All language subtitles for Lovecraft.Fear.of.the.Unknown.2008.1080p.BluRay.x264-PUZZLE-English

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English Download
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French Download
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish Download
es-419 Spanish (Latin American) Download
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,000 --> 00:00:14,074 2 00:00:15,177 --> 00:00:19,179 3 00:00:19,214 --> 00:00:26,689 4 00:00:35,895 --> 00:00:41,533 the course of HP Lovecraft's life was altered by an unfortunate madness 5 00:00:41,568 --> 00:00:45,103 in April of 1893, his father 6 00:00:45,644 --> 00:00:49,195 a commercial traveler from the vicinity of Boston 7 00:00:49,196 --> 00:00:52,296 was on business in Chicago 8 00:00:56,598 --> 00:01:00,603 it was there that Winfield Scott Lovecraft 9 00:01:00,608 --> 00:01:03,408 experienced the general paralysis of the insane 10 00:01:05,522 --> 00:01:08,459 Winfield's violent hallucinations 11 00:01:08,460 --> 00:01:10,939 were soon placed him in Butler Hospital 12 00:01:10,940 --> 00:01:14,658 his troubled wife, Susan Phillips Lovecraft 13 00:01:14,659 --> 00:01:18,945 was forced to return home to her family in Providence, Rhode Island 14 00:01:18,946 --> 00:01:21,572 with Susie was her two-year-old son, 15 00:01:21,573 --> 00:01:23,948 Howard Phillips Lovecraft 16 00:01:24,569 --> 00:01:28,972 today, the man readers of weirdfiction known as HP Lovecraft 17 00:01:28,973 --> 00:01:33,040 is ranked alongside America's best writers 18 00:01:36,309 --> 00:01:42,309 20 He defined the themes and obsessions of 20th century horror 19 00:01:42,310 --> 00:01:47,925 21 and as we chug on into the 21st century, he doesn't seem to be going away 20 00:01:47,926 --> 00:01:52,216 he let drop away all the trappings of what is called "horror" 21 00:01:52,293 --> 00:01:57,698 and he moved into some narrative peculiar to himself, invented his own genre really 22 00:01:58,513 --> 00:02:04,082 Lovecraft tells you about the scale of man in the cosmos 23 00:02:04,083 --> 00:02:11,855 and also he is really the most articulate about saying, there isn't any indifference from the ancient gods to man 24 00:02:11,856 --> 00:02:15,856 Lovecraft takes that optical empty to the cosmos 25 00:02:16,218 --> 00:02:19,008 If you could think of a kind of supernatural horror fiction 26 00:02:19,009 --> 00:02:21,729 it's almost certain that at some point in his career 27 00:02:21,730 --> 00:02:24,091 Lovecraft applied himself to it 28 00:02:24,092 --> 00:02:29,200 and when he got it right that he often did, nobody could beat him 29 00:02:29,221 --> 00:02:33,598 �� 30 00:02:47,277 --> 00:02:50,373 these are the unspeakable names of the Old Ones 31 00:02:50,374 --> 00:02:53,374 the very heart of Lovecraft's Cthulhu mythos 32 00:02:53,375 --> 00:02:55,909 a loosely connected canon, which has gone on 33 00:02:55,910 --> 00:03:00,210 to became one of literature's most influential creations 34 00:03:00,211 --> 00:03:06,000 I don't know that Lovecraft ever set down initially and went: "I'm going to grow a grand mythos" 35 00:03:06,262 --> 00:03:08,589 I think that, yes it begins 36 00:03:08,590 --> 00:03:10,761 and then everything else sort of fits in it 37 00:03:10,762 --> 00:03:15,734 it's a very complex sort of inbreeding of mythologies and what 38 00:03:15,735 --> 00:03:22,824 essentially the pitch would be what, things much older than mankind 39 00:03:22,825 --> 00:03:27,209 things much older than earth are gazing upon on us 40 00:03:27,210 --> 00:03:30,393 with indifference and cruelty 41 00:03:30,394 --> 00:03:36,138 those Old Ones were gone now hidden in distant wastes and dark places all over the world 42 00:03:36,139 --> 00:03:39,371 until the time when the great priest Cthulhu 43 00:03:39,372 --> 00:03:43,200 from his dark house in the mighty city of R'lyeh under the waters, should rise 44 00:03:43,201 --> 00:03:47,843 and bring the earth again beneath his sway 45 00:03:47,844 --> 00:03:53,370 these kind of being are you know that demons coming from hell 46 00:03:53,371 --> 00:03:59,375 there are these wired tentacle creatures coming from other worlds into ours 47 00:03:59,376 --> 00:04:06,720 and that they have been banished and that they will return someday and regain what was once theirs 48 00:04:06,721 --> 00:04:09,689 the Old Ones of the universe, the Old ones of the Cosmos 49 00:04:09,690 --> 00:04:12,791 so that's force beyond us that we are incapable of controlling and that force 50 00:04:12,792 --> 00:04:17,792 there is the universe that is vaster than we could ever comprehend 51 00:04:17,800 --> 00:04:23,303 prior to Lovecraft, if you read horror, if you read ghost stories 52 00:04:23,304 --> 00:04:28,087 you'll always have a vision of a world which is fundamentally hospitable: 53 00:04:28,088 --> 00:04:31,791 "god is looking after you��"god is looking after the good people" 54 00:04:31,792 --> 00:04:37,090 good people will probably survive horror stories or ghost stories or whatever 55 00:04:37,091 --> 00:04:39,826 Lovecraft redefined things 56 00:04:39,827 --> 00:04:44,736 He took it away from the ghost story away, from the gothic and into this vision 57 00:04:44,737 --> 00:04:52,874 of a malign world, this place surrounded by 58 00:04:52,875 --> 00:04:57,312 evil mad horrible monstrous things always trying to get in 59 00:04:57,313 --> 00:04:59,927 who frankly don't really care about us 60 00:04:59,928 --> 00:05:03,769 But what lied in an old world xenophobic gentleman 61 00:05:03,770 --> 00:05:08,731 to write these tales of unknown abominations and cosmic gods 62 00:05:08,732 --> 00:05:12,132 where bay and tranquil river blend 63 00:05:12,133 --> 00:05:14,563 and leafy hillsides rise 64 00:05:14,564 --> 00:05:18,499 the spires of Providence ascend against the ancient skies 65 00:05:18,500 --> 00:05:24,179 and in the narrow winding ways that climb o'er slope and crest 66 00:05:24,180 --> 00:05:30,180 the magic of forgotten days may still be found to rest 67 00:05:32,055 --> 00:05:34,574 I AM PROVIDENCE 68 00:05:34,575 --> 00:05:39,551 1890820 69 00:05:43,380 --> 00:05:46,786 454 the Phillips' house at 454 Angell Street 70 00:05:46,787 --> 00:05:49,986 was a vast-stage of old American values 71 00:05:49,987 --> 00:05:53,210 Lovecraft's family was very well to do 72 00:05:53,211 --> 00:05:58,069 and I believe they consider themselves to be of the Providence aristocracy 73 00:05:58,070 --> 00:06:02,094 the Phillips line goes back very far in Providence history all the way 74 00:06:02,095 --> 00:06:05,095 17 as early as the late 17th century 75 00:06:05,096 --> 00:06:11,178 the Lovecraft side originates in England, and you could trace that all the way back to about the 15th century 76 00:06:11,179 --> 00:06:15,522 there were Lovecrafts or Lovecrofts in Devon 77 00:06:15,523 --> 00:06:21,738 he was a truly, almost a "Mayflower"specimen 78 00:06:21,739 --> 00:06:26,739 preserved in the formaldehyde of New England you know 79 00:06:26,740 --> 00:06:31,500 and he was an Anglophile that definitely did not get laid much you know 80 00:06:31,501 --> 00:06:38,500 and the guy that was an alien amongst us, in the sense that he was not a very masculine child 81 00:06:40,674 --> 00:06:45,113 1898719 after Winfield's death from syphilis on July 19th 1898 82 00:06:45,114 --> 00:06:48,000 young Howard was all Suzie Lovecraft had left 83 00:06:48,001 --> 00:06:51,001 she mothered her child incessantly 84 00:06:51,002 --> 00:06:56,712 so much so, that she was known to make friends stoop when walking hand-in-hand with her son 85 00:06:56,713 --> 00:06:59,713 for fear his arm would be pull from its socket 86 00:06:59,800 --> 00:07:01,680 despite her over attention 87 00:07:01,681 --> 00:07:07,992 Suzie Lovecraft's near puritanical views restrained any physical affections toward her son 88 00:07:07,993 --> 00:07:10,687 Lovecraft would later admit to his only wife 89 00:07:10,688 --> 00:07:15,404 that this form of mothering was a devastating to him 90 00:07:17,021 --> 00:07:23,500 his grandfather Whipple Phillips, was a very impressive industrialist 91 00:07:23,501 --> 00:07:27,848 Lovecraft remembers Whipple telling him oral ghost stories 92 00:07:27,849 --> 00:07:30,673 at the age of 4 or 5 93 00:07:30,674 --> 00:07:35,650 he tutored him in a number of other ways, trying to take an interest into his education 94 00:07:35,651 --> 00:07:40,722 in the attic was an immense library presumably collected by his grandfather 95 00:07:40,723 --> 00:07:46,605 and Lovecraft went up there as a boy with a candle secretly and started reading these old books 96 00:07:46,606 --> 00:07:48,886 and fell in love with the 18th century 97 00:07:48,887 --> 00:07:51,446 Lovecraft is more than a product of his time 98 00:07:51,447 --> 00:07:55,390 he is a product of a couple of centuries earlier, so he was born out of time 99 00:07:55,393 --> 00:08:01,056 18 one of the important things for the 18th century was the code of a gentleman 100 00:08:01,057 --> 00:08:06,500 to live as a gentleman with dignity and honesty and integrity 101 00:08:06,501 --> 00:08:10,093 1819 he read the literature of the 18th century and the early 19th century and said 102 00:08:10,094 --> 00:08:14,094 "I want to be like those people I want to be like Alexander Pope" 103 00:08:14,095 --> 00:08:16,795 ��who wrote poetry just for the love of it" 104 00:08:16,796 --> 00:08:19,171 I've always had this subconscious feeling 105 00:08:19,172 --> 00:08:23,565 that, everything since the 18th century is unreal or illusory 106 00:08:23,566 --> 00:08:27,809 a sort of grotesque nightmare or a caricature" 107 00:08:27,810 --> 00:08:31,310 Lovecraft learned a lot in his grandfather's house 108 00:08:31,541 --> 00:08:34,219 in fact that all the learning that he had I think came from there 109 00:08:34,220 --> 00:08:37,828 his schooling was intermittent at best apparently he had various of 110 00:08:37,829 --> 00:08:41,202 nervous melody that had kept him out of school 111 00:08:41,203 --> 00:08:44,714 this was a time before education was mandatory 112 00:08:44,715 --> 00:08:48,552 you didn't have to send your child to school if you didn't want to 113 00:08:48,553 --> 00:08:53,576 8 at the age of 8 he would became filled with burning love of chemistry 114 00:08:53,577 --> 00:08:58,303 shortly there after that he discovered astronomy, which I think was an even more important influence he says 115 00:08:58,304 --> 00:09:04,321 it was through astronomy that he gained a sense of the boundlessness of the universe 116 00:09:04,322 --> 00:09:08,384 and the insignificance of humanity within the cosmos 117 00:09:08,385 --> 00:09:15,385 there's a phrase that generally I only encountered it when talking when reading or talking with people like paleontologist or geologist 118 00:09:17,545 --> 00:09:21,271 the kinds of "Deep Time" which is pretty alien to most people, most people tend to 119 00:09:21,272 --> 00:09:24,439 think of history and terms of��years�� 120 00:09:24,440 --> 00:09:28,975 "Deep Time" is that time before, before the comprehension of man 121 00:09:28,976 --> 00:09:31,337 the geological time 122 00:09:31,338 --> 00:09:38,838 is a way of thinking about it where you are working on a time scale where you talk about things like mountains are pushed up in row, continent shift 123 00:09:38,839 --> 00:09:43,583 spices evolve and became extinct 124 00:09:43,584 --> 00:09:45,824 but it is not something you could process 125 00:09:45,900 --> 00:09:47,900 humanity was limited to earth 126 00:09:47,901 --> 00:09:53,847 which made humanity itself small and threatened and fragile, so because 127 00:09:53,880 --> 00:09:59,869 he was a frightened and fragile being himself 128 00:09:59,870 --> 00:10:02,670 he populated that emptiness with monsters 129 00:10:07,710 --> 00:10:10,919 frequent visits to the attic gave Susie the impression that 130 00:10:10,920 --> 00:10:14,030 her son was trying to hide from the world and others 131 00:10:14,031 --> 00:10:18,333 that he was a vulnerable child and comfortable with himself 132 00:10:18,334 --> 00:10:23,972 the relationship of Susie Lovecraft with her son was problematical at best 133 00:10:23,973 --> 00:10:31,941 clearly she loved him but I think because of what had happened to her husband, Lovecraft's father who had died of syphilis 134 00:10:31,942 --> 00:10:36,143 I think she developed some weird love-hate relationship with Lovecraft 135 00:10:36,144 --> 00:10:40,775 called him hideous, said to a neighbor that he had hideous face and that's why 136 00:10:40,776 --> 00:10:43,173 he wouldn't go outdoors much 137 00:10:43,174 --> 00:10:49,595 Susie repeated these opinions enough times that her son actually grew to believe them 138 00:10:49,596 --> 00:10:52,698 insecurity mixed with classical tendencies 139 00:10:52,699 --> 00:10:56,329 segregated young Lovecraft from others his age 140 00:10:56,330 --> 00:11:01,234 but this solitary childhood, only kindled his imagination 141 00:11:01,235 --> 00:11:06,610 I used to be tormented constantly with a peculiar type of recurrent nightmare 142 00:11:06,611 --> 00:11:10,961 in which a monstrous race of entities, called by me 'Night-Gaunts' 143 00:11:10,962 --> 00:11:16,795 usedtosnatch me up by the stomach, they carried me up through infinite leagues of black air 144 00:11:16,796 --> 00:11:19,411 over the towers of dead and horrible cities 145 00:11:19,412 --> 00:11:22,978 with vast aggregations of night-black masonry 146 00:11:22,979 --> 00:11:27,702 embodying monstrousperversions of geometrical laws 147 00:11:27,803 --> 00:11:29,794 feeding his taste for the macabre 148 00:11:29,795 --> 00:11:33,610 was the recent discovery of tales by Edgar Allan Poe 149 00:11:33,611 --> 00:11:37,616 Lovecraft is the most significant descendant of Poe 150 00:11:37,617 --> 00:11:41,661 and you can see that heritage most clearly in those early stories that 151 00:11:41,662 --> 00:11:46,232 evoke affects such as those in "The Tell-Tale Heart", say 152 00:11:46,233 --> 00:11:50,233 "The Tell-Tale Heart" could have been written by Lovecraft 153 00:11:50,234 --> 00:11:53,734 he may have wanted to be a little like Edgar Allan Poe 154 00:11:53,834 --> 00:11:57,727 but he went into a whole different direction with his imagination 155 00:11:57,728 --> 00:12:01,637 you know Poe talked about how short stories should be 156 00:12:01,638 --> 00:12:06,885 everything should be there to create one particular affect 157 00:12:06,886 --> 00:12:13,109 whereas Lovecraft I think goes for much moresort of a bigger canvas somehow than Poe did 158 00:12:13,110 --> 00:12:17,500 in his teenage years, Lovecraft would attempt quiet a few of stories in the Poe style 159 00:12:17,600 --> 00:12:21,542 most however, were destroyed by Lovecraft 160 00:12:21,543 --> 00:12:25,212 I think too many writers are too hard on themselves had to be said that, 161 00:12:25,213 --> 00:12:27,764 you know Lovecraft epitomized this trend 162 00:12:27,765 --> 00:12:32,568 and I actually thinks that there's one positive thing to be bought from that, he was a great writer 163 00:12:32,569 --> 00:12:37,011 I think you know, any writer who feels down about their own work 164 00:12:37,012 --> 00:12:39,549 should read Lovecraft's comments about his own work 165 00:12:39,570 --> 00:12:42,970 he almost never has a good thing to say about his own work 166 00:12:42,971 --> 00:12:48,849 this may be a kind of version of what he perceived as "good manners" 167 00:12:48,850 --> 00:12:50,850 because there's no doubt that he would have thought 168 00:12:50,851 --> 00:12:53,426 it's very ill-mannered to praise his own work 169 00:12:53,427 --> 00:12:59,827 I think that Lovecraft was full of insecurities at that time, he really didn't know what to pursue in terms of a career 170 00:12:59,828 --> 00:13:02,999 maybe he didn't feel that he needed a career 171 00:13:03,000 --> 00:13:07,365 at least in terms of the money because he felt that the money would always be there 172 00:13:07,366 --> 00:13:10,886 but shortly there after he discovered that the money wasn't gonna be there 173 00:13:13,198 --> 00:13:17,270 in 1904, Whipple Phillips was already suffering from poor investments 174 00:13:17,271 --> 00:13:19,565 in a failed dam project 175 00:13:19,566 --> 00:13:24,262 1908328 the stress of it all no doubt tribute to his death on March 28th, 1908 176 00:13:24,263 --> 00:13:26,736 the house on Angell Street was sold 177 00:13:26,737 --> 00:13:31,295 12 the library that schooled Lovecraft for 12 years went with it 178 00:13:31,296 --> 00:13:38,343 he loved that place, it was there he knew the only security he ever had 179 00:13:38,344 --> 00:13:44,982 even though with only 3 blocks away, the new home Susie had picked for her son was an unknown country 180 00:13:44,983 --> 00:13:47,781 though high-school would offer some enjoyment 181 00:13:47,782 --> 00:13:51,150 Lovecraft was vexed by the subjects that escaped him 182 00:13:51,151 --> 00:13:54,261 Lovecraft said he had a full scale nervous break-down 183 00:13:54,262 --> 00:13:56,111 we don't really know what that means 184 00:13:56,112 --> 00:14:00,199 I personally believed that it was the result of his discovery that 185 00:14:00,200 --> 00:14:04,555 his lack of knowledge or lack of proficient in mathematics 186 00:14:04,556 --> 00:14:08,091 prevented him from pursuing a career as astronomer 187 00:14:08,092 --> 00:14:13,556 1908 in the summer of 1908, he simply left school and never returned 188 00:14:13,557 --> 00:14:19,103 19081917 Lovecraft's reclusion would last from 1908 until 1917 189 00:14:19,104 --> 00:14:21,727 judging from his letters, this break-down 190 00:14:21,728 --> 00:14:25,296 had all the remarks of a deep depression 191 00:14:25,297 --> 00:14:30,408 I shall know human society that had givenmyself too much but a failure in life 192 00:14:30,409 --> 00:14:33,932 to be seen socially by those who had known me as a youth 193 00:14:33,933 --> 00:14:38,703 they foolishly expected great things of me 194 00:14:38,704 --> 00:14:43,704 Lovecraft himself was a pretty crazy person, he was kind of nuts, wondering around 195 00:14:43,705 --> 00:14:47,886 I don't, I don't mean, I think "eccentric" is a better word 196 00:14:47,887 --> 00:14:53,800 even for his time, he must have been not only a recluse but an oddity 197 00:14:53,915 --> 00:15:00,023 he would go out occasionally apparently, and people saw him walking down the street in a raincoat 198 00:15:00,024 --> 00:15:04,973 with the flapps up to his collar and 199 00:15:04,974 --> 00:15:08,629 and looking straight ahead not try to make eye contact with anybody 200 00:15:08,630 --> 00:15:12,994 one activity that endured through this period was his reading 201 00:15:12,995 --> 00:15:16,376 this exposed Lovecraft to the amateur pulp magazines 202 00:15:16,377 --> 00:15:19,523 that would one day be the ablert of his own work 203 00:15:19,524 --> 00:15:22,641 I think amateur journalism saved Lovecraft both as a writer 204 00:15:22,642 --> 00:15:25,442 and as a human being 205 00:15:25,443 --> 00:15:32,443 19131914 there was Lovecraft in 1913, 1914 basically rotting away, he clearly didn't know what to do with himself 206 00:15:32,633 --> 00:15:39,565 and then all of a sudden here was this small world of amateur journalism where there are other people like him 207 00:15:39,566 --> 00:15:42,750 trying to be writers but not writing for money 208 00:15:42,751 --> 00:15:45,215 and I think for that moment, that was important to Lovecraft 209 00:15:45,250 --> 00:15:49,568 because amateur journalism was a kind of school for writers 210 00:15:49,569 --> 00:15:54,069 Lovecraft went on to publish his own amateur magazine "The Conservative" 211 00:15:54,070 --> 00:15:57,837 in its pages he exhibited a strong passion for the beliefs he formed during his isolation 212 00:15:57,838 --> 00:16:03,020 including a pronouncedxenophobia 213 00:16:03,021 --> 00:16:06,190 the most alarming tendency observable in this age 214 00:16:06,191 --> 00:16:10,590 is a growing disregard for the established forces of law and order 215 00:16:10,591 --> 00:16:16,143 weather or not stimulated by the noxious example of the almost subhuman Russian rabble 216 00:16:16,144 --> 00:16:18,535 the less intelligent element throughout the world 217 00:16:18,536 --> 00:16:22,213 seems animated by a singular viciousness 218 00:16:22,214 --> 00:16:26,176 every artist with every work of art is a product of his or her time 219 00:16:26,177 --> 00:16:32,077 and he reflected that a lot of very American feelings 220 00:16:32,233 --> 00:16:37,233 the feelings he had intellectually with beliefs in racism and so on 221 00:16:37,500 --> 00:16:42,500 are reprehensible they were then as they are now, and yet in a sense 222 00:16:42,700 --> 00:16:48,700 you can't expect the guy to leap out of his skin at modernsensibilities 223 00:16:48,701 --> 00:16:55,837 he has this really, this really archaicbudging idea that 224 00:16:55,838 --> 00:16:59,852 for society to be stable then it had to be homogeneous 225 00:16:59,853 --> 00:17:05,853 he just didn't like to see the culture he knew go down to drain which he felt would happen 226 00:17:05,854 --> 00:17:09,854 just by erosion as more and more immigrants came 227 00:17:09,855 --> 00:17:11,706 sort of a "Pat Buchanan" kind of a thing 228 00:17:11,707 --> 00:17:18,157 this absolutely genuinely worry of the evils of breeding, of mixed breeding 229 00:17:18,158 --> 00:17:21,658 and breeding in general I suppose 230 00:17:21,659 --> 00:17:26,659 you know the evils of taking purity with an almost Aryan sense of pride 231 00:17:26,900 --> 00:17:31,782 regardless, "The Conservative" attracted fellow amateurs 232 00:17:31,783 --> 00:17:33,636 both sympathetic and contrary 233 00:17:33,637 --> 00:17:36,764 they were attracted by Lovecraft's erudite mind 234 00:17:36,765 --> 00:17:41,261 and as a result Lovecraft developed very close ties 235 00:17:41,262 --> 00:17:45,650 to a number of these amateur journalists, and these became life-long friends of his 236 00:17:45,651 --> 00:17:51,042 they exchange many many letters even after they had left the amateur journalism movement 237 00:17:51,043 --> 00:17:53,700 and he kind of found his home in a magazine like that 238 00:17:53,701 --> 00:17:58,501 or another magazine, fan magazines that he wrote for 239 00:17:58,502 --> 00:18:03,926 and he found a lot of like-minded souls out there would read his stuff and really love them 240 00:18:03,927 --> 00:18:09,165 and he developed followers, I mean it's almost like a cult to them and himself 241 00:18:09,166 --> 00:18:15,166 he wrote so many letters in such white heat and such intensity and such length 242 00:18:15,167 --> 00:18:21,167 that it's easy to suppose that he sacrifice stories to his correspondence 243 00:18:21,767 --> 00:18:25,771 12 I believe he had token like over 120000 letters written 244 00:18:25,772 --> 00:18:28,410 and these letters are in short pieces too, I mean 245 00:18:28,411 --> 00:18:34,411 they are copious, and pages and pages of details and notes or suggestions 246 00:18:34,412 --> 00:18:37,010 on how to improve their own writing 247 00:18:37,011 --> 00:18:39,442 as the web of his correspondents grew 248 00:18:39,443 --> 00:18:44,241 it also allowed Lovecraft to test early stories on respected readers 249 00:18:44,242 --> 00:18:49,641 1919 in 1919, an armaturejournal called the "The Vagrant" took notice 250 00:18:49,642 --> 00:18:55,434 "Dagon" was the first of Lovecraft's stories to be printed 251 00:18:58,268 --> 00:19:01,159 a captured sailor escapes German sea-raiders 252 00:19:01,160 --> 00:19:03,768 only to come aground on a stretch of sea bottom forced up , 253 00:19:03,769 --> 00:19:06,802 by a volcanic upheaval 254 00:19:06,803 --> 00:19:10,418 the region was putrid with the carcasses of decaying fish 255 00:19:10,419 --> 00:19:13,957 and of other less describable things, which I saw 256 00:19:13,958 --> 00:19:17,843 protruding from the nasty mud of the unending plain 257 00:19:17,844 --> 00:19:22,858 it's got this awful sense of atmosphere that this poor guy 258 00:19:22,859 --> 00:19:24,952 is out in the middle of nowhere 259 00:19:24,953 --> 00:19:28,999 surely doomed with a black sun scouring on, what an image 260 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:33,555 as the sailor explores the riff, he discovers a cyclopean monolith 261 00:19:33,556 --> 00:19:37,602 whose carved surface depicts a race of an ancient fish-man 262 00:19:37,603 --> 00:19:40,435 they were damnably human in general outline 263 00:19:40,436 --> 00:19:42,790 despite webbed hands and feet 264 00:19:42,791 --> 00:19:46,950 shockingly wide and flabby lips,glassy, bulging eyes 265 00:19:46,951 --> 00:19:50,363 and other features less pleasant to recall 266 00:19:50,364 --> 00:19:56,177 Suddenly all hell breaks loose with this huge "Charlie Tuna"character coming out and embracing this monolith 267 00:19:56,178 --> 00:20:01,712 and then at the end what happens is that narrator just demented 268 00:20:01,713 --> 00:20:06,424 he is now on the other side of the world but afraid old Charlie's following him 269 00:20:06,425 --> 00:20:09,386 and he is: "Oh my God! That thing in the window!" 270 00:20:09,387 --> 00:20:13,906 well, has this creature followed him, or is he just plain nuts, we don't know 271 00:20:13,907 --> 00:20:17,150 but either way it's a great little story 272 00:20:17,200 --> 00:20:25,000 but you know, you have it there, you've got the creature from the cyclopean creatures from the sea is virtual Cthulhu in miniature 273 00:20:25,184 --> 00:20:30,990 "Dagon" and other stories from this period would set the Lovcraftianmodel 274 00:20:30,991 --> 00:20:34,573 scholarly people discovering violations of natural law 275 00:20:34,574 --> 00:20:38,000 and being driven towards madness or death 276 00:20:40,349 --> 00:20:46,212 it's also exhibited Lovecraft's use of baroque description and subjective adjectives 277 00:20:46,412 --> 00:20:52,412 one of the clich�� notions of Lovecraft propounded by people don't very like his work, usually 278 00:20:52,413 --> 00:20:58,490 you know is that he only has one style that consisted mostly or partly on the adjectives 279 00:20:58,491 --> 00:21:04,500 ��like, um, "Over the eldritch town of Daleech" 280 00:21:04,524 --> 00:21:10,075 the gibbous moon hung illuminating the squamous and batrachians inhabitants��" 281 00:21:10,076 --> 00:21:15,500 what he is saying that is just that, um, you know the moon was nearly full 282 00:21:15,501 --> 00:21:18,000 over the weird town of Daleech, and 283 00:21:18,001 --> 00:21:21,587 everybody who lived there were bloody peculiar frogs 284 00:21:21,588 --> 00:21:30,588 what Lovecraft is, a baroque writer as that he goes in and carefully modulates 285 00:21:31,052 --> 00:21:37,258 these over ripe incredibly complicated physiologies and sentences and style 286 00:21:37,259 --> 00:21:39,885 but it's all his own 287 00:21:40,000 --> 00:21:45,501 if you meet Lovecraft for the first time as an adult you do kind of have to learn how to read him 288 00:21:46,500 --> 00:21:50,084 it's not a modern style it's not a strip-down style 289 00:21:50,085 --> 00:21:54,468 it's not a very efficient style and there are many many things about it that is erasable 290 00:21:54,668 --> 00:21:59,651 He will pick a few words and over use them appallingly 291 00:21:59,652 --> 00:22:02,352 "Eldritch", "Gibbous" 292 00:22:02,400 --> 00:22:05,873 a lot of his stories are ??? nothing happens 293 00:22:05,874 --> 00:22:08,568 especially nothing happens to the narrator 294 00:22:08,569 --> 00:22:13,200 they are just people who start terrified and they end up terrified 295 00:22:13,201 --> 00:22:15,384 And there are other things you can make fun of him for: 296 00:22:15,385 --> 00:22:19,741 the tendency to write in the first person, 297 00:22:19,742 --> 00:22:21,906 and to keep writing 298 00:22:22,000 --> 00:22:25,907 the ultimate parodic Lovecraftian phrase is 299 00:22:25,908 --> 00:22:29,923 somebody going mad while writing and something's coming up: 300 00:22:29,924 --> 00:22:34,731 "I can hear them now coming up the steps�� 301 00:22:34,732 --> 00:22:38,281 ��their hellish tentacles are scrumming at the door�� 302 00:22:38,282 --> 00:22:43,098 ah, Shub-Niggrath, the beast with a thousand young��fhtagn fhtagn" 303 00:22:43,099 --> 00:22:45,226 and it's done, dot dot dot 304 00:22:45,227 --> 00:22:49,850 you disappear in a burst of ellipsis of italics 305 00:22:49,851 --> 00:22:53,492 it's a style that incredibly anal retentive 306 00:22:53,594 --> 00:22:59,594 and you know this guy went over it and over it and over it until he made the combination that to his taste 307 00:22:59,595 --> 00:23:04,274 which maybe gaudy to some it wasn't a perfectbalance 308 00:23:04,275 --> 00:23:07,098 one thing that influenced this purple style 309 00:23:07,099 --> 00:23:11,737 was Lovecraft's current fascination with the writing of Lord Dunsany 310 00:23:11,738 --> 00:23:17,130 Dunsany wrote these magical little tales of dreamlands and gods and 311 00:23:17,131 --> 00:23:22,726 he has this amazing prose style influenced by the King James bible 312 00:23:22,727 --> 00:23:24,485 and apparently nothing else 313 00:23:24,486 --> 00:23:31,486 Lovecraft was very taken by Dunsany's creation of a mythical pantheon of gods 314 00:23:32,045 --> 00:23:38,500 and Lovecraft eventually admitted that, that's how he come to write the stories of the of the Cthulhu mythos 315 00:23:38,709 --> 00:23:42,988 he took those Dunsanian gods which are setting in a fantasy world 316 00:23:42,989 --> 00:23:48,452 and put them into the real world, and that's how he came up with his own cosmic mythology 317 00:23:48,453 --> 00:23:51,134 though Lovecraft was now a published author 318 00:23:51,135 --> 00:23:54,661 pursuing payment for what was only to be a personal pleasure 319 00:23:54,662 --> 00:23:57,111 was far from his idea of a gentleman: 320 00:23:57,112 --> 00:24:01,326 an existence that enjoy "being " rather than "doing" 321 00:24:01,327 --> 00:24:05,895 his fellow amateurs urged Lovecraft to go against his anti-commercialism 322 00:24:05,896 --> 00:24:09,406 and higher out his skills as a "ghostwriter" 323 00:24:09,407 --> 00:24:16,494 19191920 as an invisible author, Lovecraft would be published many times between 1919 and 1920 324 00:24:16,495 --> 00:24:23,670 with no practical experience in commerce however, Lovecraft charge rates much lower than the standard of the time 325 00:24:23,671 --> 00:24:27,934 15 barely clearing a minimum goal of 15 dollars a week 326 00:24:27,935 --> 00:24:32,125 despitemeager returns, this was a prolific time for Lovecraft 327 00:24:32,126 --> 00:24:36,293 1921 17 by 1921 he had written close to 17 stories 328 00:24:36,294 --> 00:24:39,325 unhappy is he to whom the memories of childhood 329 00:24:39,326 --> 00:24:42,044 bring only fear and sadness 330 00:24:42,045 --> 00:24:44,182 wretched is he who looks back upon 331 00:24:44,183 --> 00:24:47,569 lone hours in vast and dismal chambers 332 00:24:47,570 --> 00:24:52,086 with brown hangings and maddening rows of antique books" 333 00:24:52,087 --> 00:24:57,087 the glory of the "The Outsider" is that it is the story of the thing beyond arcane 334 00:24:57,088 --> 00:25:01,088 briefly coming into the file light into that circle 335 00:25:01,089 --> 00:25:03,913 and then fleeing back into the darkness, 336 00:25:03,914 --> 00:25:07,168 A lone narrator emerges from his crumbling castle 337 00:25:07,169 --> 00:25:09,350 after a long seclusion 338 00:25:09,351 --> 00:25:13,406 he comes on to the surface of the earth to find people fleeing in terror 339 00:25:13,407 --> 00:25:17,465 from a monstrous thing that the narrator can plainly see before him 340 00:25:17,466 --> 00:25:20,466 I love the twisted ending so to speak 341 00:25:20,500 --> 00:25:25,440 and the you're reading the story, in the very last line of the story it scares you 342 00:25:25,441 --> 00:25:29,896 I was proud of this guy as he escaped from his catacombs 343 00:25:29,897 --> 00:25:35,328 and the moment that the real people saw him and screamed and he saw his reflection 344 00:25:35,329 --> 00:25:40,817 and in horror he stenches out his hand and touches the mirror Boom! That's the end of the story 345 00:25:40,818 --> 00:25:46,306 "oh my gosh, he is a ghoul, he is a creature from the darkness, now we must go off with him" 346 00:25:46,307 --> 00:25:49,688 and I went back and reread it just to see how he done that 347 00:25:49,689 --> 00:25:58,475 At his best, Lovecraft is as much as an existentialist as Albert Camus would be 348 00:25:58,476 --> 00:26:02,375 I know always that I am an outsider 349 00:26:02,376 --> 00:26:06,404 a stranger in this century and among those who are still men 350 00:26:06,405 --> 00:26:10,805 this is as a strong as a statement about 351 00:26:10,806 --> 00:26:15,137 how I felt it in my teenage years as anything 352 00:26:15,138 --> 00:26:20,351 his writing wasn't may very possibly be disguised autobiography 353 00:26:20,352 --> 00:26:26,430 He does seemed to be somebody who had an unhappy childhood and who felt he was physically repulsive 354 00:26:26,431 --> 00:26:31,975 But did he feel that because of that he was an object of horror, that everybody shunned him 355 00:26:31,976 --> 00:26:37,006 Certainly in terms��his physical appearance he was sort of embarrassed about a number of things 356 00:26:37,007 --> 00:26:43,007 he felt he had this ingrown facial hairs and that he felt that it's a disfiguring factor 357 00:26:43,360 --> 00:26:47,574 so in a way, he's kind of using himself as a jumping-off point 358 00:26:47,575 --> 00:26:51,171 but I think he would come off much more as the weirdo 359 00:26:51,172 --> 00:26:53,904 that Colin Wilson makes him 360 00:26:53,905 --> 00:26:57,872 if he really were like these characters in the stories 361 00:26:57,873 --> 00:27:00,899 ultimately I don't think he was 362 00:27:00,990 --> 00:27:05,947 when Lovecraft emerged from his own isolation, the consensusof the Providence was that 363 00:27:05,948 --> 00:27:08,667 the house on Angell street was one to be avoided 364 00:27:08,668 --> 00:27:12,180 and that Lovecraft and his mother were eccentrics 365 00:27:12,181 --> 00:27:15,396 thought this view could be argued in the case of Lovecraft 366 00:27:15,397 --> 00:27:18,451 Susie was indeed cause for concern 367 00:27:18,452 --> 00:27:21,178 her home life was one of hypertension, where Susie was known to 368 00:27:21,179 --> 00:27:25,683 cause major dramas over the slightest thing 369 00:27:25,684 --> 00:27:27,184 on March 13th, 1919 370 00:27:27,185 --> 00:27:31,027 around the same time her son was emerging as a writer 371 00:27:31,028 --> 00:27:34,339 Susie Lovecraft had been admitted to the same institution that 372 00:27:34,340 --> 00:27:37,601 claimed to her husband years before 373 00:27:37,602 --> 00:27:43,554 Susie Lovecraft passed away on May 24th, 1921, not from nerves 374 00:27:43,555 --> 00:27:46,882 but from a botchedgallbladderoperation 375 00:27:46,883 --> 00:27:49,340 Susie's death was hard on Lovecraft 376 00:27:49,341 --> 00:27:52,282 both emotionally and financially 377 00:27:52,283 --> 00:27:54,249 she left her son a meager estate 378 00:27:54,250 --> 00:27:58,115 which was already meager when she inherited it from her father 379 00:27:58,116 --> 00:28:02,213 that inheritance plus an equally paltry income from ghost writing 380 00:28:02,214 --> 00:28:04,805 barely met Lovecraft's expenses 381 00:28:04,806 --> 00:28:10,690 he made little enough money himself and used to survive by hideous cans of beans 382 00:28:10,691 --> 00:28:17,275 but I have to wonder about Lovecraft whether or not he would have taken any odd job, just to be able to make money and 383 00:28:17,276 --> 00:28:23,977 I don't think he would he had a certain set of standards and again being, you know, he had a love of old pride 384 00:28:23,978 --> 00:28:30,617 that he was a gentleman, he's an author and he was not just gonna take any odd job 385 00:28:30,618 --> 00:28:35,201 ���� Lovecraft moved in with his aunts, Lilian Clark and Annie Gamwell, 386 00:28:35,202 --> 00:28:38,145 But aunts were no substitute for a mother 387 00:28:38,146 --> 00:28:40,086 his fiction writing waned 388 00:28:40,087 --> 00:28:43,670 relieve came from Lovecraft's fellow journalists, 389 00:28:43,671 --> 00:28:46,972 "Herber West, Reanimator" actually is a very funny story and 390 00:28:46,973 --> 00:28:49,621 Lovecraft intended it, I think, to be funny 391 00:28:49,622 --> 00:28:53,485 it was commissioned for a humor magazine 392 00:28:53,486 --> 00:28:57,686 5 for which Lovecraft received all of 5 dollars per installment 393 00:28:57,687 --> 00:29:01,639 keep in mind it was a humor magazine called "Home Brew" 394 00:29:01,640 --> 00:29:06,576 founded and edited by one of his armature friends, George Julian Houtain 395 00:29:06,577 --> 00:29:10,179 Houtain said: "You can't make them too horrible!" 396 00:29:10,180 --> 00:29:12,424 so clearly Lovecraft is encouraged to write 397 00:29:12,425 --> 00:29:16,720 just the most outlandish flamboyant horror that he could think of 398 00:29:16,721 --> 00:29:20,616 Lovecraft chafed on to the reflections of the episodic writing 399 00:29:20,617 --> 00:29:24,015 19221 still the series debuted on January 1922 400 00:29:24,016 --> 00:29:26,351 under the banner "Grewsome Tales" 401 00:29:26,352 --> 00:29:31,919 later to be titled "Herbert West, Reanimator" 402 00:29:32,066 --> 00:29:33,875 Herbert West 403 00:29:33,876 --> 00:29:36,451 who was my friend in college and in after life 404 00:29:36,452 --> 00:29:39,180 can speak only with extreme terror 405 00:29:39,181 --> 00:29:43,218 Holding with Haeckel that all life is a chemical and physical process 406 00:29:43,219 --> 00:29:46,658 and that the so-called "soul"is a myth 407 00:29:46,659 --> 00:29:50,579 my friend believed that artificial reanimation of the dead 408 00:29:50,580 --> 00:29:53,658 can depend only on the condition of the tissues 409 00:29:53,659 --> 00:29:57,880 I love this sense of atmosphere on the "Herbert West" stories 410 00:29:57,881 --> 00:29:59,431 the sense of flays 411 00:29:59,432 --> 00:30:02,617 evidently were not in the movies but 412 00:30:02,618 --> 00:30:08,350 the sense of history it gives you, a sense of place and context, that is extremely strong 413 00:30:08,355 --> 00:30:14,808 now a lot of people feel that the influenceof ��Frankenstein" is heavy on that story 414 00:30:14,809 --> 00:30:18,766 I disagree, because remember what Victor Frankenstein was doing was 415 00:30:18,767 --> 00:30:24,470 creating an artificial man from different parts of human bodies 416 00:30:24,471 --> 00:30:28,150 what Herbert West is trying to do is reanimated an entire living body 417 00:30:28,151 --> 00:30:30,644 after it has theoretically dead 418 00:30:30,645 --> 00:30:33,182 a very different conception, I think 419 00:30:33,183 --> 00:30:35,508 West's adventures in reviving corpses were not 420 00:30:35,509 --> 00:30:39,727 among Lovecraft's favorite works nor his most profitable 421 00:30:39,728 --> 00:30:44,903 nevertheless, it was a small milestone in his career as a professional writer 422 00:30:44,904 --> 00:30:49,028 during this time, Lovecraft also developed two fascinations 423 00:30:49,029 --> 00:30:51,964 incongruent with his xenophobicpersonality: 424 00:30:51,965 --> 00:30:55,526 Travel and a woman 425 00:30:55,527 --> 00:31:00,998 Lovecraft had been lured away from Providence for a gathering of amateurjournalists in Boston 426 00:31:00,999 --> 00:31:04,577 the prospect of intellectual discourse with his compatriots 427 00:31:04,578 --> 00:31:06,999 was too rich to refuse 428 00:31:07,000 --> 00:31:10,183 rare trip soon became a habit 429 00:31:10,184 --> 00:31:12,671 even if Lovecraft preferred to stay within the northeast 430 00:31:12,672 --> 00:31:15,677 where familiar traditions prevailed 431 00:31:15,678 --> 00:31:20,789 on one such visit in 1921, H P Lovecraft met Sonia Haft Greene of New York 432 00:31:20,790 --> 00:31:24,791 1883316 born on 16th, March1883 433 00:31:24,792 --> 00:31:30,134 Sonia was far more experienced in the ways of the world, having being married once before 434 00:31:30,135 --> 00:31:33,070 he met this woman who was a Jewish 435 00:31:33,071 --> 00:31:37,117 one of the things that I found reading the letters, Lovecraft's letters 436 00:31:37,118 --> 00:31:39,089 was how anti-Semitic he was 437 00:31:39,124 --> 00:31:42,961 and the idea he ended up marring a Jewish woman I think is pretty extraordinary 438 00:31:42,962 --> 00:31:47,140 and she must have looked at him with the side she wanted him 439 00:31:47,141 --> 00:31:50,650 he wasn't the worst catch in the world I supposed he had a certain dignity 440 00:31:50,651 --> 00:31:52,883 he was kind of tall and thin and bonny 441 00:31:52,884 --> 00:31:58,309 she is just the opposite of him, she was very out-going and very social, and she sounded like she was fun 442 00:31:58,310 --> 00:32:04,364 and you know she was the one of��as I understand, introduced him to sex 443 00:32:04,365 --> 00:32:09,185 it was the shared passion for the literary however that attracted them most 444 00:32:09,186 --> 00:32:12,098 during one of many moonlit walks together, 445 00:32:12,099 --> 00:32:16,362 Lovecraft and Sonia encountered a weird gruntingnoise in the night 446 00:32:16,363 --> 00:32:19,343 it was an obvious inspiration for one of his stories 447 00:32:19,344 --> 00:32:23,017 but Lovecraft encouraged Sonia to write it instead 448 00:32:23,018 --> 00:32:27,727 this encouragement earned Lovecraft a kiss, his first since childhood 449 00:32:27,728 --> 00:32:31,679 and that, a rare sign of physical affection from his mother 450 00:32:31,680 --> 00:32:37,700 Sonia's story became "The Horror at Martin's Beach", and was published in 1923 451 00:32:37,701 --> 00:32:42,140 by that time she had convinced Lovecraft to ��test the waters�� of New York city 452 00:32:42,141 --> 00:32:44,083 with a prolonged visit 453 00:32:44,084 --> 00:32:48,555 she knew that Lovecraft had to be taken out of Providence, 454 00:32:48,556 --> 00:32:54,347 that if he was really gonna had a life that he had to go out into the world, and she knew how talented he was 455 00:32:54,348 --> 00:32:58,934 and she felt if he went to New York, where the magazines were actually published 456 00:32:58,935 --> 00:33:04,599 and could meet some people and he could become a success 457 00:33:04,600 --> 00:33:07,582 but in a growing metropolis teeming with immigrants, 458 00:33:07,583 --> 00:33:12,422 an acute xenophobic like Lovecraft would soon experience problems 459 00:33:12,423 --> 00:33:16,293 for the moment though, Lovecraft had every reason to be hopeful: 460 00:33:16,294 --> 00:33:23,470 Sonia had entered his life, and in March 1923, "Weird Tales" magazine was born 461 00:33:23,471 --> 00:33:27,265 as much as science fiction and fantasy might be marginalized today 462 00:33:27,266 --> 00:33:30,988 it was certainly a lot more marginalized in the 1920s and 30s 463 00:33:30,989 --> 00:33:34,559 "Weird Tales" was very influential as it happened 464 00:33:35,000 --> 00:33:42,000 it was the best of all the "pulp" magazines, devoted to weird fiction to horror stories and a certain kind of sci-fi 465 00:33:43,983 --> 00:33:47,822 tales of the fantastic had been increasing in popularity 466 00:33:47,823 --> 00:33:50,607 publisher JC Henneberger saw potential 467 00:33:50,608 --> 00:33:53,255 and dedicating an entire journal to the genre 468 00:33:53,256 --> 00:33:58,053 there was a market there, as little paying as the market might have been, 469 00:33:58,054 --> 00:34:00,828 as marginalized as the magazine might have been, 470 00:34:00,829 --> 00:34:05,143 even though it's being printed on horror paper, it doesn't matter, there is a market there, there are readers 471 00:34:05,144 --> 00:34:07,303 and there was a place for you to start 472 00:34:07,304 --> 00:34:13,479 at the best it was virtually a roll-call of the great pulp fantasy writers 473 00:34:13,480 --> 00:34:16,969 and much better than "pulp" implies 474 00:34:16,970 --> 00:34:22,360 many masters of the imaginative fiction got there start in the pages of "Weir Tales" 475 00:34:22,361 --> 00:34:25,280 H.P.Lovecraft was no different 476 00:34:25,281 --> 00:34:29,394 Lovecraft regarded "Weird Tales" as his single market base 477 00:34:29,395 --> 00:34:35,219 it was one magazine he was, well relatively proud to write for even though it has to be said 478 00:34:35,220 --> 00:34:42,220 that he believed that the average ��Weir Tale�� stories possibly below average ��Weir Tale�� stories was not that great 479 00:34:43,730 --> 00:34:47,290 it took a great deal of convincing from Sonia and other friends 480 00:34:47,291 --> 00:34:52,322 but Lovecraft finally relented and sent in a selection of stories 481 00:34:52,323 --> 00:34:59,329 "Weird Tales" bought all 5 submissions, thus began a lifelong relationship 482 00:34:59,330 --> 00:35:04,731 192433 on March 3rd, 1924, Lovecraft embarked on another relationship: 483 00:35:04,732 --> 00:35:07,681 after an aggressive campaign from Sonia 484 00:35:07,682 --> 00:35:10,938 Lovecraft finally asked for her hand in marriage 485 00:35:10,939 --> 00:35:15,075 41 33 the bride was nearly 41, the groom was 33 486 00:35:15,076 --> 00:35:17,832 his aunts were outraged by this 487 00:35:17,833 --> 00:35:21,000 you know, they thought the girl that he married was completely beneath him 488 00:35:21,001 --> 00:35:24,327 at huge risk to a sense of security 489 00:35:24,328 --> 00:35:29,330 Lovecraft would leave Providence to live with his new wife in New York 490 00:35:29,331 --> 00:35:32,325 for a virgin reclusivepuritan moral standard 491 00:35:32,326 --> 00:35:36,178 marriage promised to be an interesting experience 492 00:35:36,179 --> 00:35:39,745 sometimes I feel like that she just must have been something just short of a sane 493 00:35:39,746 --> 00:35:43,506 because what she married, was a guy who refused to work, 494 00:35:43,507 --> 00:35:44,929 except on the stories 495 00:35:44,930 --> 00:35:49,176 this is the one area which I think that Lovecraft really failed as a human being 496 00:35:49,177 --> 00:35:55,203 I think she acknowledged in her own memiors at some point that she felt like she could change him 497 00:35:56,204 --> 00:35:58,763 she couldn't change him 498 00:35:58,764 --> 00:36:06,009 19221924 between 1922 and 1924, Lovecraft's narrative aplord was on another upswing 499 00:36:06,010 --> 00:36:08,850 this included the creation of three reoccurring elements 500 00:36:08,851 --> 00:36:12,354 of Lovecraft's gestating mythology 501 00:36:12,355 --> 00:36:16,338 Miskatonic University 502 00:36:16,339 --> 00:36:18,538 the dark town of Arkham 503 00:36:18,539 --> 00:36:21,626 and literature's most dreadedgrimoire 504 00:36:21,627 --> 00:36:25,312 written by an alter ego from Lovecraft's childhood 505 00:36:25,313 --> 00:36:28,368 one inspired by his reading of the "Arabian Nights" 506 00:36:28,369 --> 00:36:31,064 the mad Abdul Alhazared 507 00:36:31,065 --> 00:36:36,257 the Necronomicon has become this strange sort of combination of 508 00:36:36,258 --> 00:36:39,500 urban legend and bad joke 509 00:36:39,501 --> 00:36:46,002 first of all it existed in the mind of Lovecraft, and then other people used it 510 00:36:46,003 --> 00:36:52,834 it was one of the easiest things��"The Necronomicon of the mad Arab Alhazared" 511 00:36:52,835 --> 00:36:55,835 "Yes, this is the book of all of the forbidden things" 512 00:36:55,836 --> 00:37:00,290 the Necronomicon was a book that collected all manner of summoning spells 513 00:37:00,291 --> 00:37:06,499 spells that would cause the return of the ancient creatures from unknown worlds and dimensions 514 00:37:06,500 --> 00:37:10,614 well the Necronomicon is yet another of those Lovecraftian concepts with, you know 515 00:37:10,615 --> 00:37:13,654 never meant to be fully bodied force 516 00:37:13,655 --> 00:37:18,335 it's a series of references that began imply this much larger tome 517 00:37:18,336 --> 00:37:23,351 with more terrible secrets and Lovecraft couldn't even hint at 518 00:37:23,352 --> 00:37:27,426 so then other people would use it, you got Fritz Leiber, you got Bloch 519 00:37:27,524 --> 00:37:30,024 you got Manly Wade Wellman, and August Derleth 520 00:37:30,025 --> 00:37:33,894 all these other writers putting it into their stuff 521 00:37:33,895 --> 00:37:38,070 so now it feels a little truer, like maybe it ought to exist 522 00:37:38,071 --> 00:37:44,965 another story from this period that can be seen as one of Lovecraft's early best," The Rats in The Walls" 523 00:37:44,966 --> 00:37:48,349 "Rats in The Walls�� was one of two stories that I read when I was a kid 524 00:37:48,350 --> 00:37:53,200 my father bought me a book called "Great Tales of Terror And the Supernatural" and it had 525 00:37:53,201 --> 00:37:59,433 all sorts of stories, two from Lovecraft: "Rats In The Walls" and "The Dunwich Horror" 526 00:37:59,434 --> 00:38:04,500 and he read them aloud to me when I was a kid, it was mind boiling 527 00:38:04,501 --> 00:38:07,146 a gentleman of the De La Poer family 528 00:38:07,147 --> 00:38:10,380 returns to his ancestralestate in England 529 00:38:10,381 --> 00:38:12,814 there he and his black cat, Nigger-man 530 00:38:12,815 --> 00:38:16,731 are disturbed by verminousslitheringbehind the walls 531 00:38:16,732 --> 00:38:21,015 Lovecraft was great at depicting the moment of this 532 00:38:21,016 --> 00:38:27,651 convey by sound or by a fleeting shadow and it really put you there 533 00:38:27,652 --> 00:38:35,062 �� and made you almost empathically experience the moment where you heard the noise behind the woodwork 534 00:38:35,063 --> 00:38:40,089 more than a lot of his stories literally embodies that sense of "Deep Time " 535 00:38:40,090 --> 00:38:46,000 in the sense of as De La Poer is trying to investigate the source of the 536 00:38:46,001 --> 00:38:50,631 of the phenomenon in the house begins to go through this sub-basement down into this 537 00:38:50,632 --> 00:38:54,288 vast subterranean caverns beneath the house 538 00:38:54,289 --> 00:38:58,500 that exploration into the depth of the castle is simultaneously 539 00:38:58,501 --> 00:39:04,021 an exploration into the depth of the past and the horrors that comes out of the history 540 00:39:04,022 --> 00:39:06,375 I seemed to be looking down from an immense height 541 00:39:06,376 --> 00:39:09,629 upon a twilit grotto, knee-deep with filth 542 00:39:09,630 --> 00:39:13,323 where a white-bearded daemon swineherd drove about with his staff 543 00:39:13,324 --> 00:39:16,366 aflock of fungous,flabby beasts 544 00:39:16,367 --> 00:39:19,938 whose appearance filled me with unutterable loathing 545 00:39:19,939 --> 00:39:24,098 Then, as the swineherd paused and nodded over his task 546 00:39:24,099 --> 00:39:28,072 a mighty swarm of rats rained down on the stinking abyss 547 00:39:28,073 --> 00:39:31,722 and fell to devouring beasts and man alike 548 00:39:31,723 --> 00:39:37,136 it's one of the stories where Lovecraft is playing with the classical gothic tropes 549 00:39:37,137 --> 00:39:39,878 you know you have the family with the hidden things 550 00:39:39,879 --> 00:39:44,632 18 you have all of this sort of early 18th century gothic elements to the story 551 00:39:44,633 --> 00:39:49,399 all of these strange stuff about the "Exhume Priory" 552 00:39:49,400 --> 00:39:54,177 and this lost world under the cliff there 553 00:39:54,178 --> 00:39:57,858 and these squealingwhite flabby beasts 554 00:39:57,859 --> 00:40:02,524 and the people are - the characters in the stories being descendants from different lines 555 00:40:02,525 --> 00:40:04,997 of the bad guys, that bred these things 556 00:40:04,998 --> 00:40:10,151 and the things having evolved, what a brilliant brilliant work 557 00:40:10,152 --> 00:40:15,152 it's really creepy stuff, it gets under your skin 558 00:40:15,459 --> 00:40:22,685 but I think it's kindda obvious if you turned down the walls of��of any kind of civilized person 559 00:40:22,686 --> 00:40:27,390 behind there something is really abominable works 560 00:40:27,391 --> 00:40:32,640 "Rats" was snatched up by "Weird Tales" in 1924 561 00:40:32,641 --> 00:40:37,328 the first year and a half of Lovecraft's marriage was like a tonic 562 00:40:37,329 --> 00:40:41,136 it was grand, it was a new adventure for him 563 00:40:41,137 --> 00:40:45,760 um��he also made lots of friends there too Frank Long, for example being one of his best friends 564 00:40:45,761 --> 00:40:49,886 works however, even Lovecraft's drive to find it, was limited 565 00:40:49,887 --> 00:40:53,224 I think A: he didn't want a job 566 00:40:53,225 --> 00:41:00,225 and B: He knew that any employment he could find in the city of New York or elsewhere 567 00:41:00,226 --> 00:41:03,481 would be really bruising for him 568 00:41:03,482 --> 00:41:08,216 the longer Lovecraft stayed in New York, the worse his xenophobia became 569 00:41:08,217 --> 00:41:11,225 almost as a retaliation against the immigrant outsiders 570 00:41:11,226 --> 00:41:13,360 flourishing around him 571 00:41:13,361 --> 00:41:19,169 the unrevealingof the grog, so to speak, happened you know because of financial reasons 572 00:41:19,170 --> 00:41:24,728 Sonia lost her hat shop and eventually had to look for work in Cleveland 573 00:41:24,729 --> 00:41:29,848 a job offer was agreed with an enthusiasm by Sonia and lothing from Lovecraft 574 00:41:29,849 --> 00:41:31,755 there was too far from Providence 575 00:41:31,756 --> 00:41:36,286 Brooklyn was unbearable, but at least it was just a train right away 576 00:41:36,287 --> 00:41:41,053 1924 by the end of 1924 Sonia had no choice but to leave for the mid-west 577 00:41:41,054 --> 00:41:42,621 alone 578 00:41:42,622 --> 00:41:45,518 Sonia would be back and forth to support her husband 579 00:41:45,519 --> 00:41:49,093 but her influence over Lovecraft's mood was waning 580 00:41:49,094 --> 00:41:52,253 his ridicule of the melting pot that was the New York city 581 00:41:52,254 --> 00:41:54,997 reach manic even racist levels 582 00:41:54,998 --> 00:41:59,540 I certainly hope to see promiscuous immigration permanently curtailed soon 583 00:41:59,541 --> 00:42:03,889 heaven knows, enough harm has already been done by the admission of limitless 584 00:42:03,890 --> 00:42:08,521 hordes of the ignorant superstitious and biologically injurious scum 585 00:42:08,522 --> 00:42:12,535 of southernEurope and western Asia 586 00:42:12,536 --> 00:42:16,119 for the most part, Lovecraft kept these views to himself 587 00:42:16,120 --> 00:42:20,990 knowing full well that his friends and correspondents did not share his views 588 00:42:20,991 --> 00:42:24,991 it wasn't long before his fiction give voice to these demons 589 00:42:24,992 --> 00:42:28,311 Red Hook is a maze of hybrid squalor 590 00:42:28,312 --> 00:42:31,806 near the ancient waterfront opposite Governor's Island 591 00:42:31,807 --> 00:42:35,542 From this tangle of material and spiritual putrescence 592 00:42:35,543 --> 00:42:39,341 the blasphemies of a hundred dialects assail the sky 593 00:42:39,342 --> 00:42:42,395 Policemen despair of order or reform 594 00:42:42,396 --> 00:42:45,300 and seek rather to erect barriers protecting the outside world 595 00:42:45,301 --> 00:42:49,319 from the contagion 596 00:42:49,320 --> 00:42:55,108 I don't think you can ever curlywhat people think or believe with what they write 597 00:42:55,109 --> 00:43:00,109 or at least I don't think you can do it on the one to one basis so beloved 598 00:43:00,110 --> 00:43:05,622 of literary scholarsacademics and amateurpsychologists 599 00:43:05,623 --> 00:43:09,709 for modern standards there is plenty of racism in Mark Twain 600 00:43:09,710 --> 00:43:15,037 there is plenty of racism in Edgar Rice Burroughs, there is plenty of sexism in Edgar Rice Burroughs 601 00:43:15,038 --> 00:43:19,685 you could thought those works were belongings to that time 602 00:43:19,686 --> 00:43:27,630 what I believe that, it's essentially a fossil record of what a gentleman 603 00:43:27,631 --> 00:43:30,631 of New England would think at the time 604 00:43:30,632 --> 00:43:35,273 it's very very easy to look at Lovecraft and go, ok well 605 00:43:35,274 --> 00:43:39,478 you know "Cthulhu" means the female genitalia 606 00:43:39,479 --> 00:43:44,599 or all of these outsiders were really Jews or blacks 607 00:43:44,600 --> 00:43:50,263 or you know, this is what the batrachian thing is all about, it's a cunningly disguised racism 608 00:43:50,264 --> 00:43:54,945 he did however made a overly racist statement toward some groups and, 609 00:43:54,946 --> 00:44:00,277 that certainly no surprise back in the 20s and 30s, 610 00:44:00,278 --> 00:44:05,662 and it's too bad, I mean that doesn't make it right, but I just don't think you can take it seriously 611 00:44:05,663 --> 00:44:12,014 it will be funny if we were not so objection, and to a certain understand it still is funny what it is even though it is completelyobjectionable 612 00:44:12,015 --> 00:44:16,018 the sheltered character who took a long long time to grow 613 00:44:16,019 --> 00:44:18,280 or you can say never grow up, that isn't true 614 00:44:18,281 --> 00:44:21,016 and so is that reacting in adolescence fashion 615 00:44:21,017 --> 00:44:27,695 to the streams of people who flooded the street in Brooklyn in "Red Hook" Brooklyn 616 00:44:27,696 --> 00:44:32,989 and I think when he refer to himself as an unassimilatedalien 617 00:44:32,990 --> 00:44:39,442 I think he understood that when he was in New York on some level he understood despite all these detestations 618 00:44:39,443 --> 00:44:41,418 that New York worked 619 00:44:41,419 --> 00:44:47,419 you know, despite his perceptionof it, its horrid chaotic sass pool, it were something that worked 620 00:44:47,420 --> 00:44:49,105 he didn't work 621 00:44:49,106 --> 00:44:52,448 it became clear to his friends that Lovecraft's exile in New York 622 00:44:52,449 --> 00:44:54,809 was leading to a breakdown 623 00:44:54,810 --> 00:44:57,560 some even feared a suicide attempt 624 00:44:57,561 --> 00:45:00,363 help came from Lovecraft's aunts, Lilian and Annie 625 00:45:00,364 --> 00:45:04,693 who found a small home for their nephew back in the safety of Providence 626 00:45:04,694 --> 00:45:08,678 Sonia offered to buy the house for him, but this was not New York 627 00:45:08,679 --> 00:45:11,527 in Providence propriety wouldreign 628 00:45:11,528 --> 00:45:16,943 if Lovecraft could not support his wife, he would distance himself instead 629 00:45:16,944 --> 00:45:22,522 19264 in April of 1926, Lovecraft returned to his beloved city 630 00:45:22,523 --> 00:45:30,257 He was released from Brooklyn and he went back to his immense�� to his almost unimaginably immense relief to Providence 631 00:45:30,258 --> 00:45:35,004 1926 that summer of 1926 was the start of Lovecraft's riches period 632 00:45:35,005 --> 00:45:39,531 it started with an idea he had outlined during those fearful days in New York 633 00:45:39,532 --> 00:45:45,074 an idea which became the most notable addition to Lovecraft's fictional universe 634 00:45:45,075 --> 00:45:50,908 the story of Lovecraft, the first one I read was "The Call of Cthulhu", like most everyone, I would imagine 635 00:45:50,909 --> 00:46:01,820 and it just struck me because it was an combination of cosmology and anthropology and horror that was all melded into one 636 00:46:01,821 --> 00:46:05,964 George Gammel Angell, professor emeritus ofSemtic languages 637 00:46:05,965 --> 00:46:07,807 at Brown University 638 00:46:07,808 --> 00:46:11,102 is mysteriously murdered on the streets of Providence 639 00:46:11,103 --> 00:46:16,799 sometime earlier, Angell had come into possession of a troubling clay sculpture 640 00:46:16,800 --> 00:46:20,781 it represented a monster of vaguely anthropoid outline 641 00:46:20,782 --> 00:46:25,311 but with an octopus-like head whose face was a mass of feelers 642 00:46:25,312 --> 00:46:27,935 a scaly, rubbery-looking body,prodigious claws 643 00:46:27,936 --> 00:46:33,199 on hind and fore feet,and long, narrow wings behind 644 00:46:33,200 --> 00:46:39,203 the description of the monster is probably better seen on paper 645 00:46:39,204 --> 00:46:41,473 than it would be visualized 646 00:46:41,474 --> 00:46:45,513 there's a thing about Lovecraft, all his creatures are really interesting 647 00:46:45,514 --> 00:46:48,933 when you read them because your imagination starts to work on it 648 00:46:48,934 --> 00:46:55,596 and you keep it amorphous and disgusting with the seafood variety that H P Lovecraft describes 649 00:46:55,597 --> 00:46:58,318 I mean that he must have something about fish 650 00:46:58,319 --> 00:47:03,655 really bothered him, you know squid and octopus and stuff like that 651 00:47:03,656 --> 00:47:08,406 Angell's investigations of the graven image are taken up by his grand nephew 652 00:47:08,407 --> 00:47:13,514 here is this guy, whose always, his eccentric uncle died and he was looking through all his papers and 653 00:47:13,515 --> 00:47:17,706 as I did when Lin Carter died it made it kind of a chore 654 00:47:17,707 --> 00:47:23,070 but you never know what kind of good issue you gonna find and he sees all these crazy things: ��What the hell is he into?�� 655 00:47:23,071 --> 00:47:26,875 when you read it's sort of an incredibly clumsy story 656 00:47:26,876 --> 00:47:31,543 here is a lump of this and here is some newspaper reports 657 00:47:31,544 --> 00:47:38,544 and here is a �� it's sort of a part journalism and it's almost anecdote like, and it doesn't really have a plot 658 00:47:38,545 --> 00:47:44,174 it's assembled in fragments, in a very interesting way and also a modernist way 659 00:47:44,175 --> 00:47:50,801 what that technique does, is to suggest an aura of mystery in itself 660 00:47:50,802 --> 00:47:53,881 and before long his intuitive and before long his expecting 661 00:47:53,882 --> 00:47:57,425 the secret agents of Cthulhu to come and get him and 662 00:47:57,426 --> 00:48:01,510 why is he even writing these things since he doesn't want anybody else to know about it 663 00:48:01,511 --> 00:48:03,622 it's about that reoccurring thing in Lovecraft 664 00:48:03,623 --> 00:48:07,149 that fear of science or just human knowledge 665 00:48:07,150 --> 00:48:12,253 going where it doesn't necessarily go ofaccidentally recovering things that 666 00:48:12,254 --> 00:48:17,920 either it was not much point knowing them or knowing them could lead to our destruction 667 00:48:17,921 --> 00:48:23,421 the nephew endeavors to connect the reports of vivid dreams across the world 668 00:48:23,422 --> 00:48:27,422 dark practices in the bayous of New Orleans 669 00:48:27,423 --> 00:48:32,000 and the discovery of a corpse city by a band of innocent sailors 670 00:48:32,035 --> 00:48:34,939 there lay great Cthulhu and his hordes 671 00:48:34,940 --> 00:48:41,144 hidden in green slimy vaults and sending out at last,?after cycles incalculable 672 00:48:41,145 --> 00:48:45,552 the thoughts that spread fear to the dreams of the sensitive 673 00:48:45,553 --> 00:48:50,273 "Cthulhu" is almost like the Paul Revere of all these deities, you know, [��Paul Revere ] 674 00:48:50,274 --> 00:48:58,023 or the King Arthur waiting to come back, you know and take over 675 00:48:58,024 --> 00:49:01,815 he's just a general evil that existed in another place 676 00:49:01,816 --> 00:49:04,575 but it's like Christianity in the sense 677 00:49:04,576 --> 00:49:08,509 in sense of our creators he's our destroyer 678 00:49:08,510 --> 00:49:13,735 he's kind of another version of the devil I suppose, except thatslimier 679 00:49:13,736 --> 00:49:16,071 as elaborate as this story was 680 00:49:16,072 --> 00:49:19,965 the spelling and the pronunciation of the ancient names was even more so 681 00:49:20,246 --> 00:49:22,846 Cthulhu 682 00:49:23,500 --> 00:49:30,500 of course, the association of the name this is my fourth language 683 00:49:31,000 --> 00:49:35,999 Poppy Z Brite makes fun of the way our pronounce "Cthulhu", but I don't know another way 684 00:49:36,000 --> 00:49:38,898 look at the way Lovecraft tries to pronounce it I can't pronounce it 685 00:49:38,899 --> 00:49:45,217 many of his colleagues apparently didn't know how to pronounce it, or pronounced it wrongly 686 00:49:45,218 --> 00:49:52,499 1934 and, so finally in a letter in 1934, he tells a colleague, well, it's really meant to be two syllables 687 00:49:52,500 --> 00:49:58,000 you are supposed to put your tongue at the roof of your mouth and cough it out like "Clu-lu" 688 00:49:58,297 --> 00:50:02,553 but he says, you know the name is entirely alien name 689 00:50:02,554 --> 00:50:05,819 not design to be pronounced by human vocal course 690 00:50:05,820 --> 00:50:13,000 the word is only a symbol for something that is entirely beyond the ability for humans to make the sounds 691 00:50:13,001 --> 00:50:18,369 so there is no incorrect way to pronounce it, because there is no correct way to pronounce it 692 00:50:18,370 --> 00:50:22,564 despite Lovecraft's effort to wave a rich narrative 693 00:50:22,565 --> 00:50:25,847 "The Call of Cthulhu" was initially rejected by "Weird Tales" 694 00:50:25,848 --> 00:50:29,784 this was common practice of the anthologist editor Farnsworth Wright 695 00:50:29,785 --> 00:50:34,557 especially when presented with a story as original as Lovecraft's creation 696 00:50:34,558 --> 00:50:40,000 one of Lovecraft's tricks of course was, was to take the rejected story sit on it for a little while 697 00:50:40,001 --> 00:50:45,302 sent it back to Wright saying I've made the changes you asked for, having not done a single thing with it 698 00:50:45,303 --> 00:50:48,803 and more often but not apparently, Wright would fall for this trick 699 00:50:48,838 --> 00:50:51,480 "The Call Of Cthulhu" was eventually printed 700 00:50:51,481 --> 00:50:55,999 19282 in February 1928's issue of "Weird Tales" 701 00:50:56,000 --> 00:51:02,886 Lovecraft's fee for such a seminal work of fiction, 165 dollars 702 00:51:02,887 --> 00:51:06,950 as Lovecraft's writing began to blossom, so did the man 703 00:51:06,951 --> 00:51:10,566 I vastly regret the absence of traditional accomplishments 704 00:51:10,567 --> 00:51:15,494 fencing, horsemanship, military service caused by my early ill health 705 00:51:15,495 --> 00:51:19,760 and lack of appreciation of the quality of the well-roundedness 706 00:51:19,761 --> 00:51:23,312 Lovecraft began to entertain his friends once more 707 00:51:23,313 --> 00:51:27,900 including them on long walks through Providence and other New England excursions 708 00:51:27,901 --> 00:51:32,788 Lovecraft was even beginning to evolve a form of tolerance toward the outsiders around him 709 00:51:32,789 --> 00:51:36,117 especially the many cultures now living in Providence 710 00:51:36,118 --> 00:51:41,625 in February of 1927, it was time for his writing to expand as well 711 00:51:41,626 --> 00:51:44,207 "Charles Dexter Ward" is the novel in which he applies 712 00:51:44,208 --> 00:51:51,019 all these sense of structure to that long walk and the effect is tremendous 713 00:51:51,020 --> 00:51:55,684 The beginning of Ward's madness is a matter of dispute among alienists 714 00:51:55,685 --> 00:52:02,200 Dr Lyman, the eminent Boston authority, places it in 1919 or 1920 715 00:52:02,201 --> 00:52:06,048 this is certainly borne by Ward's altered habits 716 00:52:06,049 --> 00:52:11,549 especially by his continual search through certain grave dug in 1771 717 00:52:11,550 --> 00:52:15,202 the grave of an ancestor named Joseph Curwen" 718 00:52:15,203 --> 00:52:17,682 Joseph Curwen was an obscure individual 719 00:52:17,683 --> 00:52:21,858 who flight from Salem to Providence around 1761 720 00:52:21,859 --> 00:52:24,952 now the first odd thing about Joseph Curwen 721 00:52:24,953 --> 00:52:29,527 was that he did not seem to grow much older than he had been on his arrival 722 00:52:29,528 --> 00:52:34,237 at length, when over fifty years had passed since the stranger's advent 723 00:52:34,238 --> 00:52:39,321 and without producing more than five years' apparent change in his face and physique 724 00:52:39,322 --> 00:52:43,122 the people began to whisper more darkly 725 00:52:43,123 --> 00:52:46,974 alchemy and the black arts proved to be Curwen's secret 726 00:52:46,975 --> 00:52:51,500 I think one of the flaws in that story, and maybe only a flaw to me, is that 727 00:52:51,501 --> 00:52:59,437 he uses this kind of pseudoscience that is actually a little bit beneath Lovecraft's acumen, it's a 728 00:52:59,438 --> 00:53:07,509 it explains the mysterious and horrifying events by reference to certain ��essential Saltes �� 729 00:53:07,510 --> 00:53:13,510 and by the lyke Method from the essential Saltes of humane Dust, a Philosopher may, 730 00:53:13,511 --> 00:53:18,492 without criminal Necromancy, call up the Shape of any dead Ancestour" 731 00:53:18,493 --> 00:53:23,000 and that's a little third grade, it's like bad science fiction 732 00:53:23,001 --> 00:53:27,480 a band of raiders confront the doom man and his unhallowed wizardry 733 00:53:27,481 --> 00:53:29,981 that night was never remarked on again 734 00:53:29,982 --> 00:53:35,035 until Charles Ward learned of his descent from Curwen, in 1918 735 00:53:35,036 --> 00:53:37,505 and continued his ancestor's experiments 736 00:53:37,506 --> 00:53:42,200 connecting the past with the present, summoning the unspeakable to life 737 00:53:42,290 --> 00:53:44,321 it's almost like a detective story, you know 738 00:53:44,322 --> 00:53:49,833 Dr Willet is really discovering what happened to Charles Dexter Ward 739 00:53:49,834 --> 00:53:53,801 discovering about Curwen, about the unfortunate accidents 740 00:53:53,802 --> 00:53:58,348 from the efforts to basically bring demons down from the stars 741 00:53:58,349 --> 00:54:03,349 and when they didn't have all the pieces, when they didn't have all the remains, you know 742 00:54:03,350 --> 00:54:08,850 terrible awfulness would be brungup and they'd had to be put somewhere, of course 743 00:54:08,851 --> 00:54:13,917 I wasn't quite sure why they just didn't destroy them, but maybe it was for sport, who knows 744 00:54:13,918 --> 00:54:19,118 it's one of those case where his detractors say what he's writing about "unspeakable horrors" 745 00:54:19,119 --> 00:54:23,000 and simply telling as that, they are unspeakable 746 00:54:23,001 --> 00:54:28,296 in fact that's only get out at the moment when Dr Willet looks down the well and see something 747 00:54:28,297 --> 00:54:32,797 that Lovecraft actually certainly found a metaphor for it 748 00:54:32,798 --> 00:54:39,121 that's "tremendously" more than just the "unspeakable": that's the cosmic in bodily form 749 00:54:39,122 --> 00:54:44,904 though completed, the lengthy tale of Charles Dexter Ward was never typed or submitted 750 00:54:44,905 --> 00:54:48,983 he just left it in a drawer, he didn't think it was worth a bothering with 751 00:54:48,984 --> 00:54:54,700 it was the first draft amazingly I believe "The Dream-Quest Of Unknown Kadath" was also 752 00:54:54,701 --> 00:54:59,624 how he didn't see the meridian in this stuff, it's just amazing 753 00:54:59,659 --> 00:55:04,548 I don't think he was built to write longer narratives 754 00:55:04,549 --> 00:55:08,492 He went as far as he could that way and it did press the envelope 755 00:55:08,493 --> 00:55:12,234 some of the those letters are really rather long 756 00:55:12,235 --> 00:55:17,590 but they are also "inert" in the certain way that a novel can not afford to be 757 00:55:17,591 --> 00:55:23,645 there was another tale written during this time on which Lovecraft held an entirely different opinion 758 00:55:23,646 --> 00:55:28,053 "The Colour Out Of Space" is just a great science fiction movie 759 00:55:28,054 --> 00:55:30,375 um, story, it should be a movie 760 00:55:30,376 --> 00:55:36,013 although I don't know how you'll do the colour, it's unlike anything we seen, I don't know what that is 761 00:55:36,014 --> 00:55:40,678 There is a type of story where you go to the minimal setting: 762 00:55:40,679 --> 00:55:45,751 a household or a farm a far field, and you 763 00:55:45,752 --> 00:55:52,035 unleash upon them a cosmic melody, you know, a cosmic curse 764 00:55:52,036 --> 00:55:56,360 1882 it all began in 1882, with a meteorite 765 00:55:56,361 --> 00:56:01,202 and by night all Arkham had heard of the great rock that fell out of the sky 766 00:56:01,203 --> 00:56:06,355 and bedded itself in the ground beside the well at the Nahum Gardner place 767 00:56:06,356 --> 00:56:08,320 they had uncovered what seemed to be 768 00:56:08,321 --> 00:56:12,830 the side of a large coloured globule embedded in the substance 769 00:56:12,831 --> 00:56:17,096 the colour, which resembled some of the bands in the meteor's strange spectrum 770 00:56:17,097 --> 00:56:19,631 was almost impossible to describe 771 00:56:19,632 --> 00:56:24,130 and it was only by analogy that they called it colour at all 772 00:56:24,131 --> 00:56:27,418 and "The Colour Out Of Space" it is as the story has it 773 00:56:27,419 --> 00:56:32,500 just a colour out of space, it's literally indescribable in prose terms 774 00:56:32,501 --> 00:56:35,799 it's something that almost impossible to even detect 775 00:56:35,800 --> 00:56:41,157 it's something that so incredibly insidious, there is no escaping from it 776 00:56:41,158 --> 00:56:45,757 except by geographically removing yourself as far as you can from the place 777 00:56:45,758 --> 00:56:48,758 by the next harvest, flora and fauna are found deformed 778 00:56:49,000 --> 00:56:53,489 and the Gardner family is infected with unexplained madness 779 00:56:53,490 --> 00:56:57,458 6 it happened in June, about the anniversary of the meteor's fall 780 00:56:57,459 --> 00:57:02,473 and the poor woman screamed about things in the air which she could not describe 781 00:57:02,474 --> 00:57:06,128 in her raving there was not a single specific noun 782 00:57:06,129 --> 00:57:09,130 she was being drained of something 783 00:57:09,131 --> 00:57:12,492 something was fastening itself on her that ought not to be 784 00:57:12,493 --> 00:57:15,918 it wasn't just the meteorite, it was something that inside the meteorite 785 00:57:15,919 --> 00:57:22,214 That begins to spread and poison the landscape and mutate the landscape and the people 786 00:57:22,215 --> 00:57:27,025 it's one of those stories that Lovecraft moves into physical gruesomeness 787 00:57:27,026 --> 00:57:31,506 the effects on the unlucky family that in the farm house 788 00:57:31,507 --> 00:57:37,999 but it passes beyond that into absolute awesomeness, a kind of real transcendental quality of terror 789 00:57:38,000 --> 00:57:41,960 the best Lovecraft had achieved 790 00:57:41,961 --> 00:57:44,794 though "The Call Of Cthulhu" looked to the stars 791 00:57:44,795 --> 00:57:49,610 "The Colour Out Of Space" was clearly set in the realm of science fiction 792 00:57:49,611 --> 00:57:55,190 for this very reason, Lovecraft submitted his tale to the new journal "Amazing Stories" 793 00:57:55,191 --> 00:57:59,106 19279 though they would eagerly publish this story in September of 1927 794 00:57:59,107 --> 00:58:05,621 their lack of payment convinced Lovecraft that he should never stray far from the known quantity of "Weird Tales" 795 00:58:05,622 --> 00:58:11,622 they would be the only magazine he formally submitted to for the rest of his life 796 00:58:13,183 --> 00:58:19,099 1928 during a 1928's excursion to Massachusetts, Lovecraft happened on a ring of stones 797 00:58:19,100 --> 00:58:23,339 oldest of all are the great rings of rough-hewn stone columns on the hill-tops 798 00:58:23,340 --> 00:58:29,874 more generally attributed to the Indians than to the settlers 799 00:58:29,875 --> 00:58:34,124 along with talk of witch blood, the eerie cries of the whippoorwills 800 00:58:34,125 --> 00:58:40,282 and the ever present Old Ones, Lovecraft shaped "The Dunwich Horror" 801 00:58:40,283 --> 00:58:47,065 it was in the township of Dunwich, that Wilbur Whateley was born on the 2nd of February 1913 802 00:58:47,066 --> 00:58:51,853 Lavinia Whateley had no known husband, but according to the custom of the region 803 00:58:51,854 --> 00:58:54,414 made no attempt to disavow the child 804 00:58:54,614 --> 00:59:00,117 there is an inbreeding between, you know, gods and man, and they produced 805 00:59:00,118 --> 00:59:03,618 you know, whatever you produced, you got this ��half-god half-man�� thing 806 00:59:03,619 --> 00:59:08,224 Wilbur Whateley's grandfather is old wizard Whateley 807 00:59:08,225 --> 00:59:14,079 he's an eccentric New England hick, what's his motivation is he trying to end the world 808 00:59:14,080 --> 00:59:18,223 because he is some kind of sadie and nihilist, no, he just needs a few extra bucks 809 00:59:18,224 --> 00:59:25,000 - And Yog-Sothoth agrees to give him a pirate blossom fee to pimps out his daughter to him 810 00:59:25,095 --> 00:59:31,712 At the age of 10 Wilbur Whateley attained an unnatural size, that of a fully grown man 811 00:59:31,713 --> 00:59:35,749 his facial aspect, too, was remarkable for its maturity 812 00:59:35,750 --> 00:59:39,388 exceedingly ugly despite his appearance of brilliancy 813 00:59:39,389 --> 00:59:43,885 there being something almost goatish or animalistic about his thick lips 814 00:59:43,886 --> 00:59:47,800 large-pored, yellowish skin, coarse crinkly hair 815 00:59:47,801 --> 00:59:50,400 and oddly elongated ears 816 00:59:50,435 --> 00:59:53,000 what troubled the residents of Dunwich even more 817 00:59:53,001 --> 00:59:59,343 was a number of cattle purchased by Old Whateley without ever increasing the size of his stock 818 00:59:59,344 --> 01:00:04,224 and the dreaded something being kept in the upper part of the Whateley farm house 819 01:00:04,225 --> 01:00:08,214 they are twins when they were born to Lavinia and that, you know 820 01:00:08,215 --> 01:00:15,279 one is a normal, mostly normal looking, you know, 8 foot tall goat-ish looking man 821 01:00:15,280 --> 01:00:22,262 and a half thing, you know, an invisible half brother which is much more like his father 822 01:00:22,263 --> 01:00:25,925 soon, a mysterious thunder was heard in the woods 823 01:00:25,926 --> 01:00:29,226 livestock and eventually entire family's disappeared 824 01:00:29,227 --> 01:00:33,605 and Wilbur Whateley was discovered breaking into Miskatonic library 825 01:00:33,606 --> 01:00:39,744 in search of a complete "Necronomicon", one that contains the rites for the Old Ones' return 826 01:00:39,745 --> 01:00:44,069 Yog-Sothoth knows the gateYog-Sothoth is the gate 827 01:00:44,070 --> 01:00:47,483 Yog-Sothoth is the key and guardian of the gate 828 01:00:47,484 --> 01:00:52,348 past, present, future, all are one in Yog-Sothoth 829 01:00:52,383 --> 01:00:58,427 "The Dunwich Horror" earned Lovecraft his biggest pay day from "Weird Tales": 240 dollars 830 01:00:58,428 --> 01:01:05,465 but again, Lovecraft failed to capitalize on his success, and would not write for more than a year 831 01:01:05,466 --> 01:01:10,819 this time Lovecraft's reticent was due to a desire for artistic growth 832 01:01:10,820 --> 01:01:17,899 There are my Poe pieces and my Dunsany pieces, but alas, where are my Lovecraft pieces 833 01:01:17,900 --> 01:01:25,500 Lovecraft's writing on the surface appears to be imitations of other writers 834 01:01:25,501 --> 01:01:31,139 if you see the early stories, there is a much more constrain sense of scope 835 01:01:31,140 --> 01:01:38,640 and towards the end of his life he was gaining as a writer I think, and gaining as an artist and as a human being 836 01:01:38,641 --> 01:01:42,039 and his view of the world became more ample 837 01:01:42,040 --> 01:01:47,148 and I think when Lovecraft shed the influence of Dunsany 838 01:01:47,149 --> 01:01:52,500 and started writing like Lovecraft that's when things take off 839 01:01:52,501 --> 01:01:57,792 he was writing much better fiction, he was witting much more contemporary fiction 840 01:01:57,793 --> 01:02:04,137 in many senses, I mean in the sense that the language was more contemporary and the settings were more contemporary 841 01:02:04,481 --> 01:02:11,381 you can even see how some of his descriptions has started becoming more specific, you know 842 01:02:11,382 --> 01:02:17,645 they go from being "unnamable of seen things" to being described as 843 01:02:17,646 --> 01:02:24,775 a cucumber body with thrones or tentacles with proboscis 844 01:02:24,776 --> 01:02:28,663 you know he really started relishing that and 845 01:02:28,664 --> 01:02:35,366 he started to give a sense of dignity and history to these creatures that I think is unique 846 01:02:35,367 --> 01:02:42,367 with Providence as a life line, Lovecraft was emboldened to venture further and further in art and in life 847 01:02:42,368 --> 01:02:45,874 hHis correspondence engaged in healthy discussions 848 01:02:45,974 --> 01:02:47,974 on race, man and civilization 849 01:02:47,975 --> 01:02:51,726 the more Lovecraft exposes himself to other opinions and places 850 01:02:51,727 --> 01:02:55,077 the more his views and phobias began to soften 851 01:02:55,078 --> 01:02:58,806 this self improvement did not extent to his marriage, however 852 01:02:58,807 --> 01:03:03,586 since his return to Providence, Sonia has seen very little of her husband 853 01:03:03,587 --> 01:03:09,716 while she remained in New York for the sake of a career, Lovecraft favored his cherished city 854 01:03:09,717 --> 01:03:16,877 on March 25th 1929, after constant pleads from Sonia, the Lovecrafts filed for a divorce 855 01:03:16,878 --> 01:03:22,340 Sonia went on to Europe, a place Lovecraft had always long to visit but never did 856 01:03:22,341 --> 01:03:29,140 later she moved to California where she remarried and led a full life until 1972 857 01:03:29,141 --> 01:03:33,294 in 1930, Lovecraft had begun work on a new tale 858 01:03:33,295 --> 01:03:40,104 by the time it was published in August of 1931, the changes in Lovecraft could be glimpsed on the page 859 01:03:40,105 --> 01:03:42,488 well you need to celebrate "The Whisperer In Darkness" 860 01:03:42,489 --> 01:03:48,684 because the astronomers now have taken the planetary status away from Pluto 861 01:03:48,685 --> 01:03:52,328 which is to say, you know, ��Yuggoth, Black Yuggoth on the rim�� 862 01:03:52,329 --> 01:03:54,436 and in fact, "The Whisperer In Darkness" 863 01:03:54,437 --> 01:04:00,937 this was Lovecraft's reaction to the discovery of a new planet 864 01:04:00,938 --> 01:04:03,938 after a rash of unprecedented floods in Vermont 865 01:04:03,939 --> 01:04:08,362 misshaped cadavers washed up along the river banks 866 01:04:08,363 --> 01:04:11,529 they were pinkish things about five feet long; 867 01:04:11,530 --> 01:04:15,121 with crustaceous bodies bearing vast pairs of dorsal fins 868 01:04:15,122 --> 01:04:20,938 or membraneous wings and several sets of articulated limbs 869 01:04:20,939 --> 01:04:24,034 Albert N Wilmarth, of the Miskatonic University 870 01:04:24,035 --> 01:04:28,412 begins to investigate the origins of these alien things 871 01:04:28,413 --> 01:04:33,379 the blasphemies that appeared on earth, came from the dark planet Yuggoth 872 01:04:33,380 --> 01:04:36,868 but this was itself merely the populous outpostof a frightful 873 01:04:36,869 --> 01:04:40,203 interstellar race whose ultimate source 874 01:04:40,204 --> 01:04:45,043 must lie far outside even the Einsteinian space-time continuum 875 01:04:45,044 --> 01:04:49,999 it's actually one of Lovecraft's most restrained stories, there are very few that runs of agitates 876 01:04:50,000 --> 01:04:54,500 most of it is done as a sense of letters, um, something I imagine 877 01:04:54,501 --> 01:05:00,724 he probably learned, there's some example there from the novel Dracula, which he greatly admired 878 01:05:00,725 --> 01:05:03,947 through the first hand contact with his colleague Henry Akeley, 879 01:05:03,948 --> 01:05:09,000 Wilmarth learns of the dark intention behind the buzzing creatures 880 01:05:09,001 --> 01:05:14,374 what Akeley deems are deadly danger, however turns out to be something else entirely 881 01:05:14,375 --> 01:05:19,206 in the last stage of Lovecraft's career, when he began to write the best stories, in spite there being 882 01:05:19,207 --> 01:05:25,155 what I called "inert" earlier, you can see him taking a different angle of vision 883 01:05:25,156 --> 01:05:28,870 And masters of the heart what is known as "The Mythos" 884 01:05:28,871 --> 01:05:34,820 "The Whisperer In Darkness", probably the first story in which one begins to see this shifting attitude 885 01:05:34,821 --> 01:05:37,500 They are still frightening, and 886 01:05:37,501 --> 01:05:45,072 and when their voices are recorded on tape ,they are intensely scary beings 887 01:05:46,700 --> 01:05:52,700 but they may not be completely inimical to the human race 888 01:05:52,701 --> 01:05:57,571 in fact the fungi from "Yuggoth" wish to expand man's senses 889 01:05:57,572 --> 01:06:01,812 to enable his exploration of the cosmos and its secrets 890 01:06:01,813 --> 01:06:07,299 this process however, involves removing the brain and placing it in a cylinder for the journey 891 01:06:07,300 --> 01:06:12,764 all in the spirit of discovery, but hardly harmless 892 01:06:12,765 --> 01:06:18,831 it's all a scam it's like people today that say, oh there is no problem with these lamofascism 893 01:06:18,832 --> 01:06:21,927 where is the problem, these people are merely misunderstood 894 01:06:21,928 --> 01:06:27,228 now you are wrong, and you better hope you don't pay with your life for this stupidity 895 01:06:27,263 --> 01:06:31,413 and Wilmarth getting sucked into this thing and it isn't even Akeley anymore 896 01:06:31,414 --> 01:06:34,478 His brain's in a can somewhere and he's being 897 01:06:34,479 --> 01:06:40,157 a "led off the path" by the buzzing lobsters and all that 898 01:06:40,158 --> 01:06:44,521 so that you being set up, if you think that's the case 899 01:06:44,522 --> 01:06:51,042 still, "The Whisperer In Darkness" could be seen as a sign of tolerance to come 900 01:06:51,043 --> 01:06:53,781 during the last years of his life 901 01:06:53,782 --> 01:06:59,208 Lovecraft's travels continued to expand his first hand knowledge of changing world around him 902 01:06:59,209 --> 01:07:01,709 he was making up for last time 903 01:07:01,710 --> 01:07:05,016 but this long differed semi-introduction to the world, did not take 904 01:07:05,017 --> 01:07:10,792 as thoroughly as it might have done, had I being chronologically anger 905 01:07:10,793 --> 01:07:15,024 Lovecraft's fans could not keep up with his thirst for growth 906 01:07:15,025 --> 01:07:20,273 ghost writing continued, but it's anonymity was becoming unattractive all the more 907 01:07:20,274 --> 01:07:25,571 1931 so in early 1931 Lovecraft began work on another original story: 908 01:07:25,572 --> 01:07:28,772 A tale of ancient Antarctic horror 909 01:07:28,773 --> 01:07:33,136 it is altogether against my will that I tell my reasons for opposing this contemplated 910 01:07:33,137 --> 01:07:37,834 invasion of the antarcticwith its vast fossil-hunt 911 01:07:37,835 --> 01:07:41,801 and its wholesale boring and melting of the ancient ice-cap 912 01:07:41,802 --> 01:07:44,302 to deter the exploring world in general 913 01:07:44,303 --> 01:07:51,276 from any rash and overambitious programme in the region of those mountains ofmadness 914 01:07:51,277 --> 01:07:54,277 some of the descriptive passages in "At The Mountains Of Madness" 915 01:07:54,278 --> 01:07:59,180 seemed to me to rank with the great geographical fantasies of literature 916 01:07:59,181 --> 01:08:05,268 actually I just think it's a paintly quality in that novel you probably don't find so much in his other work 917 01:08:05,500 --> 01:08:10,490 it is one of those places where all of the different influences come together 918 01:08:10,491 --> 01:08:16,185 the idea of you are trekking across the ice, it's quite horrible, it's Antarctic 919 01:08:16,186 --> 01:08:21,999 and it is science fiction and you know it's about an incursion by aliens 920 01:08:22,000 --> 01:08:24,805 in the foot hills of this towering cliffs 921 01:08:24,806 --> 01:08:29,373 an expedition discovered the fossil remains of a pre-Cambrian race 922 01:08:29,448 --> 01:08:34,337 found monstrous barrel-shaped fossil of wholly unknown nature 923 01:08:34,338 --> 01:08:37,681 in furrows between ridges are curious growths 924 01:08:37,682 --> 01:08:41,602 combs or wings that fold up and spread out like fans 925 01:08:41,603 --> 01:08:44,603 arrangement reminds one of certain monsters of primal myth 926 01:08:44,604 --> 01:08:48,946 especially fabled Elder Things inNecronomicon 927 01:08:48,947 --> 01:08:53,485 supposed to have created all earth-life as jest or mistake 928 01:08:53,486 --> 01:08:57,493 one of the most horrific ideas was that 929 01:08:57,494 --> 01:09:02,494 the things that descent us were astounding starting almost dissecting them 930 01:09:02,495 --> 01:09:07,037 you know, that is, that is a revelation of intelligence and curiosity 931 01:09:07,038 --> 01:09:12,400 the sense of curiosity these things have leaving little trails around the equipment down so forth 932 01:09:12,401 --> 01:09:20,169 that was what was so scary to me Something terribly and horrifying chased these men out 933 01:09:20,170 --> 01:09:25,500 you know, something that was supposed to be a fossil record is after them 934 01:09:25,501 --> 01:09:30,012 after the mysterious and utterly violation of the advance team 935 01:09:30,013 --> 01:09:34,925 the survivors of the unfortunate expedition discovered a cyclopean city 936 01:09:34,926 --> 01:09:36,725 hidden among the peaks 937 01:09:36,726 --> 01:09:41,147 there, they learn the tragic history of the star-headed Elder Things 938 01:09:41,148 --> 01:09:43,118 their shaping of life on earth 939 01:09:43,119 --> 01:09:46,552 surviving war with other races of cosmic infinity 940 01:09:46,553 --> 01:09:50,291 and falling prey to their slave race of Shoggoths, 941 01:09:50,292 --> 01:09:56,000 protoplasmic masses, capable of molding their tissues into all sorts of forms 942 01:09:56,001 --> 01:10:00,814 you know in the 60s there's an idea that aliens had come here and had kind of created the human race 943 01:10:01,000 --> 01:10:05,581 but that idea really was old, compared to what Lovecraft had trimmed up: 944 01:10:05,582 --> 01:10:12,597 which is the idea of these battling alien forces, you know on earth, and that man ended somehow inheriting this thing almost by default, 945 01:10:12,598 --> 01:10:17,598 because these two major presences had sort of wiped each other out 946 01:10:17,599 --> 01:10:25,670 the Old Ones in "At The Mountains of Madness��, are scientists they were artists, they were architects 947 01:10:25,671 --> 01:10:29,373 yes, they are tentacled cucumbers with wings but 948 01:10:29,374 --> 01:10:32,874 they are sentiment and intelligent beings 949 01:10:32,875 --> 01:10:37,875 and that sense of intelligence make the evil at work in Lovecraft's story 950 01:10:37,876 --> 01:10:39,375 much more intense 951 01:10:39,376 --> 01:10:45,376 "At The Mountains of Madness" also displayed two new reactions to the fictional "unknowns" 952 01:10:45,377 --> 01:10:47,656 fellowship and empathy 953 01:10:47,898 --> 01:10:51,898 the real imaginative achievement for him 954 01:10:51,899 --> 01:10:59,500 to have seen these threatening beings in a warmer light, eventually He kind of fell in love with them 955 01:10:59,501 --> 01:11:01,523 he's been in love with them all along, actually 956 01:11:01,996 --> 01:11:08,923 the Old Ones they may have been crinoid pickle shaped barrels with wings and starfishes for head 957 01:11:08,924 --> 01:11:12,683 in a bad sense of humor, but they were man 958 01:11:12,684 --> 01:11:14,684 but why is that 959 01:11:14,685 --> 01:11:20,000 because now, they got the rebelled slaves the Shoggoths to worry about 960 01:11:20,001 --> 01:11:26,008 so as Lovecraft seen a different group as same as him 961 01:11:26,009 --> 01:11:28,072 because all people are equal 962 01:11:28,073 --> 01:11:32,336 or he sympathized with them as slave owners who are now on the run 963 01:11:32,337 --> 01:11:38,150 from a even weirder race, so I don't know what that means really, you know, they are not so bad 964 01:11:38,151 --> 01:11:45,046 there's lead a sly guy aim against the opody bad guys 965 01:11:45,047 --> 01:11:50,440 I think there is a huge Lovecraftian influence, a huge "At The Mountains of Madness" Influence 966 01:11:50,441 --> 01:11:52,941 on the first Ridley Scott "Alien" 967 01:11:52,942 --> 01:11:58,740 the idea of a ship that essentially lands on a planet 968 01:11:58,741 --> 01:12:04,007 and they find out there lived city sized ship 969 01:12:04,008 --> 01:12:11,758 and dead ancients in it and something that is very much alive and waiting 970 01:12:11,759 --> 01:12:13,946 and then takes over the humans, 971 01:12:13,947 --> 01:12:19,081 that's essentially you could say very much ��At The Mountains of Madness�� 972 01:12:19,082 --> 01:12:26,652 it has influence the story that ��The Thing�� was based on, which was another rip-off of ��At The Mountains of Madness�� 973 01:12:26,653 --> 01:12:30,163 so, I think its repercussions are very cinematic 974 01:12:30,364 --> 01:12:34,043 this was the crowning jewel of the "Cthulhu Mythos" 975 01:12:34,044 --> 01:12:37,625 it clearly came out as the crushing blow when Farnswoth Wright 976 01:12:37,626 --> 01:12:42,177 editor of "Weird Tales", rejected it 977 01:12:42,178 --> 01:12:48,219 by then sadly, Lovecraft had really decided that you know he no longer had 978 01:12:48,220 --> 01:12:52,999 any ability to express and convey the kind of thing he wanted to convey 979 01:12:53,000 --> 01:12:59,059 he was to write very little prose fiction for the last few years of his life 980 01:12:59,060 --> 01:13:03,114 thought more stories were attempted over the next few years 981 01:13:03,115 --> 01:13:07,018 most, like "The Shadow Over Innsmouth", were problematic for Lovecraft 982 01:13:07,019 --> 01:13:14,019 Lovecraft himself seemed almost embarrassed by "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" 983 01:13:14,373 --> 01:13:17,873 and I think probably he understood, he undoubtedly understood that it was 984 01:13:17,874 --> 01:13:25,891 in a sense, kind of a reversion, a hearkening back to the same sort of xenophobic prejudices 985 01:13:25,892 --> 01:13:28,472 that he had embraced in his youth 986 01:13:28,473 --> 01:13:31,613 and why is everybody so down on Innsmouth 987 01:13:31,614 --> 01:13:33,820 some of the stories would make you laugh 988 01:13:33,821 --> 01:13:37,123 about old Captain Marsh driving bargains with the devil 989 01:13:37,124 --> 01:13:40,011 and bringing imps out of hell to live in Innsmouth 990 01:13:40,012 --> 01:13:42,534 some of 'em have queer narrow heads 991 01:13:42,535 --> 01:13:47,069 with flat noses and bulgy, starry eyes that never seem to shut 992 01:13:47,070 --> 01:13:49,741 and their skin ain't quite right 993 01:13:49,742 --> 01:13:55,649 these things are creatures that are born looking normal and the older they get, the stranger they become 994 01:13:55,650 --> 01:14:02,650 until eventually their transformation will be complete and they'll slither off into the sea where they will live forever 995 01:14:02,651 --> 01:14:05,996 it's definitely a sort of biological horror story 996 01:14:05,997 --> 01:14:09,497 where you have the break down of the, not just the human society but of the human body 997 01:14:09,498 --> 01:14:15,622 but I think the over writing concern is actually about culture, you have 998 01:14:15,623 --> 01:14:19,485 the culture of the "Deep Ones"coming up and over the decades 999 01:14:19,486 --> 01:14:23,173 eating away the culture of Innsmouth and so that finally Innsmouth will vanish 1000 01:14:23,174 --> 01:14:28,382 there is to be sure a kind of racist or xenophobic under current to that story 1001 01:14:28,383 --> 01:14:34,883 but I think it's very subtle and very indirectly expressed 1002 01:14:34,884 --> 01:14:39,349 I'm now begin to think it must be one of Lovecraft's one or two best stories 1003 01:14:39,350 --> 01:14:44,901 and he does something that you don't see a whole lot of Lovecraft doing: writing action scenes 1004 01:14:44,902 --> 01:14:50,182 I still think the escape from the Gilman Hotel is a marvelous action scene and running across 1005 01:14:50,183 --> 01:14:56,883 and running into the parade of horrific frog-fish things 1006 01:14:56,884 --> 01:14:59,186 it's it's just wonderful and not the sort of thing that he did a lot 1007 01:14:59,187 --> 01:15:05,028 Lovecraft never formally submitted "The Shadow Over Innsmouth" for publication 1008 01:15:05,029 --> 01:15:09,180 partially, Lovecraft marginalized himself 1009 01:15:09,181 --> 01:15:13,019 cause he was never become merry of his own work 1010 01:15:13,020 --> 01:15:17,194 but I think readers and critics neglected to see 1011 01:15:17,195 --> 01:15:19,731 the imagination worked behind what he wrote 1012 01:15:19,732 --> 01:15:25,276 it would be a few more years before modern tastes turned in his favor 1013 01:15:25,277 --> 01:15:29,347 at the end of 1935, New York agent Julius Schwartz 1014 01:15:29,348 --> 01:15:34,188 was able to sound the previously rejected "At The Mountains Of Madness"; 1015 01:15:34,189 --> 01:15:36,189 thanks to the efforts of Donald Wandrei, 1016 01:15:36,190 --> 01:15:39,436 "The Shadow Out Of Time", sold soon after, 1017 01:15:39,437 --> 01:15:45,543 giving Lovecraft his highest combined payday a total of 595 dollars 1018 01:15:45,544 --> 01:15:50,422 by the end of 1936, just as success seemed a possibility 1019 01:15:50,423 --> 01:15:53,407 Lovecraft's health began to diminish 1020 01:15:53,408 --> 01:15:57,390 in many ways I think if Lovecraft had preserved his health 1021 01:15:57,391 --> 01:16:02,900 he would have become a well-known writer in the 40s and 50s, if he had lived that long 1022 01:16:03,126 --> 01:16:07,621 I think Lovecraft really dead at the pinnacle of his talent 1023 01:16:07,622 --> 01:16:13,493 Lovecraft had been suffering from a small collection of ailments, including digestive trouble 1024 01:16:13,494 --> 01:16:19,994 by the time he submitted to a doctor's diagnosis, the cancer has spread through his small intestine 1025 01:16:19,995 --> 01:16:25,169 H.P.Lovecraft died on the morning of March 15th, 1937 1026 01:16:25,170 --> 01:16:28,170 he was 46 and a half years old 1027 01:16:32,035 --> 01:16:36,035 although he knew himself celebrated in a small circle 1028 01:16:36,036 --> 01:16:39,683 he never broke through to the public in any sense at all, and 1029 01:16:39,684 --> 01:16:46,713 therefore when he died he would have been justified and thinking himself as a failure or as a very very obscure writer 1030 01:16:46,714 --> 01:16:51,100 if it weren't for Lovecraft's disciples he would have been forgotten 1031 01:16:51,101 --> 01:16:56,169 it was people like Derleth and Robert Block and so forth that kept Lovecraft alive and 1032 01:16:56,170 --> 01:16:59,920 they went out and actually got his books published 1033 01:16:59,921 --> 01:17:03,877 in 1939, August Derleth and Donald Wandrei 1034 01:17:03,878 --> 01:17:06,901 two of Lovecraft's most earnest supporters 1035 01:17:06,902 --> 01:17:10,949 achieved what known had been able to do in Lovecraft's life time: 1036 01:17:10,950 --> 01:17:14,717 they founded "Arkham House" and released a selections of stories entitled 1037 01:17:14,718 --> 01:17:18,409 "The Outsider And Others" by HP Lovecraft 1038 01:17:18,410 --> 01:17:23,947 well "Arkham House" came into being virtually out of Lovecraft's death, I mean 1039 01:17:23,948 --> 01:17:29,578 almost immediately on the news of Lovecraft's death reaching August Derleth 1040 01:17:29,579 --> 01:17:33,705 it existed initially to publish Lovecraft 1041 01:17:33,706 --> 01:17:38,930 and then continued with an astonishing record as a small press 1042 01:17:38,931 --> 01:17:43,883 falling down a bit and decided to do more Lovecraft and then indeed to do 1043 01:17:43,884 --> 01:17:51,873 and more of the other great writers form ��Weird Tales�� Fritz Leiber for instance And Donald Wandrei himself 1044 01:17:51,874 --> 01:17:57,987 you know the "Arkham House" books became, for the most part incredibly valuable incredibly quickly that was sought after by book collectors 1045 01:17:58,103 --> 01:18:04,087 not because they were rare, but because they were good 1046 01:18:04,088 --> 01:18:09,031 for certainly over a decade or more there was no publisher other than the ��Arkham House�� 1047 01:18:09,032 --> 01:18:11,607 specialized in mainly supernatural horror and 1048 01:18:11,608 --> 01:18:15,136 very small snatch in science fiction 1049 01:18:15,137 --> 01:18:19,263 it was a cheap, disposable literature 1050 01:18:19,264 --> 01:18:21,764 and "Arkham House" was one of the very first places 1051 01:18:21,765 --> 01:18:26,817 to actually say some of these stuff needs to come out, respectably 1052 01:18:26,818 --> 01:18:29,318 since the success of "Arkham House" 1053 01:18:29,319 --> 01:18:33,573 many writer have continued to expand "The Cthulhu Mythos" 1054 01:18:33,574 --> 01:18:37,674 in fact this was a practice Lovecraft encouraged when he was alive 1055 01:18:37,675 --> 01:18:39,528 it's part of the Lovecraft game: 1056 01:18:39,529 --> 01:18:44,922 it's you know, it's like, you get it, and you want to add to it and passed it on 1057 01:18:44,923 --> 01:18:48,482 and it's been part of the Lovecraft's game from the very beginning 1058 01:18:48,483 --> 01:18:54,569 that Firtz Lieber's, the Bloch's, umall of these people and August Derleth 1059 01:18:54,570 --> 01:19:00,025 they took a little of this, took the story added to it, passed it on 1060 01:19:00,026 --> 01:19:02,216 and so then we started doing it 1061 01:19:02,217 --> 01:19:07,200 the problem when I was a teenager was, you know I read Lovecraft, I thought, this is how you'll do it 1062 01:19:07,201 --> 01:19:12,263 but unfortunately what I meant by this to myself was, you know, this is how you limited it 1063 01:19:12,264 --> 01:19:17,174 and were still, I'm the one never been more than twenty miles away from Liverpool, in England 1064 01:19:17,175 --> 01:19:22,522 I've set these stories in Massachusetts,you know, in Arkham and places like that, in Kingsport 1065 01:19:22,523 --> 01:19:26,528 and it was painfully obvious that I've never been very far from Liverpool 1066 01:19:26,529 --> 01:19:29,383 particularly when the, the rustics opened their mouth 1067 01:19:29,384 --> 01:19:33,884 if you read story like "The Mist", King's novel, that's pure Lovecraft 1068 01:19:33,885 --> 01:19:39,863 it's about these tentacle things breaking through from some other dimension 1069 01:19:39,864 --> 01:19:44,364 and terrorizing grocery store guests in Maine 1070 01:19:44,365 --> 01:19:49,652 that's pure Lovecraft, I am sure 1071 01:19:49,653 --> 01:19:53,084 I did this story called "Shoggoth's Old Peculiar" 1072 01:19:53,085 --> 01:19:59,117 in which I have two Loveraftian spices complaining about Lovecraft as a writer 1073 01:19:59,118 --> 01:20:04,707 but the truth is, that we only parody things that have life 1074 01:20:04,708 --> 01:20:12,643 there is no point in parodying something dead, there is no point in parodying something in which one has no interest 1075 01:20:12,644 --> 01:20:16,034 and there is no point parodying or making fun of something that doesn't matter 1076 01:20:16,035 --> 01:20:21,778 and almost 100 years after his death, Lovecraft still matters 1077 01:20:21,779 --> 01:20:25,251 and it is a passion that continued to this day 1078 01:20:25,252 --> 01:20:28,176 even in the face of criticism 1079 01:20:28,177 --> 01:20:32,575 well, there's always gonna be a kind of snobbery about supernatural horror fiction I think 1080 01:20:32,576 --> 01:20:38,576 you know, I mean the writer needs to be dead for maybe 100 years before he is fully taken and associated 1081 01:20:38,577 --> 01:20:42,248 every creator that dwells in the genre, must assume 1082 01:20:42,249 --> 01:20:46,753 his work will not be appreciated as if he was doing ��straight�� stuff 1083 01:20:46,754 --> 01:20:48,778 it's been ghettoized 1084 01:20:48,779 --> 01:20:55,311 it's really not the proper the proper occupation of a serious writer 1085 01:20:55,312 --> 01:20:58,926 I mean look at what happened with Stephen King with that war with him years ago 1086 01:20:58,927 --> 01:21:03,470 people, I mean they started to put him down, cause he wasn't writing serious stuff 1087 01:21:03,471 --> 01:21:06,971 it's very easy for us now to forget 1088 01:21:06,972 --> 01:21:11,350 in a world in which you know, as a fantasy horror science fiction whatever the hell I am, author 1089 01:21:11,351 --> 01:21:16,985 my books are gonna come out in the hum back just like anybody else is and 1090 01:21:16,986 --> 01:21:23,196 they gonna be on shelves like anybody else is, that didn't used to be the case 1091 01:21:23,197 --> 01:21:27,337 but I think probably at the moment we saw Lovecraft 1092 01:21:27,338 --> 01:21:30,737 in the Penguin Modern Classics I think 1093 01:21:30,738 --> 01:21:36,953 there is no question whatsoever that is fully established and about time too 1094 01:21:36,954 --> 01:21:44,855 he is being translate into something like 25 languages around the world, from Czech to Polish 1095 01:21:44,856 --> 01:21:48,726 to Japanese, Korean there's a Bengali edition 1096 01:21:48,727 --> 01:21:53,526 a lot of people had kind of being introduced to Lovecraft without even knowing it was Lovecraft, you know, you've got things like 1097 01:21:53,527 --> 01:21:59,486 you know, "Hellboy", which is you know which is borrowing very heavily you know from the Lovecraft mythos 1098 01:21:59,487 --> 01:22:06,753 and even things like "Pirates Of The Caribbean", Davy Jones looking like you know, he had just crawl out of Lovecraft's 1099 01:22:06,754 --> 01:22:08,721 you know, looks like "Cthulhu" 1100 01:22:08,722 --> 01:22:12,016 you look around these days and you got the plush Cthulhu phenomenon 1101 01:22:12,017 --> 01:22:16,624 you get Cthulhu slippers, you get funny Cthulhu hats 1102 01:22:16,625 --> 01:22:20,280 one of the things I think is so amazing is, I've met a group of people who 1103 01:22:20,282 --> 01:22:24,245 were into playing these Lovecraft "The Call Of Cthulhu" games and so forth 1104 01:22:24,280 --> 01:22:28,351 and they know all of the Lovecraft creatures but they had never ever read Lovecraft 1105 01:22:28,352 --> 01:22:30,029 and they don't know what his other stories were 1106 01:22:30,030 --> 01:22:35,469 his images are so utray and ghastly and macabre and colorful 1107 01:22:35,470 --> 01:22:39,509 that they influenced all kinds of rock n' roll bands 1108 01:22:39,510 --> 01:22:44,077 I think he also, literally appeals to the outsider 1109 01:22:44,078 --> 01:22:49,077 and the person who is not well-accepted in society, who is a little bit of a loner 1110 01:22:49,112 --> 01:22:54,077 I think one of the reasons of Lovecraft is so popular today 1111 01:22:54,078 --> 01:23:00,578 is that his view which is a very dark one, you know that man is lucky to be ignorant 1112 01:23:00,579 --> 01:23:05,449 I think it's what he used to say Because if he knew the truth he could either go crazy or he would kill himself, it's one that 1113 01:23:05,450 --> 01:23:07,950 everyone can relate to these days 1114 01:23:07,951 --> 01:23:14,451 Every election, you'll see the bumper sticker saying: "Vote for Cthulhu! Why settle for the lesser evil!" 1115 01:23:14,452 --> 01:23:18,379 such is Lovecraft's fame, that some occultists insist that the Cthulhu mythos 1116 01:23:18,380 --> 01:23:21,339 is no myth 1117 01:23:21,340 --> 01:23:26,786 I know every religion begins as the delusion of one or two people 1118 01:23:26,787 --> 01:23:32,187 and once enough people sign on, it's become the world view and as if you can inhabit in it 1119 01:23:32,188 --> 01:23:37,245 and live everyday life and no longer seemed sane and 1120 01:23:37,246 --> 01:23:41,397 when you are one of the very few who have believed in it there is a kind of intensity 1121 01:23:41,398 --> 01:23:45,172 that results in unbalanced character and that sort of 1122 01:23:45,173 --> 01:23:48,673 what I'm afraid of with cultists that 1123 01:23:48,674 --> 01:23:52,999 actually believed there are Old Ones 1124 01:23:53,000 --> 01:24:00,300 I think that every time somebody comes out with a world that's fully flashed on as Lovecraft creates 1125 01:24:00,301 --> 01:24:05,033 you are bound to find people that will start to speak in Klingon 1126 01:24:05,034 --> 01:24:09,129 or dressing like a "hobbit" to go to the supermarket or 1127 01:24:09,130 --> 01:24:16,201 believed they could really channel in a couple of Old Ones into their living room 1128 01:24:16,202 --> 01:24:22,500 You know and I believe that somebody have actually even died trying to evoke some of the Ancient Gods 1129 01:24:22,501 --> 01:24:25,858 I knew people that handled "Star Wars" this way 1130 01:24:25,859 --> 01:24:31,500 they were so absorbed in it, one of them wished it were true, you could tell 1131 01:24:31,501 --> 01:24:37,884 and another believed it was all true in a parallel world 1132 01:24:37,885 --> 01:24:41,308 and you know you began to go off to the deep den 1133 01:24:41,309 --> 01:24:47,437 so ,you know, I would defiantly not advised to put too much money or effort into 1134 01:24:47,438 --> 01:24:54,560 invoking that"Shoggoth" into the kitchen but, it's up to you 1135 01:24:54,561 --> 01:24:58,901 The oldest and strongest emotion of man kind is fear 1136 01:24:58,902 --> 01:25:04,812 and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown 1137 01:25:04,813 --> 01:25:07,278 we live in a world in which 1138 01:25:07,279 --> 01:25:12,774 even if you don't know who "Cthulhu"is,even if you've never read any Lovecraft 1139 01:25:12,775 --> 01:25:15,375 you can kind of get the jokes 1140 01:25:15,376 --> 01:25:21,666 and well certainly far too many people not limits me imitating him too closely 1141 01:25:21,667 --> 01:25:25,363 he also had a profound influence on people divers as 1142 01:25:25,364 --> 01:25:31,818 Fritz Leiber, as Poppy Z Brite, Caitlin Kiernan, T.E.D Klein you name it 1143 01:25:31,819 --> 01:25:37,319 for me what the brilliance of Lovecraft, what so important about Lovecraft is, um 1144 01:25:37,320 --> 01:25:40,545 Is simply his imagination 1145 01:25:40,546 --> 01:25:47,692 it's incredible, to think that this guy who was this recluse living in this you know little house 1146 01:25:47,693 --> 01:25:55,204 In Providence, Rhode Island ends up spawning you know essentially modern-day horror 1147 01:25:55,205 --> 01:25:57,275 it's the duality of Lovecraft: 1148 01:25:57,276 --> 01:26:02,796 it's the fact that people can take the ideas almost as the basis of a religion 1149 01:26:02,797 --> 01:26:07,692 People can take the ideas from a serious academic point of view 1150 01:26:07,693 --> 01:26:10,517 or for a writing point of view and then you can 1151 01:26:10,518 --> 01:26:14,884 Then if you are just drawing great big monsters 1152 01:26:14,885 --> 01:26:17,720 Lovecraft has waiting for you to 1153 01:26:18,721 --> 01:26:23,721 1154 01:26:23,722 --> 01:26:28,722 1155 01:26:29,000 --> 01:26:32,122 122410

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.