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~ News & scholarship on H.P. Lovecraft

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Category Archives: Historical context

New Book: Gorham Silver

30 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books

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Gorham Silver: Designing Brilliance, 1850-1970, a sumptuous new illustrated hardback published today, 30th April 2019.

Lovecraft’s father was, quite possibly, connected with the firm in its heyday as a buyer or salesman.

“Established in 1831, the Gorham Manufacturing Company adeptly coupled art and industry, rising to become an industry leader of stylistic and technological achievement in America and around the world. It was the only major competitor of Tiffany and Co., producing public presentation pieces and one-of-a-kind showstoppers for important occasions, as well as tableware for everyday use. Its works trace a narrative arc not only of great design but also of American ambitions. In this new volume, insightful essays are accompanied by gorgeous new photography of splendid silver pieces along with a wealth of archival images, design drawings, casting patterns, and company records that reveal a rich heritage of a giant in decorative arts and silver manufacturing. Produced in collaboration with the RISD Museum, which has the world s most significant collection of Gorham silver, this major new book casts new light on more than 120 years of grand aesthetic styles in silver, innovative industrial practices, and American social and cultural norms.”

Lovecraft and Powys

29 Monday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context

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I’d always vaguely thought of John Cowper Powys as a Welsh Marches novelist who wrote slab-like and now-little-read 1930s novels such as A Glastonbury Romance (1932). I tried to read that in the 1980s, couldn’t get past the first 50 pages, and have never investigated him further. But LibriVox has just released a set of new recordings and the blurb for these reveals that in the 1910s and 20s Powys was in Lovecraft’s world — lecturing to rapt New York and New England audiences on the likes of Nietzsche and Poe. It seems that A Glastonbury Romance was actually written in upstate New York.

Who knew? Possibly Lovecraft did, even though Powys lectured primarily to bright youthful summer schools and keen adult-education gatherings. Because in 1924 Lovecraft noted of Frank Belknap Long that… “his favourite [is] John Cowper Powys”. Thus, one suspects that Long’s affluent family would have sent the boy to just such a summer school lecture series, and (if so) he would later have been able to recall for Lovecraft the details of Powys’s manner and ideas. Although this was many years before the famous novels such as Wolf Solent and A Glastonbury Romance, and thus Long presumably liked the poetry, philosophy and lecture-essays.

According to his diary Lovecraft “read Powys” in New York in August 1925. Perhaps this was just a volume of poetry loaned by Long, but I’d suggest it would well have been dipping into the most interesting bits of the book newly recorded by Librivox, Visions and Revisions: A Book of Literary Devotions (1915). Perhaps with its companion volume Suspended Judgments (1916).

Wolf Solent arrived in 1929. Lovecraft did not feel the need to read it, but in a letter to Galpin in 1933 he revealed he had read at least one review…

“The literary editor of the Providence Journal became especially enthusiastic about Wolf Solent when it first appeared” [in Summer 1929].

Incidentally, John Cowper Powys’s career story puts the kibosh on the notion that Lovecraft might have made a living as a public lecturer. By 1926 Powys was on his uppers, with his lecturing work having all but dried up in the face of radio, cinema, gramophone records and all the other attractions of the Jazz Age. If even such a highly experienced lecturer as Powys could not find work in New York, what chance for Lovecraft?

Friday Picture Postals from Lovecraft: Pawtucket / Pawtuxet / Pawcatuck

26 Friday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Astronomy, Historical context, Picture postals

≈ 1 Comment

Sleepy Pawtuxet. The view looks across the Pawtuxet bridge toward Broad St. Note the electric trolley car nestled in its terminus bay, presumably having arrived from Providence, and the Lovecraft-alike man on the right of the picture walking away from it. Lovecraft had a regular 1906 column in the Pawtuxet Valley Gleaner at about the time of this card (probably photographed c. 1906 or 07), with astronomy articles such as “Is Mars an Inhabited World?”. The card photographer was very unlikely to have caught a 16 year old Lovecraft crossing the bridge to make the trolley connection to Phenix, though he is known to have worn his father’s clothes as might be the case with the man seen here. But the card is indicative of a scene he would have known, had he travelled out to the Gleaner newspaper offices or simply taken an early-springtime walk down that way.

I should clarify a possible point of placename confusion for those reading Lovecraft’s letters. Pawtuxet is not Pawtucket. Pawtucket now appears to be effectively a suburb of Providence, and lies to the north of the city beyond Swan Point Cemetery and at the head of what seems to be the navigable part of the River Seekonk…

… while Pawtuxet is in the far south and just beyond Providence, at the head of a river-valley where that valley meets the Providence River as it starts to meet the ocean. Of the two places Pawtuxet was by far the more sleepy and homey place in Lovecraft’s time. This is confirmed by an author in The Survey of 1922, which gives a vivid flavour of the trolley-ride Lovecraft would have had there…

As the [inexpensive electric trolley] car turns south from Providence, out toward the Pawtuxet Valley, it passes through about nine miles of usual city outskirts. Then suddenly, round a curve, rows of little white clapboard houses appear grouped about a mill close to the sides of the river; and on the hill where once also stood the company store, is the spotless white frame company church. The whole picture is flanked by hills and rolling farm lands. The car has entered “the Valley.” It is a different world. Many inhabitants have never visited the city nine miles away.

Although the Pawtuxet Valley Gleaner offices were out in Phenix, so to visit them from Pawtuxet Lovecraft would then have change trolleys and taken another trolley or bus going west some 12 miles along and deep into the Pawtuxet Valley. I imagine he would taken this more scenic route — Providence – Pawtuxet – Pawtuxet Valley – Phenix, which is only about 21 miles in total. This was apparently one is his mother’s home-places when she was growing up, which was why the Gleaner — the valley’s main paper — was still taken in Lovecraft’s home.

The even sleepier Phenix, circa 1908.

An example of Lovecraft’s column in the weekly paper, 1906…


Later, in the late 1920s and early 1930s, Lovecraft would take friends down to Pawtuxet on the trolley and the place was evidently then known for its fine seafood dinners at the local restaurants. These were presumably on the “shore”, and probably rather affordable given the usual state of Lovecraft’s finances…

On the way back I blew Price [‘treated Price’] to a typical R. I. [Rhode Island] clam dinner at antient Pawtuxet and later stopt at a Waldorf [chain restaurant] to tank up my’self.”

Still another trip was to old Pawtuxet — where, as with Price, I watched Morton eat a shore dinner.

Kirk & his wife passed through Providence on the last lap of a long New England motor tour. I took him to the ancient & unchanged fishing village of Pawtuxet, down the bay.

I imagine that Lovecraft might have been tempted to tantalise his friends while showing them around, by mentioning that Pawtuxet had featured as a substantial setting in his unpublished novel Dexter Ward. Written 1927, the book was not to be published until 1941…

He must likewise have begun to practice an extreme care and secrecy in his graveyard expeditions, for he was never again caught at such wanderings; whilst the rumours of uncanny sounds and manoeuvres at his Pawtuxet farm diminished in proportion. His rate of food consumption and cattle replacement remained abnormally high…

“the creaking of Epenetus Olney’s new signboard … was exactly like the first few notes of the new jazz piece all the radios in Pawtuxet were playing”.


Whipple.org has further useful clarification of the placenames, and warns of a third element of potential confusion, in the article “Pawcatuck, Pawtucket, Pawtuxet: Three Places in Rhode Island?”.

Sadly, the feline-loving Lovecraft never made use of ‘Pawcatuck’ in the kitty sense (one imagines a possible witty word-playing poem on the three Paw-places, re: his inevitable encounters with their paw-padding cats). Though it is deemed the site of ‘faery’ in “Dexter Ward”…

… after a few heralding cards the young wanderer quietly slipped into New York on the Homeric and traversed the long miles to Providence by motor-coach, eagerly drinking in the green rolling hills, the fragrant, blossoming orchards, and the white steepled towns of vernal Connecticut; his first taste of ancient New England in nearly four years. When the coach crossed the Pawcatuck and entered Rhode Island amidst the faery goldenness of a late spring afternoon his heart beat with quickened force, and the entry to Providence along Reservoir and Elmwood avenues was a breathless and wonderful thing despite the depths of forbidden lore to which he had delved.

Weird Tales, the “Cthulhu” issue in high-quality CBZ

25 Thursday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org, Weird Tales, February 1928. Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu”, and “The Dream Snake” by Robert E. Howard. The .CBZ (‘Comic Book Zip’) is the best option re: quality, rather than the over-compressed PDF. It can be opened with any Comic Book Reader software or a PDF reader software that supports the format (such as SumatraPDF).

The following issue had no reader response, with the Eyrie covering the January issue. This includes a letter from Lovecraft…

The issue in which readers first responded to “Cthulhu”, presumably April 1928, is not yet online. [Update: it now is but proves to have only the most vapid and very slight mentions of “Cthulhu”]. But May 1928 is, with responses from R.E. Howard and others.

For Wright to follow this with the cheap shocker “The Lurking Fear” might seem something of a clunky editorial decision. But probably he feared an adverse reader reaction among the bulk of his readers, and thus thought that a more conventional “shocker” might restore Lovecraft to good standing with them.


“Cthulhu” had also been trailed in the January 1928 issue, thus…

Added to Open Lovecraft

24 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Scholarly works

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* P. Ozcariz Gil, “The Very Old Folk: Roman Provincial Administration, Vascones, and Epigraphy in H.P. Lovecraft”, Agora: Estudos Classicos em Debate, 21, 2019. (In English. An excellent and detailed examination of the historicity of the Lovecraft dream-story known as “The Very Old Folk”).

Dr. Styx (1945)

21 Sunday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts

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Dr. Styx (1945) – The First Mythos Comic?…

“I was fully expecting the usual EC type ghost host but was stopped dead in my tracks when the focal character mentioned he was reading a book by Ludwig Prinn! On I go and there it was mention of the Outer Ones banished from the Earth, Cthulhu, Abdul Alhazred. Here was a genuine Cthulhu Mythos comic!”

New: The Dark Man, Vol 9

20 Saturday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, REH, Scholarly works

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A new edition of The Dark Man: The Journal of Robert E. Howard and Pulp Fiction Studies Vol. 9 (Feb 2019), now in Kindle on Amazon.

Of interest to Lovecraftian scholars is…

* “The Outside Scholar: Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Scholarly Identity. Part Two: A Complex and Baffling Question”, by Karen Joan Kohoutek.

This follows Part One in The Dark Man Vol. 8, No. 1 (2015), also in Kindle ebook format.

I also note an article in The Dark Man that I had overlooked, an article to be found in the Vol 7. No. 1 (December 2012) issue. This volume is not on Amazon in ebook, so far as I can tell, but is in ebook as an ePub from Lulu.com. The article is…

* “I ‘n’ I a-Liberate Zimbabwe: Motifs of Africa and Freedom in Howard’s The Grisly Horror”, by Patrick R. Burger.

This seems likely to be of interest to those writing about Lovecraft’s interest in and use of Zimbabwe (the remarkable hilltop fortification, not the nation).

Friday Picture Postals: Friend’s Beans

19 Friday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Picture postals

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Above: (top) possibly late 1940s judging by the style and use of colour; (bottom) an ‘instant communication’ postcard on 1909, presumably of use to those with very poor handwriting.

Lovecraft once wrote…

Prof. Kittredge of Harvard has written a book of old New England lore based on the Farmer’s Almanack — its contents and history. I have this volume — you really ought to read it! It’s as much a part of a New England education as Friend’s Beans!” — Lovecraft letter to Morton, October 1927.

Beans were a local Boston speciality and were of course a favourite and staple of Lovecraft’s frugal diet…

Fortunately I have reduced the matter of frugal eating to a science, so that I can get by on as little as $1.75 per week by purchasing beans or spaghetti in cans and cookies or crackers in packages.

Although when living alone in New York City it seems he was forced to Heinz beans…

… you take a medium-sized loaf of bread, cut it in four equal parts, & add to each of these 1/4 can (medium) Heinz beans & a goodly chunk of cheese. If the result isn’t a full-sized, healthy day’s quota of fodder for an Old Gentleman, I’ll resign from the League of Nations’ dietary committee!! It only costs 8 cents — but don’t let that prejudice you! It’s good sound food…

One hopes the results were then simmered in a pan or placed in an oven, but I have a feeling that for Lovecraft it was often a cold dish. Especially during the killer heatwave summers New York had at that time.

The choice of Heinz was perhaps because they were cheaper (we tend to forget how expensive food was compared to the cheap abundance of today). Or that Friends’ was not a brand popular in New York City and thus unobtainable there. Many food and restaurant brands were regional rather than national, at that time. Made in Boston, the brand had historical roots which would have appealed to Lovecraft’s regional rootedness…

Note also here the canned bread, presumably canned in much the same way as pemmican.

Incidentally, the book mentioned above by Lovecraft was The old farmer and his almanack. Lovecraft had acquired the 1904 original, not the 1920 edition linked above. The Hartmann letters on astrology show that Lovecraft had had The old farmer and his almanack since shortly after its publication in 1904. Judging by the contents list, one wonders if it occasionally served as an inspiration-mine for Lovecraft…

George Lyman Kittredge (1860-1941) was an expert on aspects of English literary history (Gawain, Shakespeare and others), who later became learned on aspects of the publications of Cotton Mather and the history of New England Witchcraft belief. Kittredge was the sort of person who Lovecraft might have ventured to address by letter on some point of fact, but I’m not aware of him being a Lovecraft correspondent.

Published: Wormwood #32

17 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, New books, Odd scratchings, Scholarly works

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The journal Wormwood : Writings about fantasy, supernatural and decadent literature (#32, April 2019) is a special issue on “Literary Enigmas” in the field, including several from the Lovecraft circle period.

Lovecraft’s copy of The Mysteries of Udolpho

13 Saturday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Odd scratchings

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Currently on AbeBooks, a volume claimed to be Lovecraft’s library copy of the early gothic novel The Mysteries of Udolpho, under the listing title “THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO. A Romance. With an Introduction by D. Murray Rose. H.P. LOVECRAFT’S COPY.”

The inscription from Kirk looks authentic enough, but before you part with your $5,000 you’ll have to make up your own mind about Lovecraft’s name and bookplate. I’m not certain from the description if the bookplate can be determined by marks to have once been attached to the book in question. There seems to be a faded square, but does it match the bookplate?

The seller notes…

It is unclear at which date Kirk gave Lovecraft this copy of UDOLPHO, but in a letter written to Clark Ashton Smith on Dec 12, 1925 (on George W. Kirk’s letterhead) Lovecraft writes: “W. Paul Cook’s request for an article on weird literature from me – a request which he won’t withdraw despite my emphatic disclaimers of all possible qualification – has imposed upon me the very pleasant task of reading up some of the matter I had long ago scheduled for perusal. I waded through the whole of “Udolpho” last week, & am now on the hunt for Maturin’s “Melmoth”.” Lovecraft also made a list of his weird fiction collection in a letter he sent to CAS on August 27, 1932; Radcliffe’s “Udolpho” is on that list.

The edition of Joshi’s Lovecraft’s Library that I have access to is uncertain of the edition. If this is indeed the edition Lovecraft owned, then, we can now be relatively certain he read the introduction by Rose.

Weird Tales from 1925

13 Saturday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, Odd scratchings

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New on Archive.org this week, scans of 1925 Weird Tales editions not previously present there…

Weird Tales, February 1925.

“The Statement of Randolph Carter” by H.P. Lovecraft.

Weird Tales, May 1925.

“The Music of Erich Zann” by H.P. Lovecraft.

Weird Tales, July 1925.

“The Unnamable” by H.P. Lovecraft.
“Spear and Fang” by Robert E. Howard.

Weird Tales, August 1925.

“The Temple” by H.P. Lovecraft. With a fairly good header illustration.

Friday picture postals from Lovecraft: the View from Prospect Terrace (ultrawide edition)

12 Friday Apr 2019

Posted by asdjfdlkf in Historical context, Picture postals

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Here’s an ultrawide double-sized fold-out postcard of the View from Prospect Terrace, Providence. This was, of course, a favourite Lovecraft place. Especially when the city and sky burned with a fine sunset. Presumably also in that quiet time when most of the Terrace’s talkative daytime sitters had gone home for their tea, and the evening lovebirds had not yet arrived…

to me the quality of total, perfect beauty [is] a mass of mystical city towers and roofs and spires outlined against a sunset and glimpsed from a fairly distant balaustraded terrace. (Selected Letters III)

This postcard, wide though it is, was obviously cropped from an even wider plate as can be seen here…

The old Providence view from Prospect Terrace…

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