A Glossary for the Fiction of Clark Ashton Smith

John Kipling Hitz

Abbadon
the angel of the "bottomless pit" of Rev. ix. 11; hell (see Gehenna)

abdominous
big-bellied ("an abdominous jar of uncolored glass")

abjuration
a renunciation under oath; a formal rejection or denial

abrogation
a nullifying; a doing away with something [L. normal'>abrogare- to repeal]

acidulous
sour; bitter; painstaking [L.- acidulus- slightly sour]

adamant
1. a stone imagined by some to be of impenetrable hardness; the hardest iron or steel 2. Poetic: unbreakable hardness (adj.-adamantine)

addorsed
Her.- placed back-to-back, as two animals or figures

adipocere
a soft or waxy substance of a light-brown color into which the flesh of dead animals is converted under certain conditions of temperature and humidity

adits
entrances or passageways

adumbration
1. a faint sketch or outline 2. foreshadowing; advance indication 3. overshadowing

adytum
an inner or secret shrine; sanctum [L. from Gk. normal'>adyton]

agate
a waxy quartz in which the colors are in bands, or are blended in clouds

aigretted
tufted as with feathers or gems

alabastrine
of a pure white color, like alabaster

alembic
a chemical vessel formerly used in distillation, usually of glass or copper (see cucurbit)

aliment
food for body or mind

almandine
n. a transparent deep red or violet garnet, a precious crystallized stone

aludel
a pear-shaped vessel of glass

amaranth
n. 1. a plant of the genus Amaranthus, with colorful leaves and, in some instances, showy, tassellike heads of flowers, as the love-lies-bleeding, pigweed, etc. 2. Poetic: an imaginary flower that never fades

amaranthine
never-fading, or, of a deep-purple or purplish-red color

ambergris
a solid, opaque, ash-colored substance used in perfumery

amethysts
purple sapphires.

amphora
a tall, two-handled jar for wine or oil, with a narrow neck [L. from Gk. amphoreus]

ana
n. a collection of notes or scraps of literature bearing on a particular person, place, or subject

anaglyph
an ornament in low relief; a cameo [Gk.- normal'>anaglyphon, from ana, up, & glyphein, to cut out]

Anakim
a race of giants in Palestine

anchorite
a hermit; a recluse (see eremite)

androsphinx
a sphinx with a human head (distinguished from ram-headed or hawk-headed sphinxes)

animadversions
disparaging comments; censure (see objurgations)

ankylose
abnormal stiffening of a joint; a consolidation of two bones or parts of bones

anlace
a broad two-edged dagger or short sword

annulated
furnished with or surrounded by rings

antemundane
unearthly

anthropophagic
cannibalistic

antimony
a silver-white, hard, crystalline metallic element, related to arsenic and tin

antinomian
related to the doctrine that faith frees the Christian from the obligations of the moral law

antipodes
a place or region on the opposite side of the earth, or its inhabitants

aphelion
the point in orbit farthest from the sun

apotheosis
1. deification; exaltation to divine honors 2. a glorification of any kind

appanage
an allowance to the younger branches of a sovereign house from revenues of the country; hence, whatever falls to one from rank or station in life [F.- apanage]

apperception
Psychol.- perception that reflects upon the act of perceiving; spontaneous insight

apterous
lacking wings

arabesque
n. 1. a complex, elaborate design of intertwined flowers, foliage, geometrical patterns, etc. painted or carved in low relief 2. adj.- fanciful, ornamental

araucarias
large cone-bearing evergreen trees

arcane
known to only a few; esoteric [L.- normal'>arcanus- hidden] (see holocryptic & recondite)

archaeopteryx
a bird of the Jurassic period which had teeth, a lizard-like tail, and well-developed wings

archimage
a chief magician; great wizard [L. from Gk. normal'>archimagos- chief of the magi]

architrave
1. Archit.- a chief beam, resting on columns 2. an ornament arching over a door or window

armillary
Astron.- an ancient instrument consisting of concentric rings in the form of a skeleton sphere, representing the relative positions of the ecliptic and other celestial circles

arrack
a strong Oriental liquor

arras
a hanging for the walls of a room, esp. a tapestry

aspergillum
the brush used for sprinkling holy water on the people

asphodels
a lily plant, bearing white or yellow flowers

astrolabe
formerly an instrument for obtaining the altitude of planets and stars

ataxia
disturbance of bodily functions, as in the paroxysms of disease

atelier
a workshop, especially of an artist; studio

athanor
a digesting furnace, formerly used in alchemy, so constructed as to maintain a uniform and constant heat

attar
the fragrant oil extracted from the petals of flowers, esp. from roses

augury
a portent or omen; the foretelling of events by signs or omens

aureate
1. golden; guilded 2. splendid (see next entry)

auroral
dawning; roseate

auriphrygiate
ornamented with embroidery in gold ("auriphrygiate domes") [L.]

austral
southern

auto-da-fe
the public pronouncement and execution of the sentence of the Inquisition, with attendant ceremonies, such as the burning of heretics at the stake

bagatelle
a trifle; a thing of no importance

baleful
1. hurtful; malignant. 2. Archaic: sorrowful, miserable (see malefic)

banyan
an East Indian fig-bearing tree which sends down from its branches roots that develop into new trunks, thus producing a thick and shady grove

barbican
an outer fortification; rampart

baroque
1. irregularly shaped, as a baroque pearl 2. fantastically overdecorated; theatrical

basilisk
fabled reptile of the Arabian desert whose breath and look were fatal (see cockatrice)

bastinado
mode of punishment in Oriental countries, esp. Mohammedan, by beating the feet

bayadere
a dancing-girl, especially one serving in an Indian temple

beryl
aquamarine or emerald variety of beryllium, used as gems

besoms
brooms; bundles of twigs

bezel
the part of a ring which surrounds and holds the stone

bifurcation
a division into two branches

bituminous
containing bitumen; volatile

blandishments
flattering speech or actions (see inveigle)

blazonries
1. Her.- artfully depicted coats of arms 2. brilliant displays

boreal
northern; pertaining to the north, esp. the north wind

boscage
a mass of growing trees or shrubs; a thicket [OF., OHG- busc- a thicket.]

bourn
1. Archaic: a limit or boundary: the bourn of man’s life 2. Poetic: realm or region

burgeoning
budding; sprouting forth

burnoose
a woolen cloak with hood, worn by Arabs and Moors

buskin
a high shoe or half-boot (see cothurn)

byssus
among the ancients, a linen, silk, or cotton cloth of exceedingly fine texture (used by the Egyptians in mummy-wrapping)

cabalistic
containing an occult meaning; mystical

cachinnation
immoderate laughter

cacodaemon
a devil or evil spirit [Gk.- kakodaimon, from kakos- bad, evil + daimon- spirit]

caftan
a long, wide-sleeved robe fastened by a belt or a sash

cairn
a mound or heap of stones for a memorial

calamite
a fossil plant of the Paleozoic era, growing to a height of 100 feet or more

calenture
1. a tropical fever with delirium 2. Poetic: to have illusions

calyx
Bot.- the outermost series of leaf-like parts of a flower, usually green but frequently colored, which encloses and supports the corolla

cantraips
incantations or charms; pieces of witchcraft (Scot., from cantrip)

caparisoned
fitted with decorative trappings; decked out

capriole
an upward leap made by a trained horse while standing [F., from Ital.- capriola]

capstan
an apparatus for hoisting anchors

captious
difficult to please; apt to find fault

carapace
the bony outer case on turtles, lobsters and other animals

carmine
red or purplish-red; crimson

carnelian
  n. a clear red chalchedony, often cut as a gem

cartouche
on Egyptian monuments or papyri, a group of hieroglyphics in a small oblong area

caryatid
Archit.- a figure of a woman dressed in long robes, serving to support an entablature

cassava
1. a tropical American shrub with thick roots from which an edible starch is obtained 2. bread made from this starch

cassia
1. a genus of plants, from some species of which is extracted the cathartic drug senna 2. Chinese cinnamon, a variety made by using cassia bark as an adulterating agent

castradoes
eunuchs ("the fat castradoes diddered in their cloth-of-gold")

catafalque
a temporary raised structure that supports a coffin [F.]

catatonia
a state of muscular rigidity; stupor

causey
a paved pathway or street [F. caucie, from L. calciare- to make a road]

celerity
quickness of motion

centurial
occurring once in a century

ceremented
wearing grave-clothes; covered in cere-cloth

cerulean
of a deep, clear blue; azure [L.- caelum, heaven, caeruleus, dark blue]

chaffer
v. 1. to bargain; to haggle or negotiate 2. to talk much and idly

chalcedony
a cryptocrystalline, translucent quartz, having a wax-like luster, and comprising onyx, agate, sard, cat’s eye, jasper and carnelian

chalices
Botany: cup-shaped flowers

charpoy
bedstead or cot of India, with a bamboo frame

chasmal
gaping

chatelaine
the mistress of a chateau

chatoyant
adj. 1. possessing a changeable luster, like that of a cat’s eye in the dark 2. Cat’s Eye, a chrysoberyl gemstone displaying an undulating or wavy light

chimera- Myth.
1. a fire-breathing monster, depicted as part lion, part goat, and part dragon 2. a vain fancy; a mere phantasm of the imagination

chiton
gown or tunic worn by men and women in ancient Greece

chryselephantine
made or covered with gold or ivory, as certain Greek statues

chrysolite
an olive-green, translucent mineral, called peridot when used as a semiprecious stone

chrysoprase
an apple-green variety of quartz

Cimmerian
dark; gloomy (from the Cimmerii, a people whose land Homer described as a region of perpetual mist and darkness)

cinnabar
1. cystallized red mercuric sulfide, artificially used a red pigment. 2. brilliant red

Circean
fascinating but poisonous; magical (from Circe, a sorceress in Greek myth)

circumambient
extending around, or being on all sides; encompassing

circumpolar
revolving around the poles without setting, as circumpolar stars

claymore
a double-edged Scottish broadsword

clepsydra
Anciently: a water-clock

cockatrice
a basilisk; a fabulous monster whose breath and glance were believed to be fatal, said to have been hatched by a serpent from a cock’s egg

coeval
of the same age

coign
Archaic: a projecting angle or stone; a corner

coir
a type of yarn made from the husk of cocoanuts

colonnades
Archit.- a range of columns connected by an entablature

colossi
statues of gigantic size, such as the statue of Apollo which anciently stood at the entrance to the port of Rhodes

comestation
Obs.- reveling or feasting [L.- comessatio, a Bacchanalian procession]

comestibles
food; edibles (see viands)

commensal
one who eats at the same table

comminatory
threatening punishment or vengeance (minatory- menacing)

condign
well-deserved

confrere
a fraternity brother

consanguinity
1. blood relationship; common ancestry 2. close relationship; affinity

contumely
scornful or insulting language; haughtiness ("contumelies")

coracle
a small fishing boat of hide on a wicker frame [Welsh normal'>corwgl, from corwg- a frame, boat]

corollas
the inner circle of flower leaves, usually colored

corposant
a ball of electric light observed on dark tempestuous nights about the rigging of a ship; St. Elmo’s light

corundum
aluminum oxide, second only to the diamond in hardness. Pure, transparent varieties are the ruby, sapphire, Oriental amethyst, and Oriental topaz.

coruscating
giving out sparkles of light (coruscations- sudden flashes)

cothurn
a high, thick-soled boot worn by actors in ancient Greek tragedies

couchant
lying down; reclining (see recumbent)

courtier
a member of the court circle

crenelations
battlements; fortifications

crepuscular
1. pertaining to twilight; glimmering 2. becoming active or flying in the twilight

cresset
a kind of iron basket holding a beacon light

cromlech
an ancient mortuary monument consisting of two or more large unhewn stones fixed upright in the ground, supporting a flat horizontal stone (see dolmen)

crotali
snakes of a genus like that of the rattlesnake (crotalus)

crozier
a staff, about 5 feet in length, surmounted by an ornamental cross

cucurbit
1. a gourd-shaped chemical vessel 2. the body of an alembic 3. any plant of the gourd family

cuneiform
wedge-shaped, as in some ancient Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian inscriptions

cupel
a shallow, absorbent vessel, used in refining gold and silver ores

cupola
a dome; hemispherical roof

cutaneous
on or affecting the skin

cycad
a tropical plant of fern-like appearance

damascened
decorated with wavy or variegated patterns

damask
n. a silk fabric, having some parts raised in the form of flowers and other figures

damaskeen
v. to ornament with wavy markings produced by inlaying or incrusting with metal ("damaskeening the slopes beyond the city with bright flowers of azure and vermilion")

decoction
an extract or essence made by boiling animal or vegetable matter

decrescent
1. decreasing; waning, as a decrescent moon 2. Her.- the declining moon, used as a bearing

delimitable
capable of being gauged, marked, or decided upon (from delimit)

deliquescent
liquifying in the air

demiurge
1. in Plato’s philosophy, a secondary deity, the creative spirit who made the world 2. in Gnostic philosophy, a subordinate god, often considered the originator of evil 3. in Greek history, a magistrate in certain Peloponnesian states (adj.- demiurgic- godlike)

desuetude
disuse; a state of being no longer practiced or customary

dewlaps
the fold of skin hanging from the throat of oxen or cattle

diablerie
demonology; sorcery [OF. diablerie, from diable- devil]

diadem
a crown; a symbol of royalty

diaphanous
transparent or translucent; pellucid [Med. L.- normal'>diaphanus- transparent]

diaphragmic
dividing; partitioning (from diaphragm)

diluvial
pertaining to a flood or deluge

dissolution
decomposition; death [L. dissolutio, from dissolutus, pp. of normal'>dissolvere, to loosen]

diurnal
relating to the daytime; daily (opposed to nocturnal)

divagate
to wander or stray aimlessly; to digress (n.- divagation, "divagance")

divertissements
diversions; amusements

divestiture
the removal of rights or honors; the act of removing something

divination
the act or art of foretelling the future or unknown

doleful
1. expressing grief, as, a doleful cry 2. melancholy (see dolorous, funereal, lugubrious)

dolmen
a prehistoric, sepulchral monumuent of large uncut stones, set on end and covered with a single huge stone, so as to form a chamber, and often covered with earth; cromlech

dolomite
a calcium magnesium carbonate occurring in white to pale-pink crystals; limestone or marble with much magnesium carbonate in it

dolorous
sorrowful; mournful; pathetic [ME.- dolerous, L.- dolorosus- painful, mournful]

drupe
a soft, fleshy fruit enclosing a hard-shelled seed, as in the peach or cherry

ebullition
1. the condition of any liquid when bubbles are rapidly forming in its mass and rising to the surface 2. a violent outburst (ebullience- a boiling over; agitation; exuberance)

effluence
a flowing out; emanation [L.- effluens]

effluvium
a noxious or evil-smelling exhalation from decaying matter

effulgence
a shining forth brilliantly; brightness; splendor

eider
the soft, fine breast feathers of a large eider duck

eidolon
an unreal or spectral form; an image

eldritch
ghastly; hideous; weird

electrum
1. an amber-colored alloy of gold and silver, used by the ancient Greeks for coins 2. Obs.- amber

eloignment
removal to a distance; a carrying off [OF esloignier- carry off ]

embrasure
an opening in a wall or parapet, through which cannon are pointed

empery
Poetic: sovereignty; dominion

Empusa
Botany: a genus of prehistoric fungi ("empusae")

empyreal
celestial; pertaining to the highest heaven, where the pure element of fire was supposed by the ancients to exist [Gk. empyros- in the fire]

energumen
a person supposedly possessed by evil spirits; a demoniac

entablature
a platform supported by columns

epiphany
a bodily manifestation, as of a deity

epiphytic
growing non-parasitically on another plant, as   certain orchids, mosses, and lichens

equerry
an officer having charge of the horses of a dignitary

equivocal
of doubtful significance; capable of a double interpretation; purposely vague

eremite
one who lives in a wilderness or in retirement; a hermit ("eremitic")

erigible
capable of being erected [Rare]

erubescent
reddish; blushing (see rubescent)

estrade
an elevated part of the floor of a room; platform

esurient
hungry; needy

ethereous
seeming to pervade all space

etiolated
whitened; blanched

evanescent
passing away gradually or imperceptibly (evanescence)

eventide
Poetic: evening time

exanimate
deprived of life; inanimate

excoriate
to denounce scathingly

exigent
demanding; pressing or urgent

exiguous
small; minute; slender [L. exiguus- scanty, small ]

fakir
a Moslem itinerant beggar, often one claiming to perform miracles (also sp. faquir)

fane
a sanctuary; temple

feculent
foul with impure substances; muddy

fecundity
fertility; richness of invention

femora
thigh-bones

fen
marsh; bog

ferine
relating to or resembling a wild beast; savage (feral)

ferruginous
of the color of iron rust; dusky

Fescennine
ribald; licentious (from town of Fescennium in Etruria, known for its wild festivals)

fetid
emitting an offensive odor (see noisome)

filagree
delicate ornamental work formed of intertwisted gold or silver wire

filiated
threadlike

firkins
wooden vessels ("vermilion fungoid blossoms large as firkins")

flagitious
deeply criminal; grossly wicked (see nefandous & nefarious)

flambeaux
burning torches

flange
a spreading or flaring part; a projecting rim or edge

fleur-de-lis
a heraldic figure representing either a lily or the head of a lance

flibbertigibbet
an impulsive, flighty, or garrulous person

floe
a mass of floating ice

florescence
a blooming; the state of being in blossom

fortalice
a fortified place; a stronghold [Med. L normal'>fortalitia]

foulder
Obs.- to thunder or flash like lightning ("fouldered" ... see fulgor & levin)

frangipanni
a perfume prepared from, or imitating the odor of a West Indian tree

franzanita
a shrub of the genus Arctosa Phylos; the fruit of one of these shrubs

fretted
ornamented with angular or interlocked lines

friable
easily crumbled

frore
Archaic or Poetic: frozen; frosty

fulgor
Archaic: dazzling brightness (fulguration- a sudden brightening … adj.- fulgurant, fulgurating)

fulminating
1. exploding 2. shouting accusations 3. thundering and lightening [Rare]

fulsome
offensively flattering or insincere; excessive (see unctuous)

fulvous
reddish-yellow; tawny

fumitory
a climbing plant with clusters of pink or purple flowers

funereal
mournful; depressingly sad or gloomy

fust
a strong musty smell

gamboge
a reddish-yellow Oriental gum-resin from certain tropical trees, used as a yellow pigment

garnet
1. a glasslike mineral of various colors, sometimes cut as a gem 2. deep red

garniture
, trimming; embellishment

garth
Archaic: a yard; garden [ME.]

Gehenna
hell-fire; the place of future punishment

genuflection
a bending of the knee, as in worship

geomancy
divination by figures or lines formed by a handful of earth cast on the ground

ghazal
1. a piece of Arabic music with a frequent refrain 2. a form of Persian verse

glabrous
smooth

glaucous
yellowish-green ("glaucous twilight")

glutinous
gluey; sticky

gibbous
irregularly rounded or bulging, as the moon when in a phase between half-moon and full

gnomon
the style or pin of a sun dial

gossamers
fine threads or webs of silk

gracile
slender

gramary
Archaic: occult lore; magic ("gramaries")

grandiloquence
the use of pompous, bombastic words and expressions (see magniloquent & orotund)

greaves
dregs of melted tallow

grimalkin
an old female cat

guerdon
an earned privilege or reward

gules
Her.- the tincture red: in a blazon without color, indicated by parallel vertical lines [OF. from L. gula, the throat] ("the leaping of flames that flung their bloody gules")

gymnosophic
pertaining to a Hindu sect of ascetics who wore little or no clothing; nude

halcyon
calm; peaceful

hamadryad
a wood nymph whose life is connected with that of the tree she inhabits

harrow
1. to tear; to wound 2. to make uncomfortable; to distress

haruspication
divination by a normal'>haruspex, a lesser priest or soothsayer in ancient Rome whose business was to inspect the entrails of animals killed in sacrifice [L., lit., an inspector of entrails]

hebetude
dullness; stupidity

hecatomb
Anciently: a sacrifice of a hundred oxen as an offering to the gods; hence, any great slaughter

Hesperian
1. western 2. Poetic: of the Hesperides, daughters of Hesperus, guardians of the fabulous garden of golden apples, watched over by an enchanted dragon, at the earth’s western extremity

hesternal
pertaining to yesterday ("my own memories grow dim like the fires of hesternal wanderings")

heteroclitic
deviating from the ordinary form ("heteroclitic runes")

hieratic
consecrated to sacred uses (see sacerdotal)

hierophant
Anciently: an expounder of religious mysteries or rites

hippodrome
Anciently: a place in which chariot races were performed

holocryptic
wholly concealed; arcanic

hornbeam
a small variety of the birch tree

houri
a nymph of the Moslem Paradise

hummocks
small elevations; piles or ridges of ice

hyaline
resembling glass; transparent (hyalescence- the state of being glassy)

hydromancy
divination by the observation of water

hyperborean
frigid; of the far north

hyssop
a fragrant, bushy plant of the mint family

ichor
Myth.- the ethereal fluid supposed to flow in the veins of the gods

ignescent
bursting into flame; emitting sparks of fire [L. normal'>ignescens, ppr. of ignescere- to take fire]

imbricated
overlapping, like tiles on a roof, scales of fish, or leaves in a bud ("imbricated leafage")

immedicable
incurable (see irremediable)

immemorial
beyond memory; originating beyond the reach of records or tradition

immensurable
not to be measured; immeasurable (see incommensurable)

immitigable
severe or extreme; incapable of appeasement

immomentous
unimportant [Rare]

immortelles
flowers that retain their color long after they are harvested

immured
enclosed or imprisoned (immurement)

impalpable
intangible; unreal

incalescent
increasing in heat  [L.- incalescens, entis, ppr. of incalescere, grow hot... Rare]

incarnadined
tinged with the color of flesh; reddened

inchoate
begun, but existing in only a rudimentary form [L.- normal'>inchoatus, pp. of inchoare- to begin]

incognizable
not capable of being recognized ("incognizably distorted stars")

incommensurable
lacking a common measure or standard of comparison; greatly out of proportion

incubus
1. nightmare 2. an imaginary demon, formerly supposed to cause nightmare, or to have sexual intercourse with the sleeper 3. anything that oppresses

incunablia
the earliest traces of an art, race, or development; early specimens of printing and engraving

indepictable
indescribable

indesecrate
never visited by man; unexplored ("her indesecrate horizons")

indissoluble
1. incapable of being dissolved, melted, or liquefied 2. firm; lasting (adv.-indissolubly)

indurate
hardened; made callous or stubborn (see obdurate)

ineffable
inexpressible

ineluctable
inescapable; irresistable

inenarrable
that cannot be narrated or told

infoliate
v. to cover or overspread with leaves [Rare]

infrangible
unbreakable [F.] ("the infrangible solitude of remote places")

innominable
not to be named (innominate- nameless)

inscrutable
incomprehensible; unfathomable

insuperable
insurmountable; not to be overcome

integument
any natural outer covering, as the skin of an animal, coat of a seed, etc.

interlocutor
an interpreter or questioner

interlunar
at the time when the moon is invisible; between the old and the new moon

inveigle
to lead on with deception; to entice (see wheedling… n.- inveiglement)

investiture
a formal investing with authority (Obs.- vestiture...in Zool., a covering of scales or hair)

inveterate
1. firmly established; of long standing 2. Obs.- bitter; also, ancient (adv.- inveterately)

invidious
envious; provoking evil

involitient
not capable of exercising the will; mindless [Rare] (volitient- exercising volition)

involuted
1. intricate; confusingly mingled 2. Botany: rolled inward at the edges

invultuation
an evil spell

iridescent
having rainbow-like colors; shimmering [Gk. iris, a rainbow, and escent- prismatic]

irrefragable
incapable of being refuted; unanswerable

irremeable
admitting of no return

irremediable
1. not to be remedied 2. not to be corrected or redressed

irresoluble
1. that cannot be resolved; insoluble 2. that cannot be relieved

isoteric
having the same number and arrangement of electrons ("isoteric luster")

ithyphallic
relating to the phallus used in the festivals of Bacchus; hence, obscene or lewd

jacinth
a reddish-orange precious stone; a hyacinth

jasper
an opaque variety of quartz, of red, yellow, or brown, and admitting of high polish

jetty
black

ka
in Egyptian myth, the spiritual self, believed to dwell in images, and to survive in the tomb

kava
a Polynesian shrub of the pepper family, and beverage made from it

lacunae
gaps; blank spaces

lambent
softly radiant (n.- lambency…"lambence")

lamia
Myth.- a female vampire preying upon infants; witch ("lamiae")

lancinating
piercing, as a shooting pain

Laocoon
Myth.- the priest of Apollo at Troy, who warned the Trojans against the wooden horse,   and was killed with his two sons, by two serpents sent by Athena

lapidaries
those who cut, engrave and set precious stones

lazuli
blue spar; lapis lazuli, a semi-precious stone used by the ancients for decoration

legerdemain
1. sleight of hand; tricks of a stage magician 2. trickery of any sort

leman
Archaic: a sweetheart or lover; esp. a mistress

lentor
1. tenacity [Rare] 2. slowness of movement; sluggishness ("the lentor of Lethe")

leonine
pertaining to a lion; fierce

Lethean
imparting forgetfulness, or, the anxious foreboding of oblivion

levin
Archaic: lightning [ME.- levene]

Liassic
Geol: pertaining to the Lias, bluish rocks which are the oldest strata of the Jurassic Period

littoral
the shore; the region on the shore of the sea or a large lake

locution
a mode of speech; a phrase

loess
Geol: a pale, yellowish clay or loam

lubricious
lascivious (see salacious)

lubricity
slipperiness; hence, shiftiness; instability

lucent
shining; luminous

lucubration
laborious study or writing [often in pl.] (humorous usage suggesting pedantry)

lugubrious
expressing sorrow

luminary
any body that gives light, or, a famous intellectual, as, normal'>luminaries of Europe

lunation
Astron.- the interval between two returns of the new moon

lune
a geometrical figure in the shape of a crescent or half-moon

lustrum
a period of five years

machicolation
a vertical opening in the floor of a projecting gallery or parapet for hurling missiles  or pouring boiling lead onto the enemy

machinations
plots; artful schemes

madder
1. a climbing plant; esp. Rubia tinctorum, a vine with small yellow flowers and berries 2. the red root of this plant, or a red dye made from it 3. bright red; crimson

magistral
n. 1. a sovereign remedy [Obs.] 2. adj.- Phar.- specially prepared; not kept on hand

magniloquent
lofty, pompous, or grandiose in speech or style of expression (adv.-magniloquently)

malachite
a green mineral, found in massive encrustations, that can be polished for ornamental uses

malefic
harmful; evil (maleficent- causing injury; maleficial... "malefical"... see next entry)

malign
of an evil nature or character

malisons
Archaic: maledictions; curses; invocations of evil

Mandragora
a genus of herbaceous plants of the nightshade family, which have narcotic properties

mandrake
1. a poisonous plant, genus mandragora, found in the Mediterranean regions: it has a short stem, purple or white flowers, and a thick root, often forked; deadly nightshade 2. the root, formerly thought to resemble the human shape

mangonel
a military apparatus formerly used for throwing stones [OF]

mantle
n. 1. a cloak or loose, sleeveless garment 2. anything that covers or conceals

manumission
emancipation; being released from bondage (v.- manumit- to release from slavery)

marah
bitter water

marcescent
withered; wizened

marish
marshy; boggy

marmoreal
made of or resembling marble

matutinal
pertaining to or occurring in the morning [L. from normal'>Matuta, the goddess of morning]

mauve
a purple dye and pigment; any of several delicate shades of purple

melange
an unsorted medley of things; a literary miscellany

melanite
a velvet-black variety of garnet

Memnon
a gigantic statue of an Egyptian king at Thebes, said to emit a musical note at first dawn

menhir
a tall, rude or sculptured stone of unknown antiquity

mephitic
noxious; pestilential

mere
a pond or pool

meretricious
1. pertaining to or characteristic of a prostitute 2. alluring by false, showy charms; tawdry

meridian
noontime; the highest point of anything

miasmal
poisonous; vaporous (also miasmatic-- "miasmata")

midge
1. a common name for gnats 2. a dwarf

migniard
Obs.- delicate; frail

minaret
a high slender tower, with one or more projecting balconies

missal
a black-letter or manuscript book of early date resembling the old Mass books

moiety
a half; a small portion

monads
Biol.- any simple, single-celled organisms; atoms (atomies)

moraine
Geol.- a ridge or heap of earth, stones, sand, or other debris carried by a glacier

morbidezza
in painting, delicacy or softness of flesh tints

mordant
caustic; cynical

moribund
at the point of death; dying

mortuary
pertaining to the burial of the dead; relating to or reminiscent of the dead

moted
containing fine floating dust or specks

mottlings
blotches or spots of different color or shades of color (see variegated)

multifarious
having great diversity or variety

multitudinous
vast in number

murrain
a malignant fever affecting domestic animals; any plague or pestilence

must
wine or juice pressed from the grape but not fermented

myrmidon
a faithful adherent; an unscrupulous follower

myrrh
aromatic gum resin, from several trees and shrubs of Arabia and Abyssinia

nacarat
bright orange-red color

nacre
mother-of-pearl; the brilliant internal layer of oysters or other shells ("minarets of nacre")

nebulous
cloudy; hazy [L.- nebulosus, from nebula- a cloud, mist, vapor] (n.- nebulosity)

necromancy
divination by means of communication with the dead; the black art

necrophagous
subsisting on carrion [Gk.- nekrophagos- eating dead bodies] ("necrophagism")

necrophore
a burying beetle

necropolis
an extensive cemetery that is ornamentally laid out

nefandous
blasphemous in character; not to be named

nefarious
abominable; atrociously sinful or villainous

neophyte
a new convert; novice (see novitiate & proselytes)

nescience
ignorance; esp. that due either to the nature of the human mind or of external things

nethermost
deepest

noctambulistic
like a sleepwalker; somnambulist ("her noctambulistic paces")

noctiluca
1. anything which shines in the darkness; phosphorous   2. small phosphorescent marine organisms that cause parts of the sea to appear luminous

noctilucent
luminous by night

noctuary
an account of what passes in the night: the converse of normal'>diary [Rare]

noisome
offensive to the smell or other senses

novitiate
the period of probation of a novice in a religious order; a novice

nyctalopia
the faculty or defect of seeing only in darkness

nympholepsy
an ecstatic frenzy, said to have taken possession of one who looked upon a nymph; hence, an emotional state caused by unrealizable desire ("satyrs mad with nympholepsy")

obdurate
unmoved by feelings of humanity or pity

obeisance
a bow of reverence or respect

obelisk
a monument of rectangular form, generally forming a low pyramid structure

objurgations
rebukes; scoldings

obliquely
indirectly; evasively (adj.- obliquitous)

obloquy
censorious speech; vilification; also, the state of one who is spoken ill of

obsequial
cringing; servile

obsequies
funeral services or preparations

obsidian
a glossy, black volcanic rock

obstreporous
boisterous or unruly; vociferous

occlude
to obstruct; to shut in or out

occultation
Astron.- concealment of one celestial body by another interposed in the line of vision

ocher
an earthy clay, colored with iron oxides and varying in color from pale yellow to deep orange or brownish-red (adj.- ocherous- of a yellow or red color)

odalisques
female slaves; concubines

offal
carrion; rubbish of any kind

oleaginous
pertaining to oil; oily

olibanum
Oriental frankincense

omnivalent
(omniscient- all-knowing, + omniverous- taking in everything, as an omniverous reader)

opalescent
resembling an opal in play of colors; iridescent

ophidian
snakelike; pertaining to serpents

orchidaceous
like an orchid in showiness, beauty, etc.

orichalch
in ancient Greece, an alloy of copper and zinc, resembling gold (orichalchum…see similor)

orlop
the lowest deck of a ship; esp. a warship

orotund
1. full; mellow; resonant; strong: said of the voice 2. pompous: said of a style of writing

oscitancy
the act of gaping or yawning; drowsiness

osier
any of various related species of willow, whose twigs are used in making baskets

ossuary
a charnel house

ostent
1. Obs.- appearance; manner 2. manifestation; portent [Rare]

oubliette
a secret dungeon with an entrance only through the top

pandanus
Asiatic shrublike trees of the screw pine family

pandemonium
1. the abode of all demons; the infernal regions 2. extreme disorder or uproar

pannakins
small pans or cups

parapegms
in ancient Greece, a table, usually of brass, fixed to a pillar, on which laws and proclamations were engraved; also, a table set in a public place, containing an account of the rising and setting of the stars, eclipses, seasons, etc. ("the brazen tablets of astronomical parapegms")

pards
Archaic: leopards

parhelia
mock-suns, sometimes white and sometimes tinted with prismatic colors

parterre
a flower garden having beds arranged in a pattern [F- normal'>par- by + L.- terra- earth]

pell
Obs.- a roll of parchment

pentacle
a figure of five straight lines, making a star; in magic, a circle with figures and symbols

penumbra
a partial shadow; a margin of shadow caused by the partial interception of light from an illuminating body, as in an eclipse (adj.- penumbral- incompletely illuminated)

perambulations
traveling surveys or inspections (see peregrinate)

perdurable
very durable; lasting

peregrinate
to travel from place to place; to wander (n.- peregrinations)

pernoctation
the act of passing the whole night ("saintly pernoctations of prayer and austerity")

peroration
the concluding part of a speech

perspicatious
quick-sighted; seeing through or understanding something promptly

phantasmagoria
a changing, incoherent series of apparitions or phantasms

philtres
magical drafts supposed to excite sexual love

Phlegethonian
Myth.- fiery, like Phlegethon, one of the five rivers of Hades ("without sound or other ostent than the Phlegethonian luster that surrounds its body and members")

phylactery
1. an amulet worn as a preservative from danger or disease among the Jews 2. a strip of parchment inscribed with religious texts and enclosed in a leather case

pilaster
a square pillar projecting from a wall to a short distance

pinnate
Bot: having the shape or arrangement of a feather; said of compound leaves

pismires
ants

planturous
abundant ("planturous lyricism")

plenilune
Poetic: the full moon [L.- plenus- full + luna- moon]

plenipotentiary
n. an ambassador

plexus
an interwoven arrangement of parts; a network

plummet
a piece of lead or other metal attached to a line, used for sounding the water’s depth

porphyry
an Egyptian rock with red and white feldspar crystals embedded in a fine-grained, dark-red or purplish ground mass [Gk.- porphyros- purple] ("porphyritic")

porrected
projecting; extending horizontally

postern
a back gate; a private entrance

poulaine
a medieval shoe with a long pointed toe

preciptancy
extreme haste; falling or rushing headlong

prescience
knowledge of events before they happen

preternatural
beyond what is natural, as opposed to supernatural (above nature)

primordial
from the earliest time; original

profulgent
Poetic: gleaming; brilliant

promontory
a high point of land extending into the sea beyond the line of coast; headland

proselytes
new converts to a religion

psammite
fine-grained, clayey sandstone

puissant
powerful; mighty

pullulation
germination; breeding

purlieus
environs; the part lying adjacent to a property [F.- normal'>lieu- a place]

purpureal
purplish (see violescent)

purulent
containing or discharging pus; suppurating

pusillanimous
cowardly; faint-hearted

pylon
Archit.- a truncated pyramid, or two of these, forming a gateway to an Egyptian temple

pythonomorph
one of the Pythonomorpha, a group of extinct marine reptiles from the Cretaceous rocks of America and Europe. Some species were more than 50 feet long. ("huge pythonomorphs with fabulous golden coils")

quadrireme
ancient Greek or Roman warship with four banks of oars

quinquangular
having five angles or corners [Obs.] ("paven with immense quinquangular flags")

quintessential
having in concentrated form the essential part; purest

quotidian
occurring or returning every day; daily

raddling
patterns formed by weaving or twisting together ("fantastic raddlings of ebony")

ramified
divided or branched out

rattans
the long, tough, flexible stems of a palm tree; the palm trees themselves

ravelled
Archaic: tangled; confused

recherche
choice; rare

recondite
remote from easy perception; secret; hidden [L.- normal'>reconditus, pp. of recondere, put away]

recrudescence
a breaking out afresh, as of a disease or wound

recumbent
reclining or leaning; idle

regnant
reigning; dominant, as a queen regnant

renascent
  reborn; showing new life and strength [L.]

retiarii
n. pl. in ancient Rome, gladiators furnished with a net and a trident; hence, spiders or marine organisms with netlike meshes [L- rete- a net]

reticulation
a network of crisscrossed lines or veins, as in leaves

revenant
one who or that which returns; a ghost

rime
congealed dew or vapor; hoarfrost

roc
Myth.- in Arabian and Persian legend, a fabulous bird of prey, so huge and strong that it could carry off the largest of animals

roseate
1. rose-colored; rosy 2. cheerful; bright

rubescent
reddened or becoming red

rubicund
inclining to redness; reddish; ruddy

ruddled
marked or colored with red ocher

rufous
of a reddish or brownish-red color; rust-colored

runlet
1. a small brook or stream 2. A small barrel, or the measure of wine it contains, about 18 gallons (alternate spelling of rundlet)

runneled
interspersed with rivulets or small brooks

russet
reddish-brown [L.- russus- reddish]

rutilant
of a shining red color [L- rutilare- to have a reddish glow] ("Like Satan’s rutilant hair, trailing on the wind of Gehenna…")

sacerdotal
pertaining to priests or the priesthood

sacrosanct
considered holy; inviolable

salacious
lustful; lecherous

saltant
leaping; jumping; dancing [L.]

salubriousness
healthfulness

samite
an old rich silk, interwoven with gold and embroidered

sang-froid
calmness in trying circumstances

sanguinary
accompanied by much bloodshed; bloodthirsty; or, characterized by vigorous activity

sanguine
having the color of blood; ruddy; said esp. of complexions

sanies
a thin, reddish discharge from wounds or sores; bloody matter

sapience
wisdom; sageness

saraband
a stately Spanish dance in triple time, of the 17th century

sarcophagous
carniverous

sard
the deep brownish-red variety of chalchedony

saturnine
of a grave or morose disposition

savant
a man of learning who is eminent in his acquirements

scatheful
harmful; injurious

scaurs
cliffs or rocky places on the sides of a hill

scintillant
sparkling [L. scintillans, ppr. of scintillare- to sparkle]

scoriac
adj.- littered with fragmentary lava [Rare] (from scoriaceous)

sedge
grasslike growths, usually in tufts or clumps, near marshes or swamps (adj.- sedgy)

sedulously
in a diligent manner

seines
large nets for catching fish

selenic
lunar [Gk. selene, the moon… Selene, the goddess of the moon]

sempervirent
evergreen; always fresh [L.- semper- always + normal'>virens, ppr. of virere- to be green or verdant]

sendal
a light, thin, silken fabric

senescence
the process or state of growing old

sententious
full of judicious observations; having brevity and weight of meaning

sepia
1. a dark-brown pigment prepared from the inky fluid secreted by cuttlefish 2. a dark reddish-brown color

septagonal
having seven angles and seven sides (coinage- a combination of septangular and heptagonal)

sepulchral
suggestive of the grave; low or hollow in tone; dismal in aspect

seraglio
a harem

sere
withered; dried up

serried
compacted in rows or ranks

shagreen
an Oriental leather or parchment, usually dyed green

shoal
1. a shallow place in a river, sea, etc. 2. a sandbank or sandbar

sibilant
making a hissing sound (n.- sibilation)

sibyl
a prophetess; a sorceress (adj.- sibylline)

sidereal
1. pertaining to the stars or constellations; starry 2. measured by means of the stars ("intersidereal," "transidereal")

similor
an alloy of copper and zinc, resembling gold and used in making jewelry

simoom
a hot, dry, dust-laden wind of the desert (also sp. simoon)

simulacra
an image, made in the likeness of a being; a shadowy semblance

sinuous
winding; undulating

sistrum
a jingling instrument used by the ancient Egyptians in religious ceremonies ("sistra")

somnolent
drowsy

sonority
high-soundedness; resonance

sortilege
the act of drawing lots; divination by lots

spar
any of various crystalline minerals which easily break into fragments with polished surfaces

spindrift
the blinding spray of salt water blown from the surface of the sea in hurricanes

sternutations
sneezings

stertorous
characterized by a deep snoring sound or labored breathing

stridors
a shrill, creaking, screechy or grating noise

stridulations
small, harsh creaking noises, as made by some insects

succubus
a female demon, fabled to have intercourse with men in their sleep

sultana
a sultan’s wife, daughter or sister

supernal
related to things above us; celestial

supplicative
gesturing with entreaty; humbly begging

susurrous
whispering; a soft, murmuring sound ("the dry, susurrous voice")

suzerain
a ruler, esp. a feudal lord or baron (suzerainty) [F.]

sward
land thickly covered with grass

swart
of a dark hue; moderately black; tawny (see umber)

sybaritic
devoted to pleasure and luxurious ease [Gk [from Sybaris, a town proverbial for its luxury]

Sybarites
an inhabitant of Sybaris; voluptuary

sycophant
a servile flatterer

syenite
a granitic rock of grayish color, found near Syene in Upper Egypt

sylvan
pertaining to a wood or forest

syncope
sudden faintness, with loss of sensation

tabouret
a stool or small seat, without arms or back

tamarack
black variety of the coniferous larch tree, remarkable for its elegant form

tarboosh
a red woolen skullcap; fez

telluric
pertaining to the earth (see terrene)

tenebrific
making dark or gloomy (tenebrous)

teratology
Biol.- that branch of science which deals with monsters or malformations

terebinth
the turpentine tree; also, a name for various resinous exudations

termagant
a brawling, turbulent woman (see virago)

terraqueous
consisting of land and water, as the earth

terrene
1. earthy; terrestrial 2. worldly; mundane

thallophytes
members of the lowest phylum of plants (algae, bacteria, lichens, and fungi)

thaumaturgy
the act of performing something wonderful; magic [Gk.- normal'>thaumatourgia]

thrall
bondage; figuratively: one controlled by a passion or a vice

thuribles
censers in the shape of a covered vase

tocsin
an alarm bell ("tocsin of doom")

tonsure
the round, bare place on the heads of Roman Catholic monks ("tonsured")

topaz
the yellow sapphire

topiarized
shaped by clipping or pruning

torrefaction
the act of torrefying or the state of being torrefied (roasted or scorched) [F]

tourmaline
a semiprecious mineral with a resinous luster, used as gem [F]

translucent
transmitting light, but not rendering objects beyond distinctly visible

trellising
1. structures of thin wooden or metal strips crossing each other in a pattern of squares, diamonds, etc., on which vines or other creeping plants are trained 2. a bower or archway of this 3. Her.- latticework

tremulous
trembling

trilithon
a monument of two upright stones topped by a projecting block or arch

trivet
a three-legged stand for holding vessels in a fireplace

trouvere
one of a class of poets in northern France from the 11th to 14th centuries,  distinguished from the troubadours of southern France by the narrative and epic character of their works

tumescence
a swelling; a swollen part (adj.- tumid… see turgescence)

tureen
a deep, covered dish, as for a soup

turgescence
a swollen or enlarged condition

tutelary
adj.- guardian; protecting

ultramundane
beyond the world, the solar system, or the present life

ultrastellar
from beyond the stars

ululation
a howling, as of a wolf or dog; a wailing

umber
of a dusky hue; brownish

umbrageous
1. shady or shaded 2. easily offended 3. Obs.- obscure (umbrageously)

unctuous
characterized by a smug pretence of spiritual feeling or fervor; unduly suave

undine
Myth.- a female water spirit, corresponding to the naiads

unforelimnable
(a coinage)

usufruct
the right of using another’s property for profit, without spoiling its substance

vacilant
fluctuating; wavering (v.- vacilate)

valediction
a bidding of farewell

variegated
1. Marked with various colors or tints 2. Exhibiting different forms, styles, or varieties

verdigris
the green or bluish patina formed on copper, bronze or brass surfaces long exposed

veridical
veracious; truth-telling [L.- veridicus- speaking the truth]

verisimilitude
a semblance of truth or reality

vermiculated
adorned with traceries resembling the tracks of worms

vermilion
1. bright-red mercuric sulfide, used as a pigment 2. scarlet; brilliantly red

vertiginous
dizzying; affected by vertigo

vestment
clothing or covering, esp. a garment or robe of office

viands
articles of food; choice dishes

vicinal
neighboring; adjoining

villanelle
  a short poem of several stanzas (usually 5) of three lines each, and a final stanza of 4 lines: it has only two rhymes throughout

violescent
tending to a violet color

virago
1. a bold, shrewish woman 2. Archaic: a strong, large, manlike woman; an amazon

viscid
semi-fluid and sticky

vitriolene
(coinage… describes spacesuits; see next entry)

vitriolic
extremely biting or caustic; sharp and bitter (from vitriol)…[L.- vitreus- glassy]

vizier
the title of high political officers in Turkish and other Mohammedan states

vocable
a word considered as a unit of sounds or letters, without regard to meaning

volitation
the act of flying; flight

volumen
a roll of manuscript

volute
Archit.- a spiral scroll used as an ornament in Ionic and Corinthian capitals

wafture
something conveyed through water or air, as an odor

wattling
a fleshy process, often brightly colored, hanging from the neck of a bird

weft
a woven fabric; web

weir
an obstruction placed in a stream to raise or divert the water

welkin
Archaic or Poetic: the vault of the sky; the heavens

wheedling
persuading by flattery or gentle pleading; coaxing

wilderment
Poetic: bewilderment; confusion

Will-o’-the-wisp
1. Ignis fatuus; a phosphorescent light seen in the air over marshy places 2. Figuratively: a delusion; deceptive attraction

windlass
a mechanism for lifting by rope, usually with a cranking attachment

withes
willow or osier twigs; vines [ME.- wythes]

wraith
an apparition of a person, believed to be alive, seen shortly before or after his death; specter

wried
(coinage... "wried and twisted constellations")

wyvern
Her.- a monster with two wings, two legs, a tapering body and a barbed tail

yoke
Figuratively: enslavement

zircon
a mineral occurring in lustrous brown or grey prisms, used as a gem

PRIMARY SOURCES

Webster’s New Universal Unabridged Dictionary. 2nd Ed., 1983.
Brittanica World Language Ed. of Funk & Wagnall’s Standard Dictionary. 2 Vols., 1960.

SECONDARY SOURCES

The American Heritage Dictionary, 1994.
Funk & Wagnall’s Standard Dictionary, 1993.

(pp. =past participle // ppr. = present participle . . . for abbreviation key, see Poetry section)

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Printed on: December 22, 2024