Complimentary worldwide shipping on orders over $400 · No import tariffs for most countries
Complimentary worldwide shipping on orders over $400 · No import tariffs for most countries

2 min read
Orpheus — The Weight of Turning is a literary myth retelling from The Hospitable Dark, returning the story of Orpheus and Eurydice to its human threshold before it becomes legend. Before the underworld, before the condition, before the fatal backward glance, there is a room, a marriage, a note brought gently into tune, and the ordinary nearness grief will later make unbearable.
Before he tried to bring his wife back from the dead, Orpheus was once occupied, like any other husband, with a stubborn string and the small patience of an ordinary morning.
Eurydice stood in the doorway with one hand against the wood, listening as he bent his head over the lyre and turned the peg a fraction more than was necessary, then a fraction back again, for musicians are seldom content to leave a thing when it is nearly right, and husbands, if they are wise, soon learn that there are labours of the household less urgent than appearing to finish what one has begun.
The room was full of the plain, good things by which a life first makes itself believable: a cup still warm from use, the heel of yesterday’s bread, the white brightness of morning at the threshold, the faint scent of olive oil and crushed thyme, and, standing among them without knowing that she made them all seem gathered and complete, Eurydice herself.
He played the string softly, then once again, and this time the note settled where it ought.
“There,” she said.
“You say that,” said Orpheus, “as though you had been waiting in grave uncertainty.”
“I have,” said Eurydice. “I had almost begun to fear for the whole order of the world.”
Now there are men who would answer such a thing with a speech; Orpheus, though he had the making of speeches in him, had not yet come to the age when every feeling must turn at once into song. So he only smiled a little and reached out without looking, and she came the rest of the way into the room.
It is worth remembering this — not because mornings are rare, for they are not, and that is their mercy, but because what is lost in the great tales is often first lost in some small and perfectly ordinary form.
A hand on a doorway. A voice from the next room. A woman listening while a man pretends not to be pleased that she has heard the note come right.
If you do not understand why such things matter, then you will make very little of what follows; and if you understand too well, then I am sorry, but you are fit to hear the story.
Continue reading: Orpheus — The Weight of Turning at The Hospitable Dark on Substack.

2 min read
A companion myth essay on Actaeon, Artemis, forbidden sight, and the terrible moment when seeing becomes trespass. When Sight Becomes Trespass asks why Actaeon’s story cannot be reduced to simple guilt or divine cruelty, and why the old myth still wounds through transformation, failed recognition, and the loss of being seen.

3 min read
A literary Greek myth retelling of Actaeon, the hunter who sees what was never meant for mortal eyes. In The Stag in the Clearing, The Hospitable Dark enters the forest through dogs, leather, wet grass, and dawn laughter before the old story turns towards transformation, terror, and the failure of recognition.

2 min read
Telemachus reaches Pylos seeking news of Odysseus, but Nestor gives him something more difficult than certainty: memory. This reader’s guide to The Long Return III — An Old King Remembers explores fathers, sonship, hospitality, Troy’s aftermath, and the first hard education Telemachus receives from old grief.
If this piece found something in you, you may wish to continue the journey elsewhere.
On The Lantern Chronicles, I gather writings from Angkor, myth and legend, contemplative essays, and poetry — works shaped by silence, beauty, wonder, memory, and the deeper questions that follow us through the world.
It is a place for stone and story, reflection and vow, shadow and revelation.
You would be most welcome there.