Tolometh


by Clark Ashton Smith



In billow-lost Posedonis

I was the black god of the abyss:

My three horns were of similor

Above my double diadem;

My one eye was a moon-bright gem

Found in a monstrous meteor.


Incredible far peoples came,

Called by the thunders of my fame,

And passed before my terraced throne

Where titan pards and lions stood,

As pours a never-lapsing flood

Before the winds of winter blown.


Below my glooming architraves,

One brown eternal file of slaves

Came in from mines of chalcedon,

And camels from the long plateaus

Laid down their sard and peridoz,

Their incense and their cinnamon.


The star-born evil that I brought

Through all the ancient land was wrought:

All women took my yoke of shame;

I reared, through sumless centuries,

The thrones of hell-black wizardries,

The hecatombs of blood and flame.


But now, within my sunken walls,

The slow blind ocean-serpent crawls,

And sea-worms are my ministers,

And wandering fishes pass me now

Or press before mine eyeless brow

As once the thronging worshippers...


And yet, in ways outpassing thought,

Men worship me that know me not.

They work my will. I shall arise

In that last dawn of atom-fire,

To stand upon the planet's pyre

And cast my shadow on the skies.


The End