Skip to content
The Horror Library

Occultism

2 stories

Things Near and Far

Arthur Machen·1923·3h 23m read

Arthur Machen's 'Things Near and Far' is a semi-autobiographical essay-narrative that weaves personal memory with philosophical meditation on the occult, literature, and the pursuit of artistic vocation. Written in the early twentieth century, it reflects on Machen's youthful years—from his childhood in Caerleon, Wales in the 1850s through his impoverished years as a young man cataloguing occult manuscripts in London during the 1880s. Rather than a conventional story with plot or characters, readers should expect a lyrical exploration of place, intellectual curiosity, loneliness, and the transformative power of literature and the unknown.

The Kybalion: A Study of the Hermetic Philosophy of Ancient Egypt and Greece

Three Initiates·1908·2h 27m read

The Kybalion is an early 20th-century treatise on Hermetic philosophy attributed to three anonymous initiates, presenting itself as a modern exposition of ancient Egyptian esoteric teachings attributed to Hermes Trismegistus. Rather than a narrative fiction, this is a didactic philosophical work organizing Hermetic doctrine into seven fundamental principles—Mentalism, Correspondence, Vibration, Polarity, Rhythm, Cause and Effect, and Gender—intended to serve as a master key for understanding occult knowledge. Readers should expect a systematic, metaphysical exploration of universal laws and mental transmutation rather than a conventional story.