Of Kings and Things: Strange Tales and Decadent Poems
Edited and introduced by David Tibet; with an afterword by Tim d’Arch Smith and a comprehensive bibliography by David Tibet, Ray Russell and Mark Valentine, Of Kings and Things is the first introduction to Stenbock’s writing for the general reader.This volume offers fifteen stories, including all of those in his fabled collections Studies of Death and Child of the Soul, over thirty poems and two essays by this complex, intriguing figure.Illustrated with exceedingly rare archive material. Described by W. B. Yeats as a “scholar, connoisseur, drunkard, poet, pervert, most charming of men,” Count Stanislaus Eric Stenbock (1860–1895) is surely the greatest exemplar of the Decadent movement of the late nineteenth century.A friend of Aubrey Beardsley, patron of the extraordinary pre-Raphaelite artist Simeon Solomon, and contemporary of Oscar Wilde, Stenbock died at the age of thirty-six as a result of his addiction to opium and his alcoholism, having published just three slim volumes of suic