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Author Archives: asdjfdlkf

Archives of the Blue Pencil Club of Brooklyn

29 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

≈ 2 Comments

I came across a list of the archives of the Blue Pencil Club of Brooklyn, which are held as part of the Katharine Brownell Collier Papers at the Archives and Special Collections Library, Vassar College Libraries, in Poughkeepsie, New York. The 1924-1927 (Lovecraft in New York period) issues of The Brooklynite, are marked as having been annotated.

So far as I can remember, there is no proof that Lovecraft was ever an actual paid-up member of the Blue Pencil Club of Brooklyn. But it’s known that he sometimes went as a guest, usually a guest of his wife. (Update: he joined in 1924). Lovecraft wrote his essay “Cats and Dogs” for them in 1926, though was unable to read it in person at the meeting. The Club included Lovecraft’s friends, such as James Ferdinand Morton (and his later wife, Pearl K. Merritt, also the sister of Dench’s wife), Rheinhart Kleiner (sometime editor of The Brooklynite), and his associate Ernest A. Dench (and presumably also his wife). I think Kirk also went occasionally to Blue Pencil meetings or perhaps to offshoot walking rambles organised by Dench, but he found the members fairly humdrum. There appears to have been a later cross-pollination of members with the Paterson Rambling Club, and probably also with the non-Club amateur gatherings held at Dench’s small home. Possibly Dench’s Writers’ Club, for professionals, was an informal (since it seems to have left almost no trace) offshoot of the Blue Pencil Club — but that’s just my guess.

Note that the Club was established c. Feb 1915, and the Vassar College archive appears to be missing its early publications such as the Blue Pencil Amateur, c.1916.


Blue Pencil Club:

Folder 5.6 Correspondence: among club members re: club organization, meetings, and various written works, 1925-1944, n.d. (12 items)

Folder 5.7 Programs: banquet programs, 1929-1932 (2 items)

Folder 5.8 Publications: memorial booklets for Hazel Pratt Adams and Alice Lovett Lewis, VC 1904, 1922, 1027 (TS, 48 p.)

Folder 5.9 Publications: The Brooklynite, official organ of the BPC, 1917-1918 (TS, 12 p.)

Folder 5.10 Publications: The Brooklynite, 1921 (TS, 6 p.)

Folder 5.11 Publications: The Brooklynite, 1923 (TS, 16 p.)

Folder 5.12 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes annotated issue, 1924 (TS, 16 p.)

Folder 5.13 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes annotated issue and 17th anniversary issue 1925 (TS, 20 p.)

Folder 5.14 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes annotated issue, 1926 (TS, 16 p.)

Folder 5.15 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes annotated issue, 1927 (TS, 20 p.)

Folder 5.16 Publications: The Brooklynite, 1928 (TS, 12 p.)

Folder 5.17 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes 21st anniversary issue, 1929 (TS, 20 p.)

Folder 5.18 Publications: The Brooklynite, 1930 (TS, 8 p.)

Folder 5.19 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes annotated issue, 1931-1932 (TS, 12 p.)

Folder 5.20 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes 25th anniversary issue, 1933 (TS, 34 p.)

Folder 5.21 Publications: The Brooklynite, 1935-1936 (TS, 16 p.)

Folder 5.22 Publications: The Brooklynite,includes annotated issue, 1937-1939 (TS, 16 p.)

Folder 5.23 Publications: The Brooklynite, includes annotated issue, 1940-1944 (TS, 12 p.)

Folder 5.24 Publications: The Brooklynite, n.d. (TS, 2 p., fragments)

Folder 6.51 Blue Pencil Club

Rheinhart Kleiner after Lovecraft’s New York period

29 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 2 Comments

I’ve been doing a little digging into Rheinhart Kleiner (1892–1949) after Lovecraft’s New York period, spurred by An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia‘s comment that Lovecraft lost touch with Kleiner from the end of Lovecraft’s New York period through to 1936-37 (although Lovecraft did encounter him, as part of groups, on some of his New York visits in the 1930s). I wondered why they lost touch.

One reason might be that Kleiner appears to have been active as a hardline communist in New York during at least the later part of that period, a member of “Unit 36-S” of the New Deal’s Federal Writers’ Project. The New York City FWP was a body set up in 1934/5 and it was swiftly infested with bickering communist and socialist sects (seemingly to the detriment at that time of fellow Kalem member Arthur Leeds — see the chapter on Leeds in my latest book). Perhaps of relevance to this discovery is that fellow Kalem member George Kirk’s Chelsea Book Shop in New York was also cited in the official record as having been one of… “the two official book shops of the Communist party of the United States”.


I also stumbled on another curious mystery of Kleiner’s later years, which is the whereabouts of his c.1946 book Burrowings of an Old Bookworm. This is not currently on any bibliographic databases. Imprimatur (Vol.1, 1-3, p.31) noted of Paul W. Cook’s Vermont little magazine The Ghost…

“The fourth number (July 1946) is entirely devoted to Burrowings of an Old Bookworm by Rheinhart Kleiner.”

Burrowings was apparently… “a long bookish memoir largely devoted to popular fiction he read during his boyhood” (L.W. Currey’s description of The Ghost). Burrowings is also mentioned in Rheinhart Kleiner’s death notice in Wilson Library Bulletin, 1949…

“Rheinhart Kleiner, trade writer; at [222 Demott Avenue, according to New York Times] Clifton, New Jersey; after a long illness; fifty-six. Well known in his field in England and Australia as well as in the United States, his latest book was Burrowings of an Old Bookworm.”

My suspicion would be that Burrowings may have been a circulated typescript memoir in carbon, rather than an actual book? I guess an inspection of The Ghost, currently available from L.W. Currey for $150, could yield more precise details.

An item I did discover is James Guinane’s self-published 46-page mimeographed booklet RK: Rheinhart Kleiner: a Memoir (1951). Guinane was a young Australian amateur journalist (Churingas) on the remote island of Tasmania, and he also presumably(?) corresponded with Kleiner. The booklet is described as…

“American amateurs receiving it can recall nothing to equal it in the artistic use of mimeographing … Forty-six pages of Guinane’s polished prose are divided into nine chapters on various phases of Kleiner’s personality and literary output.” (review in LOC X Collection 1324).

This is not yet scanned and online. There’s currently a cheap copy of it listed on Amazon USA, but sadly they won’t ship it to the UK.

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #14

28 Wednesday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013

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My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

* WaterFire video: raising Cthulhu…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-b7_E9bdZ0&w=420&h=315]

 
* Blog write-ups are coming in:

Bret Kramer; Joanna Dunn; Laird Barron; Wilum Pugmire (one) and Wilum Pugmire (two).

* Video of the bronze bust unveiling ceremony.

* Video sample of the augmented-reality walking tour.

* Adam exploring the Lovecraft sites in Providence… nice suit…

adam

* Gigi Mitchell-Velasco, organist at the keynote speeches. Photo by P. Freidland…

Gigi Mitchell-Velasco

* Joseph Caffentzis’s magnificent view over Providence, from the Biltmore Hotel…

providence2013

Henry S. Whitehead

27 Tuesday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ Leave a comment

I found an online photograph of Lovecraft’s friend and correspondent Henry S. Whitehead…

He looks thin and tired here because he was ill in the later part of his life. Lovecraft remarks that he was immensely fit when well.

I’ve also found out that Whitehead had two aspects of his career which would have interested Lovecraft. 1) He had worked in an area of New York known to Lovecraft, and had there worked with immigrants, and so would have been able to compare experiences with Lovecraft about ‘the pest zone’. 2) He had also been a “chaplain for the Connecticut State Hospital for the Insane”.

I here go through his early church career in chronological order, based on a quick dash through the online archives now available:

His Columbia University alumni news magazine (Vol.13, 1921/1922, p.6) reported…

   [Graduates of 19]”’04 — Henry St. Clair Whitehead, formerly rector of Christ Church of Middletown [South Farms, c.1914-1917], Connecticut, and also chaplain for the Connecticut State Hospital for the Insane, is now located at 28 Brimmer Street, Boston, Massachusetts.”

After Middletown he moved to New York. He was on a list of newly appointed curates 1916-17, his appointment being to St. Mary the Virgin from Nov 1st 1917. The publications of his church show…

   “Rev. Henry S. Whitehead is Pastor of the Children, Church of S. Mary the Virgin, New York City” (The American Church Monthly, Vol.5, Mar-Aug 1919, p.926). “Rev. Henry S. Whitehead is on the staff of the Church of S. Mary the Virgin in New York, and is an authority on pastoral work. In his article on “Work Among Foreigners” he shows why the Episcopal Church is especially well adapted to undertake this work.” (The New American Church Monthly, Vol.4 No.4, Dec 1918, p.274).

In New York he was living at 144 West 47th St. (co-incidentally not that far from Everett McNeil then at 543 West 49th St., and with probably the same predominately Irish population). His connection with St. Mary the Virgin was dissolved sometime between late 1919 and May 1920, according to the Annual Convention journal of his church. He was then attached to the Diocese of Massachusetts, living at 28 Brimmer Street, Boston until he was shipped out to be… “acting archdeacon of the Virgin Islands from 1921 to 1929.” He then went to Florida — a news item reports on a children’s Halloween Party of welcome for the “new rector” at Dunedin (St. Petersberg Times, 10th Nov 1929).

So when had he been… “chaplain for the Connecticut State Hospital for the Insane [at Middleton]”? He started his church career in 1912, after graduating from the Berkeley Divinity School at Middletown. So his stint in the madhouse was either 1912-1914, or else was an additional duty undertaken while serving as rector at South Farms, Middletown. Whitehead later refers in fiction to this period, in his (Lovecraft revision?) story “Bothon”…

“It happened while I was chief intern in the Connecticut State Hospital for the Insane. I served there for two years under Dr. Floyd Haviland before I went into private practice.” (“Bothon”).

In I am Providence (pp.845-846) S.T. Joshi discusses theories that “Bothon” was not written by Whitehead, but by Derleth from a Lovecraft plot outline. But the apparently autobiographical use of the “Connecticut State Hospital for the Insane” may suggest otherwise, as I’m not sure Derleth would have bothered to slip in such an obscure detail from Whitehead’s early career. On the other hand, the setting may have been in the original outline, decided on in consultation with Whitehead.


There has also been some controversy about Whitehead’s claim to have graduated from Harvard. I have found that “Whitehead, Henry S” appears in the Harvard Club of New York City members’ book from 1912 through to 1920. He is listed as of the class of 1904, the same year when — according to his alumni magazine — he also graduated from Columbia. Yet he is listed in the Harvard College Class of 1904 book under Special Students and Affiliated Members, with a ‘b’ next to his name which indicates he withdrew at the end of the Sophmore Year — so I assume he must have transferred to Columbia for his final year? The Harvard College Class of 1904 (first report) book also gives his full name: “Henry St. Clair McMillin Whitehead”. The Harvard College Class of 1904 (second report) book gives his own account of his career from 1904 to undertaking his religious training in 1909…

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #13

26 Monday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013

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My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 has obviously been a huge success for all concerned, even when seen from this distance in the British Isles. Congratulations to all the organisers and helpers, and to the city of Providence for supporting the event!

* More fab videos of the discussion panels, recorded by Steve Ahlquist. Panel: “Religion, philosophy, and cosmic horror in HPL” (Sunday 2:30pm – 3:45pm, Grand Ballroom, Biltmore Hotel)…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDqEct4UgmI&w=560&h=315]

 
Panel: “Self, gender identity, and sexuality in Lovecraft” (Sunday 1:00pm – 2:15pm, Grand Ballroom, Biltmore Hotel)… rather surprised that no-one mentioned “Hypnos”…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGI8aAHwRgQ&w=560&h=315]

 
Steve also has a 39-minute video of the Cthulhu Prayer Breakfast on Sunday morning.

* Providence Monthly (a superficial glossy ‘lifestyle’ mag) has an article “I Am Providence, And I Am Weird” by Michael Clark, who makes some oddly disgruntled observations about the appearance of some of HPL’s fans…

“I moved to Providence eight years ago, and unfortunately I still know nothing about or nor have read anything written by one of this city’s cultural icons, HP Lovecraft, the weird fiction author. … an eclectic lot, including Goths, gay men, and what appeared to be a preponderance of spinsters … Goths, clad in black and exhibiting signs of Vitamin D deficiency, milled about …”

* Michael Umbricht’s sumptuous Powerpoint presentation is now online, “Cosmic Inspiration: Lovecraft’s Astronomical Influences”. Has many large and sharp archive pictures of the Ladd Observatory, which are nicely paired with Lovecraft’s comments on his involvement with Ladd. This Powerpoint seems to have been prepared for the Ladd Open Day during NecronomiCon…

upton-ladd-brownuni

* Lovely example of wall-title typography for the Cohen Gallery’s Ars Necronomica art exhibition, an element of NecronomiCon Providence 2013. This show will be open into September 2013. Photo: Joseph Caffentzis…

coheng

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #12

26 Monday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013

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My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

* Report from J.W. Ocker, author of the New England Grimpendium.

* 38 minute video of Robert M. Price‘s Cthulhu Prayer Breakfast event (Sunday morning) at NecronomiCon…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cB58lYxqixk&w=560&h=315]

 

* The main art exhibitions (Providence Art Club and The Cohen Gallery at Brown) will continue to be open into September.

necro2013-artshows

* More NecronomiCon event photos from various folks…

astro19041904 boyhood astronomy journal.

bignazoBig Nazo band.

eldritchbaEldritch Ball Fancy Dress party.

nec13passConvention Pass.

waterfireWaterFire event.

Some notes on Richard Ely Morse (1909-1986), a later Lovecraft correspondent

26 Monday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

≈ 2 Comments

Richard Ely Morse (1909-1986) worked mostly as a librarian at Princeton University. He earned his… “B.L.S. from Columbia University School of Library Service in 1932”, so when Lovecraft first knew him he was a new 23 year-old graduate. In 1968 Deke Quarterly stated that… “In his career he worked at the Princeton University Library, The Library of Congress, and the library of the Cooper Union Museum in New York” [being the Museum Librarian there from c.1936 until he resigned c.1949]”.

He published a volume of poetry titled Winter Garden in 1931, and he inscribed a copy for Lovecraft. The inscription is given in An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. On noting the volume’s publication, Morse’s fraternity magazine remarked: “He is president of the poetry society and editor in chief of the literary magazine [at Amherst].” Today at nearby Deerfield, which appears to be a feeder school for Amherst College, there is a current… “Richard Ely Morse ’26 Fund. Established in 1992 by Richard E. Morse ’26, this fund supports students who are proficient in music, art or literature.”

Morse was published in the Dial (Sept 1927), in The Best Poems of 1928 (“The Swan”), and his poetry can be found in the little magazines as late as 1967. Here is part of his “The Swan” (original line breaks missing due to OCR)…

   “HIS swan, upon the icy waters of my heart, sails night and day; reflected amid the drift of tarnished wood-leaves, desolate and gray. Bending his plumed, silver-shining neck he seeks in baffled love that shadowed apparition always vanishing from him above. And now he moves his head in spectral bitterness, to assuage his pain darting it beneath the calm of silver that shatters and forms again. There is no escape, only the mocking image of the mirrored swan beneath him sails, under a moon long turned to stone, for ever on….” (from “The Swan”).

An online forum comment mentioned that… “He [Lovecraft] certainly did observe it [homosexuality] in persons he was introduced to by way of Samuel Loveman (e.g. Richard Ely Morse)”. On this see I Am Providence, p.827. Lovecraft and Morse had met face to face, rather than simply by correspondence, and were introduced by Loveman (known to have been a gay man) in May 1932.

Morse’s poem “Mad Dreams (for H.P. Lovecraft)” appeared in Fantasy Commentator Vol.7 No.1 (#41), 1990.

Three of Lovecraft’s letters to Morse are held at the Houghton Library, Harvard College Library. Another is in the British Museum. Letters to Morse are published in the Selected Letters. I have found that Morse had a letter, mentioning Lovecraft by name, published in The American Scholar (1949, Vol.18, p.231) — but I am unable to access more than a snippet via online methods. He contributed a poem to The Acolyte in 1942, “In Memoriam: H. P. Lovecraft” (collected in Marginalia).

Morse served as a corporal in the U.S. Army in 1942-1943. Possibly a search of Army records might reveal a photograph?

His entry in An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia states he published an article “Some Modern Book Illustrations” in The Californian (Spring 1937). While at the Cooper Union Museum (c.1936-c.1949) he had contributed texts to exhibition catalogues such as “The Art and Technique of Modern Glass” and is also credited in the catalogue “Alter Ego: Masks, Their Art and Use”. He has a bibliography titled “Relating to Puppets, Marionettes and Shadow-Plays” in the Cooper Union Museum catalogue for “Small Wonders: Puppets and Marionettes” (c.1949). A few years later he wrote the text for Clowns and Ballerinas: The Circus and Dance in Art (1952), an exhibition catalogue for Princeton University Library. This exhibition may have been partly drawn from his own private collection, as he is said to have… “collected photographs, drawings, and prints relating to the commedia dell’arte and to the dance” (The Princeton University Library Chronicle) which he bequeathed to Princeton on his death. He had already donated “140 dance programs and souvenir booklets” to Princeton in 1966.

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #11

26 Monday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013

≈ 1 Comment

My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

* S.T. Joshi had received the Robert Bloch Award at NecronomiCon 2013. The award was set up by the 1995 NecronomiCon committee, and was administered by the New England Lovecraft Society. Joshi once gave the award to Lovecraft scholar Dirk W. Mosig, at the NecronomiCon 1997. Below is Matthew Carter’s photo of S.T. receiving The Shining Trapezohedron from convention organiser Niels Hobbs…

trap

* Matthew Carpenter has big photo sets of the Costume Ball at the NecronomiCon, and the Ars Necronomica art show…

necroball2013
ars

* A Facebook news snippet, from NecronomiCon, to the effect that…

“the entire print run of The Crypt of Cthulhu [fanzine] will be reprinted in a series of hardback collections. These will be made from scans of the originals”

* Nazo monster seen on the water at WaterFire on Saturday night…

nazo

* The first of the written convention reports online: K.H. Vaughan, on the Saturday. Vaughan volunteered as a helper Minion.

* Sounds like the weather’s been nice. Despite a heavy rain shower just before the convention started, humidity has stayed down. SSY writes…

“this weekend in Providence there is both a Lovecraft convention and a Rocky Horror convention running at the same time, it’s also pretty cold for this time of year … Chilly enough that I want to get a jacket. August around here is usually insufferably humid…”

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #10

25 Sunday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013, Scholarly works

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My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

* Steve Ahlquist’s videos of some of the scholarly talks…

Lovecraft’s Monsters: Rationalism, Anti-Rationalism and Lovecraftian Modernity

It’s Only Dark Because You Can’t See: A Posthuman Look at Lovecraft’s Cosmology

Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn’: The Language of Lovecraft

Lovecraftian Religions: Yesterday, Today, & When the Stars are Right

Thinking Ecocritically: A Look at Embodiment and Nature in H.P. Lovecraft

… Dialogic Ontology of Martin Buber to Evaluate H.P. Lovecraft’s Materialist Cosmic Dread

Dagon and Derrida: Lovecraft’s Texts and Postmodernity

Emerging Scholarship Symposium: Monstrous Modernism: Lovecraft’s Theory of the Aesthetic in Modernity

Emerging Scholarship Symposium: The Shadow of His Smile: Humour in H.P. Lovecraft

Emerging Scholarship Symposium: “… Mind, Body, and Phallus in Lovecraft’s “The Thing on the Doorstep”

 

* The Darkest of the Hillside Thickets band on stage, Saturday evening…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpwnG6-fqEA&w=420&h=315]

* Big Nazo creatures on stage at WaterFire…

stage

Cthulhuoid dances…

cthdance

* Now available: the Amazon Kindle ereader edition of WaterFire’s reprinting of the corrected H.P. Lovecraft: New England Decadent. It’s a rather crude Kindle auto-conversion, and is without hyper-linked footnotes or navigation — but it’s vastly more affordable than the paper version.

* Now available: Charles Harrington’s Amazon Kindle ereader edition of H.P. Lovecraft’s Tour of Providence was published just yesterday on the Amazon Kindle store. Might be especially useful if you’re staying on after the convention to explore Providence…

“An updated walking guide to locations associated with Howard Phillips Lovecraft and his fiction. The approximately three-hour route winds through Providence, past Lovecraft’s haunts and influences for his macabre tales.”

* Picture from the live HPPodcraft podcast from NecronomiCon…

hppod

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #9

25 Sunday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013

≈ 1 Comment

My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

* Another super NecronomiCon 2013 video from Steve Ahlquist, 88 minutes of the panel on HPL’s Phobias: race, class, and “The Outsider” (Friday, 4:00pm – 5:15pm, Grand Ballroom, Biltmore Hotel)…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gO5wOys7lBI&w=560&h=315]

“… analyzing Lovecraft as an individual and in the context of his society and time period. (Peter Cannon, Bob Price, Scott Connors, Lois Gresh, with Rory Raven as moderator)”

* Todd Chicoine’s compilation video of snippets from Thursday and Friday at NecronomiCon 2013… the gaming panel looks surprisingly under-attended…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fE4veLSJ2R4&w=420&h=315]

* Wessendenwoollies’s nice unfiltered macro, showing the wrinkles on Lovecraft’s own rough sketch of the statuette in “The Call of Cthulhu”…

wessendenwoollies

* Another preview of the Big Nazo creatures which will be roaming the streets tonight at WaterFire…

bignazo

* Short blurb in The Providence Journal on the art shows…

“Of special note: John Coulthart’s “Cthulhoid”, a creepy digital print that suggests a kaleidoscopic version of the monster from Alien…”

cthulhoid

* Good to see that Lovecraft’s gravestone isn’t swamped with a heap of tacky schwag…

grave

NecronomiCon Providence 2013 update #8

24 Saturday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in NecronomiCon 2013

≈ 2 Comments

My unofficial round-up of NecronomiCon Providence 2013 news and links…

* Pic of Jo Pulver, Laird Barron, and Wilum Pugmire, glimpsed on the “Writing Mythos Fiction Today” panel (Friday, 10:30am – 11:45am)…

pugmire

* New 57-minute video version of the opening keynote addresses for NecronomiCon 2013, at the First Baptist Church.

* 70-minute video version of the “HPL’s Providence and Arkham” discussion panel (Friday, 2:30pm – 3:45pm Friday: Garden Room, Biltmore)…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I4nb_27aGNU&w=560&h=315]

“Few writers have as strong a sense of place as Lovecraft. His often quoted remark, “I am Providence” shows this. Many of Lovecraft’s places are based on real towns and areas. We look at the influence of Providence on Lovecraft’s work, as well as the imaginary locales he created. (S.T. Joshi, Will Murray, Steve Mariconda, Faye Ringel, Caitlin Kiernan + Donovan Loucks as moderator).”

S.T. Joshi throws out a couple of stumpers during this panel discussion…

i) Why did Lovecraft use “100 Prospect St.” as the address of Ward’s house in “Dexter Ward” (1927) — when the actual house is clearly, according to Joshi and others, based on 140 Prospect Street. (140 Prospect was apparently a house that Lovecraft could glimpse from his study windows, at that time?)

Henry Samuel Sprague (1847-1929) was resident at 100 Prospect St. in 1919 (Who’s who at New Port gives his Providence address alongside his 1919 holiday address). But modern architectural research shows Sprague was at 100 Prospect St. from c.1902 to c.1929. Sprague was also listed as a member of the Rhode Island Historical Society in 1920 and 1928. Henry was listed as in charge of “Hay and Grain” at the Providence Chamber of Commerce (Chamber magazine, November 1919) as he was “in the grain business”. He had the wholesale grain business from his Connecticut family, Sprague Flour & Grain: “their mills being the largest in this city [Providence], and perhaps in the state”, the works site being “The Columbia Elevator and Grain Mills” and its associated rail yards. By the time Lovecraft was writing “Dexter Ward”, Henry Samuel Sprague had very probably retired — since he was then nearing age 80.

Henry S. Sprague appears to have been closely connected to a John L. Sprague who had graduated from Cornell in 1918, and who was receiving mail at 100 Prospect St in 1921 (Cornell Alumni News, May 1921). John was either Henry’s son or a ward. The Cornell graduation date would make John L. Sprague approx. the same age as Dexter Ward (Ward born 1902). John L. Sprague was seemingly the namesake of an older man in the same family who died in 1917. Could Lovecraft have known the young John L. Sprague and his father Henry, perhaps via his research for “Dexter Ward” at the Rhode Island Historical Society, and for that reason felt able to use 100 Prospect St. as Ward’s address?

ii) Joshi said something I didn’t quite catch and can’t find again on the video. Something about there not being an actual post of Semitic Languages in Brown University. Presumably this was a reference to… “George Gammell Angell, Professor Emeritus of Semitic Languages in Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.” (“The Call of Cthulhu”).

The nearest match seems to be a Henry Thatcher Fowler, professor of Biblical literature and history at Brown from 1901-1934, a specialist on early Judaism (Origin and Growth of the Hebrew Religion, 1916). His assistant professor at the time of “Cthulhu” was Millar Burrows, who was at Brown from 1925-1934 and who was later famous for the Dead Sea Scrolls.

iii) Joshi also mused during the panel on how to pronounce “Dunwich”. I can confirm that the British pronunciation is (and would have been) “Dunn-itch”, as Joshi suggests, with a silent “w”. As someone from the British Midlands I can also confirm that Warwick is not pronounced War-wick but “Warr-ick”, as the second “w” is silent. Greenwich has another silent “w”, and is pronounced “Grrenn-itch”. Although there are some places suggested as models for Lovecraft towns, such as Oakham, which consciously shunned the British pronunciation.

Historic New England

24 Saturday Aug 2013

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

≈ Leave a comment

Historic New England magazine, online and free from 2000 onwards.

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