6 Quotes & Sayings By William Hope Hodgson

William Hope Hodgson was an English author of fantasy and horror fiction. In his lifetime he wrote more than 100 books, some under a number of pen names, but is best remembered for his series of horror stories featuring Carnacki the Ghost-Finder, which began with The Ghost Pirates (1908), and continued with The Ghost Pirates of China (1909). He also wrote a few detective novels and a biography of Robert Louis Stevenson.

1
I read, and, in reading, lifted the Curtains of the Impossible that blind the mind, and looked out into the unknown. William Hope Hodgson
2
I am what I might term an unprejudiced sceptic. I am not given to either believing or disbelieving things 'on principle, ' as I have found many idiots prone to be, and what is more, some of them not ashamed to boast of the insane fact. William Hope Hodgson
3
There had stood a great house in the centre of the gardens, where now was left only that fragment of ruin. This house had been empty for a great while; years before his–the ancient man's–birth. It was a place shunned by the people of the village, as it had been shunned by their fathers before them. There were many things said about it, and all were of evil. No one ever went near it, either by day or night. In the village it was a synonym of all that is unholy and dreadful. William Hope Hodgson
4
And then, suddenly, an extraordinary question rose in my mind, whether this stupendous globe of green fire might not be the vast Central Sun–the great sun, round which our universe and countless others revolve. I felt confused. I thought of the probable end of the dead sun, and another suggestion came, dumbly– Do the dead stars make the Green Sun their grave? The idea appealed to me with no sense of grotesqueness; but rather as something both possible and probable. William Hope Hodgson
5
Moreover, they who returned, if any, would be flogged, as seemed proper, after due examination. And though the news of their beatings might help all others to hesitation, ere they did foolishly, in like fashion, yet was the principle of the flogging not on this base, which would be both improper and unjust; but only that the one in question be corrected to the best advantage for his own well-being; for it is not meet that any principle of correction should shape to the making of human signposts of pain for the benefit of others; for in verity, this were to make one pay the cost of many's learning; and each should owe to pay only so much as shall suffice for the teaching of his own body and spirit. And if others profit thereby, this is but accident, however helpful. And this is wisdom, and denoteth now that a sound Principle shall prevent Practice from becoming monstrous. . William Hope Hodgson