Living bridges

Living bridges in India

“The root bridges, some of which are over a hundred feet long, take ten to fifteen years to become fully functional, but they’re extraordinarily strong […] some of the ancient root bridges used daily by the people of the villages around Cherrapunji may be well over 500 years old.”

Health-and-safety commissars in the West would no doubt have a fit over the idea of these in the USA or UK. But one wonders if the same techniques could be used by artists to create giant Cthulhu-esque living structures? It’d certainly go way beyond a timid weaving of willow-wands.

Iram, the lost city in the desert

The new Uncharted Ruins blog has a long and interesting article on the lost desert city of Iram, relevant to Lovecraft’s “The Nameless City” (1921) and “The Call of Cthulhu” (1926)…

“According to […] some currents of Islamic Sufism, Irem existed in this world as well as on separate levels of existence”

The 1902 Encyclopaedia Britannica entry on “Arabia” also mentions this tradition…

“Very gorgeous are the descriptions given of ‘Irem’, the ‘city of pillars’, as the Koran styles it [which] after the annihilation of its tenants, remains entire, so Arabs say, invisible to ordinary eyes, but occasionally, and at rare intervals, revealed to some heaven-favoured traveler.”

The mention in “Cthulhu” is…

“Of the [Cthulhu] cult, he said that he thought the centre lay amid the pathless deserts of Arabia, where Irem, the City of Pillars, dreams hidden and untouched.” — The Call of Cthulhu.

Rabid

A possibly interesting new history book on an insanity-causing disease: Rabid: A Cultural History of the World’s Most Diabolical Virus. Just published in hardcover, and as an audio-book.

Was this a disease still a threat in Lovecraft’s time? It seems so. It was a real horror, one literally stalking New England, in the early years of the 20th century. Although possibly it was a minor worry at the time, when weighed alongside things like tuberculosis and syphilis. But raving insanity was the result of the disease, which might make it interesting to Lovecraftian researchers.

   “By 1768 rabies had been distributed throughout New England.” — New Jersey municipalities: Volumes 25-26 (1948).

   “the increase of rabies of late in New England renders it obligatory on those physicians, who may meet with it, to give an account of their cases as soon as convenient” — Boston medical and surgical journal: Volume 40 (1849).

Rhode Island only had four human death from rabies between 1911 and 1917, one in Providence in 1913 (Mortality Statistics, United States Bureau of the Census 1919, p.44). However by the late 1920s the incidence of death had about doubled (possibly this was because of the swelling of the U.S. population), and there were about 100 human deaths per year from the disease in the USA.

   “In the earlier part of this [20th] century, New Jersey had a large problem with canine rabies. In 1939, the worst year for recorded cases of dog rabies, 675 dogs and four humans died of rabies.” — The History of Rabies, New Jersey Department of Health.

However there only appears to be one instance I can remember in which Lovecraft has a dog directly associated with terror, in “The Hound” (1922)…

   “The baying was loud that evening, and in the morning I read of a nameless deed in the vilest quarter of the city. The rabble were in terror, for upon an evil tenement had fallen a red death beyond the foulest previous crime of the neighborhood. In a squalid thieves’ den an entire family had been torn to shreds by an unknown thing which left no trace, and those around had heard all night a faint, deep, insistent note as of a gigantic hound.” — “The Hound”.

Rabies was eradicated in Britain in 1902, and then again most famously in 1922 after a four-year outbreak caused by dogs smuggled past the quarantine in 1918. One wonders if the news in 1922 from his beloved British Isles might have set Lovecraft to thinking on threatening dogs? Although personal experience, Poe, and the 1921 movie of The Hound of the Baskervilles might seem more obvious inspirations for “The Hound”.

Close to shore

Alongside the influenza pandemic of late 1918, the threat of German submarines, and the various terrorist attacks, there was another real horror on the East Coast of America in Lovecraft’s young manhood. This one in summer 1916. Detailed in Michael Capuzzo, Close to shore: a true story of terror in an age of innocence, Random House 2001.

“Combining rich historical detail and a harrowing, pulse-pounding narrative, Close to Shore brilliantly re-creates the summer of 1916, when a rogue Great White shark attacked swimmers along the New Jersey shore, triggering mass hysteria and launching the most extensive shark hunt in history.”

The attacks were the first documented cases of shark attack in American coastal waters. Amazingly, the shark also staged a triple attack at… “a farming community eleven miles from the sea”, Matawan Creek.

Lincoln Woods

One of the most interesting-sounding fantasy movies of 2012, Wes Anderson’s underage love whimsy Moonrise Kingdom, was partly filmed in Lovecraft’s beloved Lincoln Woods (Lincoln Woods State Park)…

“the Quinsnicket or Lincoln Woods region which I have haunted all my life.” — letter from Lovecraft to Clark Ashton Smith, 1933.

The Cthulhu Prayer Society newsletter #13 (PDF link) has a good account of Lovecraft’s rambles in the Lincoln Woods, in preparation for their own ramble event.

Incidentally, I hadn’t realised that there are a lot of giant glacial boulders to be found in the Park (handy boulder map)…

Photo: Miles Crawford.

Although sadly some of the boulders appear to have been scrawled on with crude graffiti in modern times. The Park appears to have been started as a reserve in 1907, and a detailed history is the book Lincoln Park remembered: 1894-1987. I’m not sure if the Lovecraft letters appear in this book, or not.