
Harry Clarke's 'They Swarmed Upon Me' – Poe's Tales of Mystery, 1919
A reader in 1919 encountering this illustration would have felt a chill of visceral dread — the dense stippled darkness seems to breathe. Harry Clarke's extraordinary pen-and-ink mastery renders a tormented figure overwhelmed by swarming, writhing forms, while a cold mechanical eye descends from above. The hallucinatory background teems with coiling phantoms and ghostly bodies, making the black-and-white composition feel suffocatingly alive. It is a perfect visual embodiment of Poe's descent into madness — claustrophobic, obsessive, and utterly unforgettable.
This belongs firmly in a museum — Clarke's stippling technique and nightmarish symbolism are fine art by any measure. Yet the raw, visceral horror energy and Gothic excess give it a pulp fever-dream intensity that leaps off the page.
“"THEY SWARMED UPON ME IN EVER ACCUMULATING HEAPS" 263”





