
List: $2.99
| Sale: $2.10
Club: $1.49
The Doom That Came To Sarnath
Author: HP Lovecraft
Series: Timeless Terrors #133
Narrator: Jonathan Dunne
Unabridged: 21 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Jonathan Dunne
Published: 04/22/2026
Categories: Fiction, Horror, Classic, Short Stories
Synopsis
Experience the atmospheric visual edition of this tale by searching "Jonathan Dunne Horror" on YouTube.Title: The Doom That Came to SarnathSeries Name: Timeless TerrorsSeries Entry: 133Author: H. P. LovecraftNarrator: Jonathan DunneOriginal Publication: 1920Public Domain: YesYouTube Channel: Jonathan Dunne Horror Stories & Audiobooks (search on YouTube)Description:The Doom That Came to Sarnath by H. P. Lovecraft is a chilling mythic chronicle of pride, cruelty, and inevitable cosmic retribution. Written in Lovecraft’s richly archaic style, the tale unfolds like a forbidden legend whispered down through forgotten ages.In the land of Mnar, beside a still and mist-shrouded lake, the proud city of Sarnath rose in splendor after conquering the ancient, alien city of Ib. The beings of Ib—strange, green, and mute—were utterly destroyed, their memory mocked and their idol carried away as a trophy. For centuries, Sarnath prospered, its alabaster walls gleaming and its feasts growing ever more decadent.Yet on the eve of a grand celebration marking the thousandth year of Ib’s fall, unease begins to creep across the revelers’ hearts. The stolen idol inspires dread. Whispers echo through torchlit halls. And as the appointed hour approaches, an ancient doom—long foretold—draws near from the dark waters of the lake.Lovecraft crafts a tale not of sudden violence, but of mounting inevitability: a civilization blind to its own arrogance, haunted by forces older than mankind. Rich with dreamlike imagery and mythic cadence, The Doom That Came to Sarnath stands as an early and powerful expression of cosmic horror—where time is vast, memory is long, and vengeance may sleep for centuries before it wakes.Narrated by Amazon bestselling horror author Jonathan Dunne, this performance captures the story’s solemn grandeur, creeping dread, and apocalyptic finality—a legend of forgotten gods, drowned cities, and the terrible price of pride.