French==
| |
| − | This version is more potent.
| |
| − | | |
| − | ==The English Translation==
| |
| − | This version is far more common.
| |
| − | | |
| − | ==Xanthic Folio==
| |
| − | Aset of tablets in what is said to be elder thing glyphs, found in China. These deal with the King in Yellow and his court at some length. Why a prehuman document should do so is unknown.
| |
| − | | |
| − | ==Yellow Codices==
| |
| − | These English and French translations of the Xanthic Folio have circulated among jaded artists and writers for years. They are believed to be the inspiration for The King in Yellow even though its contents are quite different from the play, the Codices seem to convey it to the reader, almost subconsciously.
| |
| − | | |
| − | ==Spells==
| |
| − | Only the Xanthic Folio contains a spell: Create Time Warp.
| |
| − | | |
| − | [[Category:Mythos:Tomes|King in Yellow]]
| |
| − | [[Category:HasturCycle]]
| |
| − | __NOTOC__
| |