Robert E. Howard Readers discussion

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Michael
(last edited Jan 28, 2012 02:47AM)
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Jan 28, 2012 01:36AM

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A cestus was an ancient Greek battle glove, made of strips of leather wound around the forearm and fist. Used in boxing matches as well as combat, unlike modern boxing gloves the cestus was designed to inflict damage, not soften the blow. The cestus was sometimes made more fearsome by the addition of metal plates or spikes, and in ancient Rome was often used in gladiatorial games.
I should have known this without having to look it up as I'm pretty sure they're mentioned in The Golden Fleece by Robert Graves. 30 years sure do dim the memory, though!



You dont see that word in new fiction.

God, that's terrible, but I couldn't resist!


God, that's terrible, but I couldn't resist!"
Bad, Michael, bad. That one hurts.
Can't wait to see what happens with 'shagreen.' As in, "his scabbard was of shagreen," "her shagreen belt," and "the weapon's shagreen handle." Lots of shagreen about.
Much to my chagrin, harhar.
sha·green
/ʃəˈgrin/[shuh-green]
1. an untanned leather with a granular surface, prepared from the hide of a horse, shark, seal, etc.



I'll be damned. That's interesting, Jim. Can you imagine someone introducing one of these sisters: "And this, this is Lazuli Long, sister of Lapis and Lazurus Long..."
Ha, I love the mellifluousness of it!

I thought shagreen was specifically shark skin - didn't know it could be horse or seal skin. It's grainy surface makes it less likely to slip in the hand, so it's often used for hand grips.
Chagrin! Makes me look like Oscar Wilde ;-)

Michael wrote: "REH does use that word a lot - he was obviously an en-thew-siast ;-D
God, that's terrible, but I couldn't resist!"
Funny thing about thews: it's one of those words that REH didn't actually use all that often, but because of its relative obscurity, it tended to get repeated by pasticheurs when they wrote their Conan stories.
I made a word count of every time REH used "thew" or "thews" in the Conan stories. The result? A mere 37. Guess it had a hell of an impact. And for those counting: he used "mighty thews" exactly once, and it didn't even refer to Conan's.

Michael wrote: "REH does use that word a lot - he was obviously an en-thew-siast ;-..."
Very interesting! Thanks for the post, Taranaich.

Instead of being completely lazy, I just googled it myself! ;-)
The Cimmerian Word of the Week
REHupa Word of the Week
I don't propose that our thread in any way seeks to duplicate these fine web pages, but if there's a word you come across that you needed to look up or research, then you can share and discuss it here.


Instead of being completely lazy, I just googled it myself! ;-)
The Cimmerian Word of the Week
REHupa Word of the Week
I don't propose..."
Very cool. Thanks for the links, Michael.

Can mean "extremely" or "excessively", but the sense in this case is "very great".
I'm not sure when I'm going to be able to drop this one into conversation. Maybe it'll pop up in one of our discussions here ;-)

Getting the dictionary...
tul·war-
tʌlwɑr, tʌlˈwɑr [tuhl-wahr, tuhl-wahr] n. any of several Indian sabers.
Origin: 1825–35; < Hindi talwār, tarwār < Sanskrit taravāri
Well, gosh. Ain't no scimitar at all - it's a sabre. And you even learned a little Sanskrit today. Crom take it all.

Oscar Wilde indeed. You're so clever, Michael, I bet sometimes even you don't know what you're saying.
(misquote, I know, but Wilde was woundy funny...)
(nah, you're right - the new word doesn't really work that well.)

Lin Carter used it a lot.


I read pretty much all of them when I was young, but it's been a good long while since I read one.

Robert E. Howard: The Sword Collector and His Poetry which incidentally carries a great photo of the Tulwar sword. Each of the sword types he mentions in his poetry is defined, an example of how it’s used in his poetry is given plus a photo. Here is the link:
http://www.blackgate.com/2010/08/09/r...
Robert E. Howard: The Sword Collector’s Sword Collection which has great information and photos of the yataghan sword, plus other swords and knives that were found in the description of his sword collection:
http://www.blackgate.com/2012/07/27/r...
He had a fascinating knowledge of edged weapons, quite of few of which weren’t included in his poetry.
BB
Books mentioned in this topic
The Sowers of the Thunder (other topics)Time Enough for Love (other topics)
Time Enough for Love (other topics)
The Complete Chronicles of Conan (other topics)
The Golden Fleece (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert A. Heinlein (other topics)Robert A. Heinlein (other topics)
Robert E. Howard (other topics)
Robert Graves (other topics)