(For Throwback Thursday, here's a short post I'd forgotten about from my old blog Panic on the Fourth of July, posted in 2009. Enjoy!)
H.P. Lovecraft was a lifelong resident and antiquarian from Providence, Rhode Island, who supported himself by writing the most vivid star-flung nightmare fantasies of the early 20th century. His shadow over the field of horror entertainment since his death in 1937 is unparalleled and unmistakable. To say something is "Lovecraftian" is to intimate its awesome alien strangeness, as in, "Some early scenes in Ridley Scott's Alien (1979) are truly Lovecraftian."
In
Lovecraft's tales, gone were the dank castles of Count Dracula, the
Gothic laboratory of Dr. Frankenstein, the cross and the silver bullet
to destroy the beast, the pure of heart and the Lord's Prayer. He wrote
for the new scientific age of Darwin, Einstein,
and Freud, when our fears were no longer blasphemous monsters of
superstitious Old World folklore, but of the vastness of the universe
and humanity’s lowly place within it; terrors not of the soul, but of the mind.
"The
most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the
human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of
ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant
that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own
direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing
together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of
reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go
mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and
safety of a new dark age."
"The Call of Cthulhu," 1927
Lovecraft's
infamous Great Old Ones are not, as some have insisted, simply evil
alien creatures, as Arkham House founder August Derleth posited and
promulgated in his own stories;
no, they represent the inability of humans to comprehend anything
outside their own earth-bound experience. From deep space and other
dimensions, these beings are not the saucer-eyed, woman-hungry Martians
of science fiction; these entities are vast, incorporeal, protean,
inconceivable. Degenerate cults worship them as gods, and Lovecraft at
once parodies and mocks notions of religion, spirituality, sacred texts, and transcendent knowledge.
An
atheist who, as he said, "hated and despised religion," Lovecraft saw no
real qualitative difference between, say, "Shub Nigurath, the Goat with
a Thousand Young" or "Past, present, future, all are one in
Yog-Sothoth," and "Transubstantion of the Eucharist" or "There is no God
but God." The dread Necronomicon is their bible; the acolyte's cry of "Iä! Iä!" is Cthulhu-speak for "Hallelujah!"
"They
worshiped, so they said, the Great Old Ones who lived ages before there
were any men, and who came to the young world out of the sky. Those Old
Ones were gone now, inside the earth and under the sea; but their dead
bodies had told their secrets in dreams to the first men, who formed a
cult which had never died. This was that cult, and the prisoners said it
had always existed and always would exist, hidden in distant wastes and
dark places all over the world until the time when the great priest
Cthulhu, from his dark house in the mighty city of R'lyeh under the
waters, should rise and bring the earth again beneath his sway. Some day
he would call, when the stars were ready, and the secret cult would
always be waiting to liberate him."
"The Call of Cthulhu," 1927
The final lines of "The Shadow over Innsmouth" (used so well in Stuart Gordon's 2001 film Dagon)
can be seen as a nightmarish twist on the Lord's Prayer: "And in that
lair of the Deep Ones we shall dwell amidst wonder and glory forever."
Compare: "For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory,
forever and ever. Amen."
"Man must be prepared to accept notions of the cosmos, and of his own place in the seething vortex of time, whose merest mention is paralysing. He must, too, be placed on guard against a specific, lurking peril which, though it will never engulf the whole race, may impose monstrous and unguessable horrors upon certain venturesome members of it."
"The Shadow out of Time," 1935
2 comments:
What a wonderful post.
Make whatever you want to out of Lovecraft and his works but there's really only one thing that it all comes down to: He worked a very specific mine and he may have been the best miner on his team. What he did, he did very, very well. The idiosyncrasies and pitfalls of his style and subjects are documented to the end-times, for me. The things you CAN'T take away from his work is what endures, resonates, and matters. His verbiage was often clunky, his vision was impeccable. Ia Ia, Lovecraft fhtagn!
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