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The Corpse and the Skeleton

by Clark Ashton Smith


Scene: The catacombs of the ancient city of Oomal. A new corpse has been
deposited along-side a skeleton, which, from its mouldiness and worm-picked
appearance, seems of considerable antiquity.

The Corpse: How now, old bare-bones! What word of the worm? Methinks you have
known him well, in your time.

The Skeleton: Aye, aye, and so will you: 'Tis a world of creditors, of which the
tomb and the worm are the last. There is little left for the devil, when these
have taken their due account. The vermin is a very Jew, and will have his last
ounce of brain and marrow. 'Has spared me never a scrap of flesh nor tatter of
skin against the mouldy breath of the cavern-wind, nor aught save the jaw-bone
to stop the diddering of my teeth.

The Corpse: You speak so dismally: To change the theme, let us talk of our
former lives.

The Skeleton: Willingly, willingly, though as for myself, I fear my memories
have grown a trifle musty, from five hundred years, more or less, in an air that
is rotten with the dead. However, for the dust that has settled among the bones
of my throat, I bethink me that I was once a taverner, and, for capacity, was
not a least of mine own puncheons. Often-sith have I thirsted for even a quart,
in lieu of those former tunfuls. Time is a cheating merchant, he has given me
this modicum of mould, in exchange for a noble corporosity. Death, you will
find, is a dull business, and without profit despite the number of the
traffickers.

The Corpse: Where, then, with their multiform splendours, are the heavens of
light and hells of fire, promised unto faith by the sybils and hierophants?

The Skeleton: Ask of yonder cadaver, him whose corpulence diminishes momently,
for the pampering of worms. He was once a priest, and spoke authentically of
these matters, with all the delegated thunder of gods. As for myself, I have
found nothing beyond this narrow charnel vault, in whose lethal night are bred
the vapours of pestilence, that wander forth to swell our number with the
living, and rise from the rotten earth for an incense to the very sun.

The Corpse: 'Twas the pestilence that sent me here from my marriage-bed. I was
an optimate of Oomal, yet they have thrust me away to rot among the common
rogues.

The Skeleton (Sympathetically, and in a tone less like the grating of bones than
heretofore): Too bad, too bad! Albeit I am long beyond the flesh myself I
commiserate you. The brides are bony, and the bedfellows cold, that you are like
to find here, even though you lie till the death-light glimmers within your