Geek Mountain State (tracking Vermont’s inner geek) has details of a Lovecraft talk on the 20th Feb 2014…
Lovecraft in Vermont
17 Monday Feb 2014
Posted in Historical context
17 Monday Feb 2014
Posted in Historical context
Geek Mountain State (tracking Vermont’s inner geek) has details of a Lovecraft talk on the 20th Feb 2014…
26 Sunday Jan 2014
Posted in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts
“Cochemare” [trans. “the night-mare”] (1810) engraving by Jean Pierre Simon. Source: Wellcome Library.
That object – no larger than a good-sized rat and quaintly called by the townspeople “Brown Jenkins — seemed to have been the fruit of a remarkable case of sympathetic herd-delusion, for in 1692 no less than eleven persons had testified to glimpsing it. There were recent rumours, too, with a baffling and disconcerting amount of agreement. Witnesses said it had long hair and the shape of a rat, but that its sharp-toothed, bearded face was evilly human while its paws were like tiny human hands. It took messages betwixt old Keziah and the devil, and was nursed on the witch’s blood, which it sucked like a vampire. Its voice was a kind of loathsome titter, and it could speak all languages. Of all the bizarre monstrosities in Gilman’s dreams, nothing filled him with greater panic and nausea than this blasphemous and diminutive hybrid, whose image flitted across his vision in a form a thousandfold more hateful than anything his waking mind had deduced from the ancient records and the modern whispers.” — H.P. Lovecraft, “Dreams in the Witch House” (1932).
Simon was undoubtedly inspired by the famous “The Nightmare” (1781) by Johann Heinrich Fussli…
Lovecraft was probably also inspired by this widely known work by Fussli (later known as Henry Fuseli), whom he knew of and admired…
I don’t have to tell you why a Fuseli really brings a shiver while a cheap ghost-story frontispiece merely makes us laugh.” — “Pickman’s Model” (1926).
From Lovecraft’s Commonplace Book of story ideas, #106…
A thing that sat on a sleeper’s chest. Gone in morning, but something left behind.”
I also found this rather cool “Hypnose” (1904) by Sascha Schneider.
The uses of the light-shaft, the opium poppies, and the older/younger man pairing all signify the artist’s knowledge of the details of the Hypnos myth, something Lovecraft also used…
a shaft of horrible red-gold light — a shaft which bore with it no glow to disperse the darkness, but which streamed only upon the recumbent head of the troubled sleeper […] “I followed the memory-face’s mad stare along that cursed shaft of light to its source” — H.P. Lovecraft, “Hypnos” (1922).
Schneider was a contributor to Brand’s pioneering gay publication Der Eigene and also illustrator of Old Shatterhand / Winnetoue, the very Teutonic wild western series that was a best-seller in early 20th century Germany and probably also among German immigrants to America. It turns out that finding Schneider’s “Hypnose” led me back to his various broad variations on Fussli’s “The Nightmare”…
Above: all untitled except the last two, a Karl May book illustration, and “Around a Soul”.
There is an English language masters dissertation on Schneider which is available online: Monsters and Men: The Life and Works of Sascha Schneider.
It seems there were also fictional depictions of this chest-squatter, one of which was noted by Lovecraft in Fitz-James O’Brien’s story “What Was it? A Mystery” as a predecessor of de Maupassant’s “The Horla”.
For a full book on the history of the topic see Sleep Paralysis: Night-Mares, Nocebos, and the Mind-Body Connection (Studies in Medical Anthropology) (2011).
24 Friday Jan 2014
Posted in Historical context
22 Wednesday Jan 2014
Posted in Historical context, Podcasts etc.
The Bowery Boys have a new podcast on New York history, which takes a look at a topic Lovecraft was intimately familiar with: Green-wood Cemetery in New York City. An older podcast from them is on The British Invasion, 1776, another topic on which Lovecraft knew the minutest details. These two are somewhat linked, as the first shooting engagement in 1776 was on Martense Lane, now known as Border Avenue, which borders Green-wood Cemetery on the southern side. The lane was named after the Martense family, among whom at the very first in America there was a Jan Martense and also a Gerrit Martense — names that both occur in Lovecraft’s “The Lurking Fear”.

Art by Graham Turner
17 Friday Jan 2014
Posted in Historical context, Maps
12 Sunday Jan 2014
Posted in Historical context
The Library of Congress restored version of the gothic southern swamps movie Sparrows is now available on DVD. The movie starred the biggest star of her day, Mary Pickford, and consequently saw a very wide release in May 1926. The expressionist-style horror / dark melodrama is set in a decrepit ‘baby farm’ in the swamps of New Orleans. Lovecraft was, by that date, no longer in New York. But one wonders if he saw the movie in Providence in summer 1926? Lovecraft of course wrote “The Call of Cthulhu” in the summer of 1926, so one has to wonder if the movie’s acclaimed visuals could have influenced the feel or perhaps even the setting of his story’s New Orleans swamp scenes?
17 Tuesday Dec 2013
Posted in Historical context, Podcasts etc.
Arkham Insiders podcast, the new German language podcast on Lovecraft, looks at Lovecraft and the Munsey magazines, 1908-1913.
14 Thursday Nov 2013
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
Possibly of interest to anyone writing on historical elements used in “The Dreams in The Witch House”: the PhD thesis Silent Sentinels: archaeology, magic, and the gendered control of domestic boundaries in New England, 1620-1725.
13 Wednesday Nov 2013
Posted in Historical context, REH
A PDF of The Cross Plainsman (Autumn 2000) contains a transcript of the 1932 list of books owned by Lovecraft, sent to R.E. Howard. Presumably it was a partial list, items of interest to Howard?
“There are then appended the pages listing Lovecraft’s personal library at the time, August 1932. […] I append here the list of books in the 1932 HPL collection:”
Interesting to see that Lovecraft owned a pirated amateur edition of the famous Not at Night omnibus.
Also on the shelves in 1932 was “Theory of Pneumatology – Jung – Shilling”. Not, as you might think, the Jung. But rather Johann Heinrich Jung-Stilling, a man of the late 18th century.
“This [The Theory of Pneumatology] is in reply to the question, what ought to be believed or disbelieved concerning presentiments, visions and apparitions, according to nature, reason and scripture. Contents: Introduction; Examination and Refutation of the Principles of Materialism; Remarks Upon the Nature of Man; On Presentiments, Predictions, Enchantments and Prophesying; On Visions and Apparitions; Brief Summary; Notes. Also included is a biographical sketch of the author, Johann Heinrich Jung-Stilling.”
12 Tuesday Nov 2013
Posted in Historical context, Scholarly works
Inquire Within: a Social History of The Providence Athenaeum Since 1753 (2003), a free ebook from The Providence Athenaeum commemorating its 250th anniversary.
06 Wednesday Nov 2013
Posted in Historical context
Lovecraft mentions seeing dog carts while in Quebec. Yes, they really were drawn by dogs…
05 Tuesday Nov 2013
Posted in Historical context
A Fulbright Scholar is on the Lovecraft trail in Quebec.