Harry Clarke's 'Silence' – Tales of Mystery & Imagination, Poe 1919
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Harry Clarke's 'Silence' – Tales of Mystery & Imagination, Poe 1919

Harry Clarke, the Irish master of Art Nouveau pen-and-ink illustration, brings Edgar Allan Poe's prose poem 'Silence — A Fable' to life with his signature obsessive stippling, sinuous organic forms, and suffocating black void. A luminous robed figure stands atop a crag inscribed 'SILENCE,' surrounded by alien lotus-like flora, serpentine creatures, and writhing vegetation that anticipates cosmic horror aesthetics. Clarke's hyper-detailed pointillist technique and grotesque botanical imagination make this one of the most visually dense Poe illustrations ever produced.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Harry Clarke
Era: Edwardian (1901-1914)
Decade: 1910s
Country: Ireland
Coolness: 7/10

Less Buck Rogers rocket fuel, more Lovecraftian dread — Clarke's hallucinatory biological horror and obsessive stippled darkness push this well beyond decorative into genuinely unsettling fever-dream territory.

Text in image:

SILENCE BUT THERE WAS NO VOICE THROUGHOUT THE VAST, ILLIMITABLE DESERT 84

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