Further notes on Letters to Family. My reading of the first volume is now nearly finished.
* Lovecraft talked of the “beams of the moon” and their influence… “many a mind closed & sluggish in sunlight, opens up rare & magnificently exotic vistas in the beams of the moon” (page 377) and this passage seems to relate to the combined Commonplace story idea I posted previously. It also plays into a related story idea (page 401), which then arose from his purchase of an antique lamp from Ancient Greece (page 381).
* Later he talked of the likelihood of writing “a new series of tales” (page 437), though this probably indicates the Cthulhu mythos which was obviously then emerging.
* He recalls an unfinished story of circa 1906-07, which featured an Ancient Roman colony in South America. He considers he might revive the idea one day, with the momentous modern discovery of a Roman colony while tunnelling under Providence. The Roman ships having been swept across the Atlantic by a mighty storm, a colony founded among the Indians, and then destroyed by earthquake etc. Later he notes the story potential in Rome’s long African frontier (page 500), which seems to imply a transfer of the Roman New England idea from New England to Africa. See my essay on Great Zimbabwe for how this might have developed further.
* In summer 1925 he was reading the account of the travels of Marco Polo, The Travels of Sir John Mandeville, and also appears to have seen the German mountaineering documentary-drama movie Peak of Fate. These could all have played into aspects of his Dream Quest, written after he returned to Providence.
* Evidently Tryout Smith’s idea for the story “In the Vault” arrived sometime in August 1925, and it’s possible that this was what he was sketching out in Elizabethtown when interrupted. This does not obviate my notion that there was a ‘lost/unwritten’ New York story (see above), but it does suggested that “In the Vault” was the Elizabethtown tale being jotted down. But to be sure one would need the exact dates.
* The tunnelling under College Hill, Providence, he recalls as dating to 1906-08.
* Lovecraft’s New York reading on the deep history of Providence shows him that its culture and sense of itself was… “not laid by the Baptist home-lot families at all, but by the more polished Episcopalians from Newport, Boston or England, who came after 1700 and who were largely communicants of the King’s Church” (page 395). He also finds a new 43rd St. cafe-restaurant which is very handy for use after his late-night library reading (page 415).
* He had enjoyed becoming purposely lost in Cat Swamp as a boy… “Remembering that I had no map & knew nothing of the country, [I went] trusting with chance with a very agreeable sense of adventure into the unknown; just as I used to enjoy getting “lost” on walks around Cat Swamp, East Providence, or somewhere, with you, Gramp, or my mother in the early and middle ‘nineties.” (page 421). Evidently it was a small family tradition to try to become purposely “lost” on walks and horse-and-buggy rides.
* In “1897-8-9” the museum in Waterman Street “was an enchanted world” for him, with its “basement” museum of Greek and Roman reproduction sculpture. I’ve previously blogged about this, with interior pictures. I’ve updated the post, re: the fact that there was a “basement” full of sculptures as well as the few sculptures which adorned an upstairs entrance hall.
* An aunt made use of a “Mrs Glazer’s stable” for storage, in which the damp ruined a large painting and fine books. But this does not appear to be the drier barn in which Lovecraft later stored his own books and old materials.
* The Netropian journal, seemingly produced by the Rhode Island Hospital Trust Co. of Providence, and with many local history articles and art in the 1920s. Copies apparently languish in paper at Brown and the Rhode Island School of Design, and might usefully be scanned and sent to Hathi. I seem to recall that Brown has recently joined Hathi, so we may yet see the run online.
* Lovecraft’s friend Kleiner trained himself to become an expert calligrapher in 1925, just for himself and friends.
* Arthur Leeds wrote a long tribute to Blackwood, which is presumably now lost. Leeds also had a large collection of magazines such as Adventure, Black Cat etc. Lovecraft was able to peruse and read into the Leeds collection at length, one quiet night.
* His opinion of the Arthur Leeds vampire story was glowing, when it appeared in the Weird Tales issue for Halloween 1925. “A great tale … the atmosphere and climax are ideal” (page 431). It is now newly in the public domain and available for adaptation.
* Lovecraft remarks “I never read a literary review” in magazines and newspapers, meaning reviews of fiction. He does make remarks indicating that he looks at the notices for new books in the magazines and papers. Evidently he skips the women’s pages in the magazines and newspapers he is sent from Providence, though otherwise seems to scour the papers quite closely.
* He does not seem to have acquired the anticipated scrapbooks, and his mass of cuttings evidently remains in a semi-chaotic home-brew filing system.
* He read a book on the British decadents of the 1890s in summer 1925 (page 380). This can’t have been The romantic ’90s by Richard Le Gallienne, as it did not appear until 1926.
* He saw and enjoyed movies such as Seigfried, The Unholy Three, The Phantom of the Opera. Though he was evidently bored and lulled to sleep by conventional cinema, there is obviously a lot more to said on the topic than Joshi’s short essay. Indeed it seems to me that a book on Lovecraft and cinema could be written, by someone prepared to do all the legwork in the Letters and cinema archives. Though I won’t be the one writing it, so feel free. Along with a comprehensive chronology of the movies he saw and valued, one idea to examine might be that Lovecraft recognised the power of cinema by 1925 and the rise of this art then played a small part in dampening his own literary output during the 1930s. It was probably not a strong influence, but it may have been a small factor. Such a book might also note my discoveries of the pre-Lovecraft cinema careers of Leeds, McNeil, Houtain and Dench, back when cinema production was centred in New York. At least two of the Kalem members had been film industry professionals, and the Kalems were also occasionally joined by Charlie Chaplin’s brother.
* A Kalem meeting was attended by Hart Crane in 1925, though he arrived “one quarter lit-up” by booze, and after an hour he departed in search of more. The poet was, as many will recall, a pitiful drunk.
* In 1925 he took his “first real view” of the Hudson River, on a river-trip far up the river (pages 375 and 386). I may look at this trip for a future ‘Picture Postals’ post.
* In New York he saw again the Innsmouth-like “Old Mill” village he had visited in 1922. It is footnoted as Kiendlville, though Lovecraft knows it as Kiendalville. Neither spelling shows up on a postcard search. Letters to Family has a very fine description in which he and Loveman venture beyond this fishing-village settlement and reach the sea-marshes, which alone is worth the price of the book (pages 389, 391-92). Loveman wrote a poem about the visit. The material relating to this area might be collected and then make for a fine illustrated artbook project for an artist working in fine charcoals.
* In the summer Lovecraft finds he adores “huckleberry pie”, then in season.
* The Taorima restaurant was in Clinton St., above a grocery shop where Lovecraft shopped for cans.
* The national coal strike of the second half of 1925 caused the cost of living to rise. Under-heating of rented apartments was not permitted by law in New York City, and by Christmas the price of coke fuel had risen to $22 a ton by the start of December, at which Lovecraft’s landlady was livid. Lovecraft remarks that as winter approached the city temporarily lifted its total ban on bituminous (‘smoky’) coal due to the strike, so the city was likely to have been far smoggier and smokier than usual in the Autumn-Winter of 1925-26. The resulting atmosphere may have impaired Long’s health (he fell ill with bronchitis) but the resulting intensification of Autumnal mists and sunsets could have pleased Lovecraft. Kirk’s Diary mentions how fine the Indian Summer was that year, and another remark by Lovecraft indicates its terminus was in mid November (page 491) when the weather broke.
* By Autumn/Fall 1925 coffee at John’s was 10 cents, compared to the cost of full spaghetti meal at 35 cents. This seems high. Was the coffee price so high to help shape the profile of the clientele, by keeping out the riff-raff?
* With his Weird Tales cheque Lovecraft obtained a $13 ‘hiking’ suit by searching the “slum shops” for one and haggling. This is the one he wears in the well-known ‘HPL, cat-strangler’ snapshot. He also purchased a life-saving $7 ‘Perfection’ oil heater for his room, and was so eager to have it he carried it out of the shop and lugged it through the streets. After learning the heater’s arcane ways he managed to pare it down to consuming 3 gallons a week. On this flat-top heater-stove he was able to heat up his canned food, previously eaten cold.
Shown here with inner oil chamber, filled and wiped elsewhere on newspaper and then carried to the stove.