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HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 04:42PM
An essay I wrote on HPL and Nightmares.

Nightmare Imagery in the Writings of H. P. Lovecraft
by
Gavin Callaghan


“I have frequently wondered if the majority of mankind ever pause to reflect upon the occasionally titanic significance of dreams, and the obscure world to which they belong.”
-H.P. Lovecraft, “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” (D 25)


I. H.P. Lovecraft’s Nightmares

H.P. Lovecraft often acknowledged the apparent incongruity between his interest in weird-fiction on the one hand, and his concurrent rationalistic and materialistic philosophical ethic on the other: a contradiction symbolized by his interest both in the Roman Empire in terms of history, and in his interest in eighteenth-century English and colonial styles in terms of literature and architecture -eras which, (aside from the freakish rococo fads of artists like Aubrey Beardsley) are not usually associated with either the Romantic or the macabre impulse in literature. The highly realistic, almost journalistic prose style employed in Lovecraft’s later weird works, too, is also emblematic of this contradiction, especially given the cosmic and fantastic aspects of Lovecraft’s weird vision -ideas usually couched, in the works of other writers, within exotic or highly-ornamental prose, rather than in the straight verbiage of objective reportage.

I would suggest that the source of all these contradictions -whether in terms of thought, aesthetic, or style- is ultimately to be found in Lovecraft’s usage of and apparent obsession with nightmare imagery; Lovecraft’s fiction, indeed, forming almost a textbook example of the nightmare: whether its symptoms, its images, or its origins in the repressed and sleeping unconscious. And it is this adherence to the nightmare, this dedicated desire to replicate and explore nightmare imagery on the written page, which leads the otherwise outwardly rationalistic Lovecraft to explore the creatures populating his “sleep of reason.” Indeed, it is striking the way in which Lovecraft’s weird-fiction is able to encapsulate or duplicate whole -almost as if regurgitated there directly, without digestion, directly from within his seething unconscious- the most basic psychological archetypes of the nightmare, as well as those infantile, incestuous, and sexual desires which form its basis, seemingly without any intervening medium in between, save for those Burroughsian pulp stories on which he thrived as an adolescent, and which served to channel his fantasies into tangible form. It is Lovecraft’s mastery in this use of nightmare imagery, too, one thinks, which is primarily responsible for the huge success and wide popularity currently enjoyed by Lovecraft’s horror stories, decades after they were first written, and long after the vast majority of the weird-fiction and pulp-fiction of his era has been, for the most part, consigned to the dust. Lovecraft’s fictional style may be restrained and traditional in the extreme, but the nightmares within, like bodies preserved in formaldehyde, still preserve within them the outward forms of a genuine and troubling life: even if their meaning, and their inspiration, was ultimately understandable only by Lovecraft himself.

Lovecraft of course was quite conscious of this central division within his fiction: referring in one early letter to his fictional works as “my nightmares and fantasies” (SL II:124), thus drawing a clear distinction between the two, one which corresponds directly to the difference discernable between his weird-fiction on the one hand, and his more Dunsanian/Arcadian/and Burroughsian stories on the other (although even in Lovecraft’s most placid fantasies, his macabre and nightmare-inspired imagery often breaks through.) Lovecraft will use the same language in “The Call of Cthulhu”, where he likens the sculptures of decadent/languid artist Henry Wilcox to “those nightmares and phantasies which Arthur Machen evokes in prose, and Clark Ashton Smith makes visible in verse and in painting.” [emphasis mine] (DH 143) Indeed, Lovecraft will refer to nightmares throughout his weird-fiction, whether the word is used as a mere adjective, or in direct reference to the actual nightmare itself. And just as Lovecraft’s fictional Arkham is accurately described as ghoul-haunted or witch-haunted, Lovecraft’s weird-fiction can be equally well described as nightmare-haunted.

With regard to the former usage of the word, we find “the nightmare horde” (D 261) of bacchanalian demons from “The Horror at Red Hook”; the epidemic which afflicts Arkham in “Herbert West: Reanimator” is called a “scourge, grinning and lethal, from the nightmare caverns of Tartarus” (D 140); in Lovecraft’s keynote story “The Unnamable”, the dead sylvan monstrosity is termed by Lovecraft “a hybrid nightmare” (D 205); while in “Medusa’s Coil”, the sad tale told by father De Russy will be called a “nightmare tragedy”. (HM 189) In “The Mound”, too, Lovecraft will speak of “the nightmare idols of the serpent Yig and the octopus Tulu…” (HM 162), while in “The Picture in the House” Lovecraft will write offhandedly of “the carven mausolea of the nightmare countries.” (DH 116) In “The Whisperer in Darkness”, too, Lovecraft will link the unnerving familiarity of Mr. Noyes’ voice with “forgotten nightmares” (DH 248), Wilmarth also describing his unsettling experiences within the tale as “the whole nightmare drama of the lonely hills”. (DH 237) Lovecraft’s fondness for this “nightmare” language even finds its way into the title of Donald Wandrei’s weird short story, “The Shadow of a Nightmare”, in which an amusing Lovecraftian stand-in, named “Arthur Marl”, engages in an extended disquisition on the nature of the weird-tale.

Beyond this more general, rhetoric usage of the term, however, one also notes numerous direct references to abnormal dreams and nightmares throughout Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, including numerous references to the characteristic symptoms and attributes of the nightmare itself. One notes (the doubtlessly autobiographical) title to Lovecraft’s poem, “The Po-et’s Nightmare” (1916), in which the poet Lucullus Languish’s nightmare is preceded by a wild night of eating; while in “Beyond the Wall of Sleep”, Lovecraft will declare that “abnormal dreams were the foundation of the trouble”. (D 29) What Lovecraft calls numerous “traces of strange dreaming” (DH 130), too, will be found throughout “The Call of Cthulhu” -there called, significantly, “strange visitations” [emphasis mine] (DH 131), thus paralleling those nocturnal (and sexual) visitations also related to the nightmare, which later gave rise to the imagery associated with witches, (as discussed below.) One thinks here, too, of what Lovecraft calls that “frightful dream” (DH 38) (full of excremental and cannibalistic imagery) experienced by Delapore in “The Rats in the Walls”; as well as Peaslee’s “mad dreams” (DH 423) in “The Shadow Out of Time”, which reveal the truth about his alien experiences. In Lovecraft’s “The Temple”, too, the crew of the German submarine will suffer from pre-Cthulhuian “bad dreams” (D 60), brought on (just as in “The Call of Cthulhu”) by a combination of some sinister power beneath the ocean, in alliance with undead imagery (in this case, the open eyes of the dead Greek/Italian youth). And, of course, Lovecraft’s perfect embodiment of the nightmare creature, the excremental Shoggoth, will be first glimpsed by his narrator in “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” during the course of a nightmare: the narrator describing a “dream in which I saw a shoggoth for the first time, and the sight set me awake in a frenzy of screaming”. (DH 367)

Not surprisingly, we find that H.P. Lovecraft himself, as his voluminous correspondence attests, was plagued by intense dreams and nightmares all his life (and, although Lovecraft only hints at this fact obliquely, doubtlessly numerous voluptuous and erotic dreams as well; dreams which, as we shall see, are closely related to the nightmare in both their characteristics and their etiology.) As Lovecraft informs friend Robert Bloch in a letter describing a 1933 nightmare, such dreams are “typical of the sort of dream I have every week or so -or perhaps twice a week.” (SL IV:243) And, as S.T. Joshi observes, H.P. Lovecraft’s nightmares “contain many conceptual and imagistic kernels of his [HPL’s] mature tales”. (JOSHI 21) “Dagon”, “Nyarlathotep”, “The Statement of Randolph Carter”, and many other stories were based, in whole or in part, on Lovecraft’s dreams. But, as we shall see, Lovecraft’s nightmares also capture, if frozen at this stage, the persistence of infantile sexuality well into adult life, whose thematic tropes would also reappear throughout Lovecraft’s writings, including his essays and verse.

II. Symptoms of Nightmare

“…lest sleeping abnormalities wake to resurgent life, and blasphemously surviving nightmares squirm and splash out of their black lairs to newer and wider conquests.”
-H.P. Lovecraft, _At the Mountains of Madness_ (MM 105)


But what exactly is a nightmare? According to Ernest Jones’ classic study, On the Nightmare (revised edition, 1951), “the three cardinal features of the malady are (1) agonizing dread; (2) sense of oppression or weight at the chest which alarmingly interferes with respiration; (3) conviction of helpless paralysis.” (JONES 20) With regard to this “agonizing dread”, for example, one notes what Lovecraft, in “Nyarlathotep“, calls a “general tension“ (MW 32), and “a strange and brooding apprehension of hideous physical danger; a danger widespread and all-embracing, such a danger as may be imagined only in the most terrible phantasms of the night”. (32) (As Lovecraft goes on in “Nyarlathotep”, “Never before had the screams of nightmare been such a public problem; …“ [MW 32]) One thinks here, too, of what Lovecraft and Sonia Greene call that “nightmare fear of impending evils such as the world had never seen before” (HM 329) in “The Horror at Martin’s Beach.” In this same story, too, we can also see that “helpless paralysis“ described by Jones, described by Lovecraft and Green as a strange “paralyzing influence” (HM 329) brought about by “unknown powers” (HM 329) (in this case, the hypnotic powers of a female sea monster [proto-Cthulhu?] in alliance with the hypnotic moon), causing a line of men to be “irresistibly held in some mysterious bondage” (HM 329) until, just like the line of men in Lovecraft’s “The Moon-Bog”, they are pulled into the waters of the sea and drown.

As Ernest Jones quotes D. Cubasch, in such nightmares the dreamer “‘is rooted to the spot’” (JONES 24) in terror, until “‘a vigorous movement wakens the dreamer from his sleep, and all is over-’” (JONES 24); cf. here Lovecraft’s poem “Nemesis”, in which Lovecraft writes of how “…I struggle and shriek ere the daybreak, being driven to madness with fright” (AT 27); (cf. here too, that vigorous movement at the end of the dream-sequence in Lovecraft‘s “The Po-et’s Nightmare”, in which poet Lucullus Languish is depicted as “Shrieking in silence” [AT 25] as he “fled” [AT 24] within his dream, after which he “tumbled out of bed”. [AT 25]) In The Dreams in the Witch House, too, “A paralysis of fear” (MM 286) will be said to have “stifled all attempts to cry out” (MM 286) during Gilman’s sexual/dream-like encounter with the maternal/grandmotherly “old woman” (MM 286) -a “paralysis” (MM 291) which Lovecraft perceptively describes as being “mental and emotional.”

In addition, Ernest Jones notes several other “accessory features” (JONES 20) of the nightmare, many of which also prove to be present to a striking degree, in both the world of myth and folklore, as well as in the weird-fiction of H.P. Lovecraft. One notes, for example, the prevalence of those leering, staring, or mocking faces which are seen in nightmares, of which the most prominent example in the West, perhaps, is the staring feminine visage of the gorgon, Medusa (a figure likewise found within Lovecraft’s writings. [HM 193, AT 244, D 262]) As Ernest Jones observes, “Dreams of grimacing figures (Fratzentraume) are more than any others a rich source for the creation of fantastic human caricatures and the half-human, half-animal figures so prominent in mythology”. (JONES 80) And in Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, too, one notes the frequent references to leering and mocking faces, and, by extension, leering hypnotic eyes: Lilith, who “squats leeringly” (D 260) on her throne in “The Horror at Red Hook”; the ghoul in “The Outsider”, who “stood leering before me” (DH 52); what Lovecraft describes as the “the distorted, hilarious elder gods” in “The Call of Cthulhu” (DH 154), etc. In “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”, too, part of the narrator’s “vague, unaccountable uneasiness“ (DH 364) about his grandmother (both during his childhood and later on in his dreams), will be inspired by her “staring, unwinking expression” (DH 364) -language closely akin, one thinks, to the staring visage of the gorgon/Medusa.

Another such “accessory feature” of nightmares, according to Ernest Jones, is “theme of transformation of human beings into animals” (JONES 219) (and vice versa.) As Jones observes, the folkloric metamorphosis from man into animal “has important sources in dream experiences, for here the actual transformation of the figure of a human being into that of an animal and the occurrence of composite beings, half animal, half human, so often takes place directly before the eyes of the dreamer.” [emphasis mine] (JONES 64) One immediately thinks here of Lovecraft’s 1927 dream, described in a letter to his friend Donald Wandrei, in which, while exploring a decayed, post-apocalyptic landscape, Lovecraft finds a deserted streetcar line and then sees “the dark forms of two men looming up in the moonlight” (SL II:200) -men who quickly assume the form and posture of animals. “They had,” Lovecraft goes on,

“the regulation caps of a railway company, & I could not doubt but that they were the conductor & motorman. Then one of them sniffed with singular sharpness, & raised his face to howl at the moon. The other dropped on all fours to run toward the car….” (SL II: 200)

Significantly, this scene in the dream is preceded by a subterranean sequence characterized by what Lovecraft calls “a singular accession of fright, as if some subtile & bodiless emanation from the abyss were ingulphing my spirit” [emphasis mine] (SL II:199), identical to that paralyzing terror described by Jones, above. One thinks here, too, of Lovecraft’s famous 1933 dream, described in a letter to Robert Bloch and elsewhere, in which Lovecraft dreamed that he was one of “…a party of silent, apprehensive men” (SL IV:242) who were “in search of a vague being of infinite and incredible evil.“ (SL IV:242) As Lovecraft goes on:

“Once- in the light of a leprous, waning moon- we saw It…. A black, large-eared, crouching thing about the size of a large dog, and roughly resembling one of the Notre Dame gargoyles. … […] Looking down, we saw the Blasphemy merge Itself plastically and hideously with the handsome form of the mounted captain, till in an instant there was but one being where two had been… a shocking hybrid thing clad in the silken robe of our captain, yet having in lieu of a face only the black, large-eared snout of the evil entity. It looked up and leered -squealing things we could not understand-- and then galloped off…” [emphases mine] (SL IV:242-243)

What Jones calls this “sudden transformation of one person into another” (JONES 238), as well as “the occurrence of phantastic and impossible animal forms…” (JONES 238), are also characteristic of the nightmare; and both Lovecraft’s own dreams and his published weird-fiction feature numerous examples of such changes of identity (cf. Lovecraft’s 1933 dream, published in Weird Tales as “The Evil Clergyman” [1939], in which Lovecraft is transformed into another man amid an atmosphere of “deadly fear” [D 291]; “The Shadow Out of Time”, in which Nathaniel Peaslee switches bodies with an alien entity; and “The Thing on the Doorstep”, in which Ephriam Waite successively usurps both the bodies and the identities of his child and then her husband, etc.)

Lovecraft’s weird-fiction is also replete with many examples of such dream-inspired human-animal transformations and hybridization. In his poem “The Howler”, for example, one of the sonnets from Lovecraft’s Fungi from Yuggoth, the poet will run “in frenzy” (AT 69) from what he calls “a four-pawed thing with a human face”. (AT 69) In “The Horror at Red Hook”, Lilith’s Satanic bacchanalia will be populated by a “hybrid pestilence” (D 260), including what Lovecraft calls a “dog-faced howler.“ (D 261) One notes, too, Lovecraft’s numerous mentions of werewolves (AT 21, AT 30-37, HM 345), wolves (MM 257, DH 280, MW 551), and most importantly those omnipresent dog-like ghouls found throughout his weird-writings -amongst whom, just as with Cthulhu‘s bestial followers, human and animal characteristics are combined. Needless to say, the fact that all of this hybrid- and bestial-imagery originally materialized in Lovecraft’s dreams, completely separate from any consciously-constructed, quasi-Spenglerian fictional polemic on the part of Lovecraft, is both obvious and suggestive, and entirely typical of what Freudian psychologist Ernest Jones describes as the origin of the pathology of the nightmare in underlying “manifestations of Angst neurosis” (JONES 53) on the part of the dreamer. As Jones points out, as well, “the capacity for transformations is predominantly an erotic motif” (JONES 264) (cf. here Helen Vaughn’s numerous changes of name [and later of form] in Arthur Machen’s The Great God Pan, not to mention Asenath Waite’s changes of identity/sex in “Thing on the Doorstep”) -Jones likewise citing in support the numerous seduction transformations found throughout mythology; a fact, again, which suggests the underlying sexual repression underlying Lovecraft‘s nightmare-conceptions.

The same nightmares and underlying anxieties which gave rise to Lovecraft’s weird-fiction would likewise, according to Jones, (and via much the same processes) earlier give rise to such related medieval superstitions as the vampire, the werewolf, the witch, the devil, and the incubi/sucubi, all of which have the transformation of human beings into beasts as their fundamental basis. As Sabine Baring-Gould observes, “Transformation into beasts forms an integral portion of all mythological systems.“ (BARING-GOULD 153) The devil’s “power of transformation” (JONES 184), for instance, as Jones points out, including the ability to change “human beings into animals” (184), is basically identical with this attribute of dreams. And it is interesting to note that Lovecraft’s Nyarlathotep- who likewise had his origin in a dream of Lovecraft‘s, and who likewise acts, in “The Dreams in the Witch-House”, as a stand-in for the devil- is also known, in the Lovecraftian corpus, for his [apparent] powers of transformation (DH 114, DH 271) (although certain commonalities - foreignness, swarthiness/blackness- are usually evident in his portrayal.) As Jones observes, “It is generally recognized that the Nightmare has exercised a greater influence on waking phantasy than any other dream. This is especially true of the origin of the belief in evil spirits and monsters” (JONES 73) -a statement which is equally true, one thinks, of Lovecraft’s weird-fiction.

Why animals should play this transformative role in nightmares and folklore, is also easy to explain -Ernest Jones writing of what he calls the close “association between human beings and animals in the imagination” (JONES 246), particularly in the “untutored” (JONES 68) minds of “children and savages “ (68), for whom “the gulf we perceive between human beings and animals is much less apparent” (68) (Lovecraft’s dreams in this regard thus preserving a peculiarly infantile perception.) Baring-Gould concurs, observing how “The intelligence which was manifest in the beasts bore such a close resemblance to that of man, in the childhood and youth of the world, that it is not to be wondered at, if our forefathers failed to detect the line of demarcation drawn between instinct and reason.” (BARING-GOULD 155) Things like the primitive tribal belief in the shamanic ability of a man or witch-doctor to assume the form of an animal during trance and dream states doubtlessly has its origin in such infantile misperceptions (ideas apparently conserved via later beliefs in the supposed astral travel-abilities and aerial/flying abilities of werewolves. [BARING-GOULD 165, JONES 141, JONES 150]) For H.P. Lovecraft, of course, this supposed lack of demarcation between humans and animals was a source of horror: cf. Lovecraft’s 1923 letter to his friend Frank Belknap Long about “the anthropological background of The Rats [in the Walls]” [interpolation mine] (SL I:258), in which Lovecraft affirms that “No line betwixt ‘human’ and ‘non-human’ organisms is possible, for all animate Nature is one -with differences only in degree; never in kind…” (I:258) -Lovecraft going on from there to postulate “a sort of sadistic cult amongst the beasts” (I: 258) which “might later develop into a formal Satanism” (I:258); Lovecraft’s infantile identification of humans with animals here finding pessimistic confirmation via his nihilistic reading of Huxley and Darwinism. As Ernest Jones observes, ironically (Jones could very well be writing about Lovecraft): “Even educated people can still feel this relationship [between humans and animals] in a varying measure, a fact which is often made use of for literary purposes.” [interpolation mine] (JONES 69) And while Jones cites in this instance David Garnett’s successful play Lady into Fox, Lovecraft’s nightmare-ridden horror fiction suits both his and our purposes far better.

Combined with this infantile identification with animals, is also a psychological realization of what Ernest Jones calls “the freedom they [animals] display in openly satisfying needs, particularly those of a sexual and excremental order, which with human beings have often to be restrained; in fact, the expression ‘animal passions’ is generally employed to denote sexual impulses” (JONES 69-70), so that “Animals therefore lend themselves to the indirect representation of crude and unbridled wishes” (JONES 70) -wishes which, in the relaxed moral atmosphere of dreams, often find consummation. Cf. here H.P. Lovecraft’s fascistic essay “Cats and Dogs”, where he speaks with fastidious dislike of dogs “‘wolfing’” (MW 551) down their food “most openly and unashamedly” [emphasis mine] (551), the dog being “wholly repulsive in his bestial and insatiate greediness” (551), while on the other hand the (motherly?) cat (whom Lovecraft prefers) “is held in check by an inherent and inescapable daintiness.” [emphasis mine] (551) (In “Under the Pyramids”, Lovecraft will manage to extend this fastidious dog/eating-imagery to what he calls the dark cannibalistic and necrophilic “Unknown God of the Dead” [D 243] [Lovecraft’s dead father?], which, much like a dog, “licks its chops in the unsuspected abyss”. [D 243]) (The myth of the werewolf, in turn, would seem to represent this idea of animalistic freedom taken to the point of sadistic frenzy; as Jones observes, a prime element of the werewolf myth is the “oral-sadistic or cannibalistic impulse” [JONES 150], a sexual pathology which, Jones concludes, “wolf symbolism is specially well suited to represent” [JONES 151] -Lovecraft‘s numerous invocations of werewolves throughout his writings perhaps representing a transference or transfiguration of incestuous anxieties along sadistic, animalistic, and cannibalistic channels.) Tellingly, Lovecraft’s Dreamland in The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath will prove to be populated by his cannibalistic/necrophilic/and “dog-like” (MM 378) ghouls, throughout -and it is perhaps indicative of the lax moral standards of the dream that Lovecraft’s stand-in, Randolph Carter, will go so far as to disguise himself as a ghoul: even “wallowing naked in the mould to get the correct surface, and loping in the usual slumping way, with his clothing carried in a bundle as if it were a choice morsel from a tomb” (MM 339) ! (Cf. here, too, Lovecraft’s description of the narrator‘s crawl through the underground burrow in “The Lurking Fear”, the narrator suddenly forgetting “danger, reason, and cleanliness in my single-minded fever to unearth the lurking fear” [D 193]; indeed, he crawls underground for so long, he says, “that life faded to a far memory, and I became one with the moles and grubs of the nighted depths.” [D 193])

H.P. Lovecraft in particular -as his obsession with unspeakable/unnamable/and forbidden topics throughout his works clearly suggests- seems to have been particularly affected by the Victorian strictures regarding acceptable behaviors, especially (if the landscape of Lovecraft’s weird-fiction is any indication) with regard to excremental functions. As Ernest Jones observes, discussing the different forms taken by sexual repression throughout the ages, “In the nineteenth century, for instance, it seems to have been predominantly directed against exhibitionism, with a marked extension to excremental functions; so that sexuality in the Victorian era tended to be called ‘shameful’ or ‘disgusting’ rather than sinful.” (JONES 165) One immediately thinks here of the marked excremental aspects of Lovecraft’s fiction: the subterranean (anal) vaults explored by his protagonists and inhabited by his monsters, the excremental Shoggoths, the frequent and flatulent blasts of wind and thunder, and the necrophilic behaviors and cannibalistic eating habits of Lovecraft’s creatures- habits which are essentially anal-sadistic in nature. As Ernest Jones observes, “necrophilia” (JONES 111), involving either “some kind of sexual act on the corpse or, more characteristically, by biting, tearing, and devouring the decaying flesh” (JONES 111), “evidently signifies a reversion to the most primitive aspects of sadism, both of the oral and anal kind” (JONES 111) -an idea, Jones goes on, which would seem to underlie the various fecal and odorous associations of the vampire in folklore; Jones quoting in demonstration a 1645 description of a Greek vampire called “‘the Burculacas’” (JONES 122), whose “‘name is given to him from vile filth. For [BURCULACAS] means black mud, not any kind of mud but feculent muck that is slimy and oozing with excrementitious sewerage so that it exhales a most noisome stench…’” (JONES 122)


Cf. here Lovecraft’s equally-fecal description of the nightmarish Shoggoth: described in At the Mountains of Madness as a “nightmare, plastic column of fetid black iridescence” (MM 101), which, he writes “oozed tightly onward through its fifteen-foot sinus” (MM 101) (sinus = anus?), “gathering unholy speed and driving before it a spiral, re-thickening cloud of the pallid abyss vapor” (MM 101) (flatulence?) For Lovecraft, the ultimate “‘thing that should not be’” (MM 101) is merely fecal in nature -reflective, perhaps, of some past parental fastidiousness or maternal prohibition, impressed deeply into the impressionable mind of a child. Indeed, the Shoggoth almost seems to be a living embodiment of that similar “knee-deep” (DH 35) “filth” (DH 35) about which Delapore dreams/has a nightmare in “The Rats in the Walls”, or of that “change” (D 15) which occurs during the narrator’s “slumber” (D 15) in “Dagon”, resulting in “a slimy expanse of hellish black mire with extended about me in monotonous undulations as far as I could see” (D 15), called elsewhere in the same story “nasty mud” (D 15) and “black slime”. (D 15) Nor is it surprising, perhaps, to learn, as Lovecraft reveals in 1921, that this “detestable ooze” (MW 150) in his tale in fact derives from an actual (and, one thinks, anal/excremental) dream of Lovecraft’s, during which “I dreamed that whole hideous crawl” (MW 150) in which the “hero-victim is sucked half into the mire” (150), his hero pulling “himself along” (150) “tenaciously though it cling to him” -Lovecraft even claiming, years later, that he “can yet feel the ooze sucking me down!” (MW 150)

One notes here, too, the prominent role played by mud in one of Walter Gilman’s incestuous/sexual/and sadistic dreams in The Dreams in the Witch House -the “old woman” (MM 286) pulling Gilman into “a dark, muddy, unknown alley of foetid odours” (MM 286), Lovecraft accentuating the infantile context of this sequence by speaking of how “the grimacing crone” (MM 286) dragged “Gilman after her by his pajama sleeve.” (MM 286) Such language, of course, suggests more a child than an adult male, who could (presumably) flatten an old woman with a single blow if he so desired. Mud, indeed, will figure throughout this sequence: Brown Jenkin will lurk beside the ankles of the Black Man, “which the deep mud largely concealed” (MM 286); fleeing a scene of child sacrifice (bathroom-training gone wrong?), Gilman will plunge “recklessly down the noisome staircase and into the mud outside” (MM 287); while the next morning Gilman will awake to see “with growing fright that his feet and pajama-bottoms were brown with caked mud” (MM 287), while “muddy prints” (287) and “muddy rat-tracks” (287) will be seen all over the floor -all of this suggestive of some nocturnal/infantile excremental accident; prelude, perhaps, to some vengeful parental/maternal act of reprisal or punishment.

[IMAGE FILE]

Fig 1. Squatting position. [From Hand Book of Diseases of the Rectum by Louis J. Hirschman, M.D.., St Louis, C.V. Mosby Medical Book & Publishing Co., 1909; p. 61.]

One notes in this regard, too, the numerous examples of squatting in Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, usually associated with Lovecraft’s weird entities: the “squatting position” (HIRSCHMAN 61) of course being, according to a 1909 medical textbook, “the natural posture for defecation” (HIRSCHMAN 61) -Dr. Hirschman elsewhere in the same volume further describing “The squatting position” as “the position assumed by the aboriginal races in defecation” [emphasis mine] (HIRSCHMAN 59), which suggests both Lovecraft’s concern with the primitive, as well as his nightmarish obsession with the excretory. One thinks here, again, of Lilith in “The Horror at Red Hook”, described as “a naked phosphorescent thing which swam into sight, scrambled ashore, and climbed up to squat leeringly on a carved golden pedestal” (D 260) -the Hebrew Lilith being, as Ernest Jones elsewhere affirms, “definitely a Vampire” (JONES 125) (again, cf. what Jones calls “the horrible stink that invests the vampire.” [emphasis mine] [JONES 122]) Lovecraft’s undead/revenant Cthulhu, of course, will ape Lilith in this, his statue depicting a figure “of a somewhat bloated corpulence” (DH 134), which “squatted evilly on a rectangular block or pedestal.” (DH 134) In “The Festival”, too, the sound of a flute will be accompanied by the sight of “something amorphously squatted far away from the light, piping noisomely…” (D 214) The horrific and cannibalistic/necrophilic moon-merchants in Lovecraft’s The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, too, will be said to have “squatted close together” [emphasis mine] (MM 318) as they “ate the smoking meat that was passed around” (MM 318) -something about this “suspicious nourishment” (319) causing Randolph Carter to turn “even paler” (MM 318) as he noted the “size and shape” (318) of it; and although Carter’s horror probably derives from the implied cannibalistic nature of the repast, the squatting/excremental context of the meal is clear as well. Lovecraft will go on to combine all this squatting/wolf/dog/and ghoul imagery into a single image, as he describes the giant “dog-like mountains” (MM 367) visible on the horizon of dreamland, which “squatted there atop the world like wolves or ghouls” [emphases mine] (367), with “their right hands […] raised in menace against mankind” (MM 367) -the latter equally suggestive of both parental punishment or anger, as well as, perhaps masturbation (cf. here, the miraculous abilities of Asenath Waite‘s “right hand“ [DH 281], which “could make any dog howl” [emphasis mine] [281]; as well as Nathaniel Peaslee’s “right hand” [DH 425], which “twitched eagerly in its eagerness to turn a lock it hoped to find.” [DH 425]) Of course, the eating and excretory freedom of dogs extends as well to their openly sexual and autoerotic behavior.

That these multiple depictions of squatting look back to the period of Lovecraft’s earlier toilet-training definitely seems possible -surely a troublesome period in a household as inhibited and fastidious as Lovecraft’s. (Cf. here what Lovecraft himself called his many “‘physical illnesses’” [deCAMP 32] during childhood, which included what he calls [suggestively] “‘kidney trouble’” [32] [urination?] and “‘frightful digestive trouble’” [32] [toilet training?]) Factor into this Lovecraft’s ongoing issues of parental control vis-à-vis his mother (further discussed below), and one thinks that in such excretory acts as a child Lovecraft perhaps found some measure of control and/or erotic relief (of an infantile kind), independent of his parents (cf. here the “peculiar incident” [MM 167] in The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, in which Ward‘s parents respond to a thunderclap [flatulence?] by running upstairs, only to see Ward standing there “with an almost fearsome combination of triumph and seriousness on his face.” [MM 167] Later, interestingly, during his abortive attempt to enlist to fight in WWI, Lovecraft will observe, “Verily, ‘tis amusing to make so great a stir about a little matter like this, …” [SL I:48] -and although Lovecraft is here referring to the contrast between his domestic stir and his larger cosmic perspective, one senses here a similar sense of triumph at the reaction which his enlistment provokes in his mother.) And hence, too, perhaps, Lovecraft’s continued dwelling upon and immersion within such excremental topics in the context of his weird-fiction, years later -the nightmare aspects of his chosen medium embodying some measure of mental control and freedom, free of any maternal interference. Lovecraft’s fascination with excremental imagery also preserves aspects of infantile sexuality, as well -since anal, oral, and urinary functions in the child form but a prelude to and an analogue of the sexual outlets which develop during adolescence and through adulthood; although, as any glance at the landscape of contemporary pornography reveals, for some this fascination with the oral and the anal continues to perpetuate itself well into the adult years, particularly amongst some (but not all) homosexuals. (Cf. here, too, the sadistic acts of serial killers and lust murderers, which are sometimes accompanied by defecation on or near the victim’s body [RESSLER 138], or else by a sexual interest in a victim’s feces. [RESSLER 7 & 126, deRIVER 232]) Linguistically, too, sexuality often continues to be associated with excremental language such as “dirt” and “filth” (“dirty magazines”, “filthy pictures”, etc.) Indeed, while it’s eerie to think of the degree to which the persistence of Lovecraft’s infantile sexuality influenced his writing

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 04:48PM
(perhaps even influencing or figuring into his later socio-political views), as Ernest Jones observes in On the Nightmare, “adult emancipation of sexual from excremental processes is but rarely complete, and traces of the old association” (JONES 290) are “common enough.” (JONES 290) Indeed, in Lovecraft’s case, they are glaring -and unmistakable. Lovecraft’s interest in cannibalism and sadism are merely an extension of this more basic and infantile excretory taboo.

A simple chart suffices to prove this basically sadistic complexion of Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, a complexion suggestive, once again, of the relaxed moral atmosphere of dreams and nightmares which formed Lovecraft’s inspiration. Indeed, a line drawn through the chart, from one end to the other, would form a perfect inverted percentile graph of the proportions of cosmicism vs. bestiality in his weird-fiction:

[CHART 1]
Fig. 2 Mundane vs. Cosmic in HPL’s weird-fiction.


Yet another common accessory feature of the nightmare which finds wide expression throughout both H.P. Lovecraft’s weird-fiction and his dream-life -as well as in the larger world of dream-inspired mysticism and medieval superstition- are those night flights often experienced during dreams, which Ernest Jones sees as an “allied theme” (JONES 219) to the “transformation of human beings into animals”. (JONES 219) In The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, for example, Randolph Carter will be carried by the squatting moon merchants to their home on the moon: their escape from the earth’s gravity described in terms typical of the sexualized/ecstatic feelings of the night flight: “Then with a queer whistle and plunge the leap was taken, and Carter felt the terrors of nightmare as earth fell away and the great boat shot silent and comet-like into planetary space.” [emphases mine] (MM 319) In At the Mountains of Madness, too, Lovecraft will speak of those “unexplainable falls” (MM 103) experienced by “rash flyers” (MM 103) in the upper atmosphere- language as applicable to Lovecraft’s own dream life as it is to the world of aviation.

Sometimes, as in Lovecraft’s poem “Nemesis”, these night flights will take the form of a slow floating or drifting: the poet being “whirl’d with the earth at the dawning” (AT 27), and having “…drifted o’er seas without ending, …” (AT 27) In “The Dreams in the Witch House”, meanwhile, “Gilman’s dreams” (MM 267) will be said to consist “largely in plunging through limitless abysses of inexplicably colored twilight and bafflingly disordered sound;” (MM 267) -his “mode of motion” (MM 267) tellingly, being described by Lovecraft as being “partly voluntary and partly involuntary” (MM 267), suggestive either of parental issues with personal control, or also of the involuntary and automatic aspects of sexual stimulation.

This same largely involuntary response will likewise figure in relation to the night flight in Lovecraft’s dream fantasy “Celephais”, too, in which Kuranes will be said to have “plodded on as though summoned toward some goal” [emphasis mine] (D 84), daring not “to disobey the summons” (D 84), after which he suddenly plunges over “the precipice and the abyss where all the village and all the world fell abruptly” (D 84) into “infinity” -Kuranes’ fall therefrom afterward reading more like a characteristic night flight: “…he had floated down, down, down; past dark, shapeless, undreamed dreams, […] and laughing winged things that seemed to mock the dreamers of all worlds.” (D 84-85) In “Nyarlathotep”, too, Lovecraft will directly connect this involuntary motion with night flights, observing how “my power to linger was slight. As if beckoned by those who had gone before, I half floated between the titanic snowdrifts, quivering and afraid, into the sightless vortex of the unimaginable.” [emphasis mine] (MW 34)

The primary impetus for such night flights, as even Lovecraft’s evasive circumlocutions makes clear, is sexual -having its origin in the persistence of the mechanisms of infantile sexuality. As Ernest Jones explains:

“…dreams of travelling are almost constantly associated with sexual motives, such as exploration of inaccessible places, […] escaping with the loved parent away from the competing one, and so on; […] Flying dreams similarly are individually determined and symbolize various wishes, but the ultimate source of these is always the same, namely the sexual excitations of various movements (dandling, chasing, etc.) in early childhood; the phenomenon of erection is in both sexes the kernel of the whole conception of flying. In his experimental studies on dreams the Norwegian psychologist Mourly Vold came to the conclusion that dreams in which the dreamer sees either himself or another flying or floating in the air are produced by gentle sexual excitation.” [italics Jones‘] (JONES 204)

Lovecraft, of course, forms almost a textbook example of this: whether his persistent dreams of floating (as reflected in his weird-fiction, quoted above), in his dreams of traveling or exploration (cf. here, again, the notably involuntary aspects of Lovecraft’s 1927 streetcar dream: Lovecraft being “Impell’d by some obscure quest” [emphasis mine] [SL II:199] to ascend “a rift or cleft” [II:199] in a mountain precipice, etc.) One notes here, too, the fact that Lovecraft’s earliest dreams of night flights (that we know of) appear to have been his childhood dreams of Night Gaunts: which were, notably, associated by Lovecraft with the infantile stimulation of tickling. As Lovecraft himself explains:

“‘When I was 6 or 7 I used to be tormented constantly with a peculiar type of recurrent nightmare in which a monstrous race of entities (called by me ‘Night-Gaunts’ -I don’t know where I got hold of the name) used to snatch me up by the stomach […] & carry me off through infinite leagues of black air over the towers of dead & horrible cities. […] They had no voices & their only form of real torture was their habit of tickling my stomach […] before snatching me up & swooping away with me. […] They seemed to come in flocks of 25 or 50, & would sometimes fling me one to the other.’” [emphasis mine] (deCAMP 32-33)

(Note Lovecraft’s infantile/sadistic description here of the Night Gaunts’ tickling-stimulation as “torture”, corresponding to the largely sadistic view of sexuality held among some children.) Of course, Lovecraft’s association of his Night Gaunts with tickling almost forms a textbook case of those “sexual excitations of various movements (dandling, chasing, etc.) in early childhood;” cited by Jones, above. And this infantile sexuality would go on to inform much of Lovecraft’s later weird-fiction: whether in relation to the cannibalistic sadism of the old man in “The Picture in the House”, whose autoerotic desires are stimulated by the homicidal images in a book:

“‘Thar’s suthin’ at stir ye up an’ make yer blood tickle.’… […] Thet feller bein’ chopped up gives me a tickle every time I look at ‘im- I hev to keep looking’ at ‘im- see whar the butcher cut off his feet? Thar’s his head on that bench, with one arm side of it, an’ t’other arm’s on the other side o’ the meat block” [emphases mine] (DH 122)

-or in regard to the Night Gaunts themselves, who will later figure as allies of Randolph Carter in The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath (where they aid him in driving off the hippocephalic-elephantine shantak birds, their ambivalence closely corresponding to that of the dog-like ghouls), and where they are still referred to as “faceless and rubbery ticklers” [emphasis mine] (MM 383) (never mind the fact that Lovecraft was writing in 1927, or that Randolph Carter is now an adult, and presumably immune to their stimulation.) One thinks here, too, of Lovecraft later in life, writing of how his funny childish behavior had once “‘tickled my elders’” (JOSHI 16), Lovecraft engaging in one of his typical acts of unconscious reversal/transference. Doubtlessly, one or more of Lovecraft‘s elders tickled him. (Lovecraft will confirm this unconscious parental/infantile association with his night flights in “Celephais”, in which one of Kuranes’ night flights is closely associated with parental giganticism: Kuranes “flying over dark mountains” [D 86] one night in Dreamland, where “he found a hideously ancient wall or causeway of stone” [D 87], which is described as being “too gigantic to ever have risen by human hands, and of such a length that neither end of it could be seen. “ [emphasis mine] (D 87) In The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, too, Randolph Carter and his ghoul-friends will be sucked into the air by what Lovecraft calls “A force not of earth” [MM 394], which pulls them “toward a gigantic castle high above the mountaintops, large “beyond all mortal thought” (MM 395); in both cases, the gigantic will be associated by Lovecraft with the god-like -Lovecraft here reflecting, inadvertently as it may be, the origins of the idea of deity itself in the superstition of ancestor worship.)

Even as adults, dreams of night flights signify some form of sexual stimulation: this sexual origin doubtlessly underlying the close association, in folklore, of night flight-activity with the activities of witches (often depicted as lascivious women), as well as the nocturnal visitations of vampires, incubi, and sucubi. (Cf. here John Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi, in which he refers to “men conveyed by witches through the air / On violent whirlwinds”. [WEBSTER 157]) As Ernest Jones convincingly argues, the “numerous legends relating to women who fly by night” (JONES 218), such as witches, as well as “the innumerable beliefs to do with travel or flight by night” (JONES 258), are “closely related to Nightmare experiences”. (JONES 218) These same night flights, one notes, will also underlie Lovecraft’s larger (feminine) conception of the “‘moon-ladder‘” (MM 106) throughout his weird-fiction, which is characterized by a “spectral whirling” (DH 153) of the male sailor Johansen “through liquid gulfs of infinity” (DH 153), followed by what Lovecraft calls “dizzying rides through reeling universes on a comet’s tail, and […] hysterical plunges from the pit to the moon and from the moon back again to the pit” (DH 154) -Lovecraft’s association of such flights with the moon, here (the female moon goddess?) thus preserving some aspects of their essentially sexual etiology.

In On the Nightmare, for example, Ernest Jones points out the folk “expression for night emissions, ‘The Witches are riding him’” (JONES 205) -and as Jones observes, the riding imagery which is characteristic of night flights “typically represents the act of coitus itself” (JONES 205), usually “conceived of in infantile and often sadistic-masochistic terms.” (JONES 259) Cf. in this connection those “hybrid winged things” (D 215) ridden by the cult members in “The Festival”, Lovecraft describing how the bacchanalian “throng of celebrants” (D 215) “seized and mounted them” -the morbid sexuality in this instance being couched in curiously negative yet still recognizably necrophilic language: with the winged creatures being described as not resembling “crows, nor moles, nor buzzards, nor ants, nor vampire bats, nor decomposed human beings” [emphasis mine] (D 215) -Lovecraft’s denials in this instance merely serving to underline the necrophilic origins of his imagery. (Cf. here, again, those already cited “strange visitations” [emphasis mine] [DH 131] from the undead Cthulhu which so trouble the artist Wilcox and many others during the night -the necrophilic, again, supplanting the sexual in the Lovecraft weird-canon [as per usual.]) This idea of being ridden, meanwhile, has particular resonance for the male sex in relation to the anxiety symptoms of the nightmare: since, as Ernest Jones point out, the typical symptoms of the nightmare -“The pressure on the breast, the self-surrender portrayed by the feeling of paralysis” (JONES 76), etc.- merely represent “a normal act of sexual intercourse, particularly in the form characteristic for women”. [emphasis mine] (JONES 76) It can then be theorized that the nightmare has its origin in repressed sexuality -a repression often manifested, in men, by “the repression of the feminine, masochistic component of the sexual instinct” (JONES 76) -an idea perhaps reflected in the similar inversion of male into female via Lovecraft’s Ephriam Waite and Edward Derby in “The Thing on the Doorstep”, as well as, more horrifically, via the castrative rites of Atys referenced in Lovecraft’s “The Rats in the Walls”.

Yet another accessory feature of the nightmare, meanwhile -and one which perhaps most clearly indicates the sexual bases of most nightmare imagery- is the ambivalent and sometimes overtly voluptuous nature of nightmare imagery. As Ernest Jones points out in On the Nightmare, there is often a “distinctly voluptuous character” (JONES 46) to even “the most terrifying nightmares” (JONES 46) -what Lovecraft similarly calls, in “Under the Pyramids”, “the ecstasy of nightmare and the summation of the fiendish”. [emphasis mine] (D 229) As Jones observes, one often sees an “admixture of erotic and apprehensive emotions” (JONES 77) in the same nightmare; a “voluptuous dream” (JONES 76) can alternate with a nightmare Footnote 1, and “clinically all gradations may be observed” (JONES 76) between the “most extreme form of this [nightmare] on the one hand and erotic dreams on the other“ (JONES 76), with “the typical Nightmare” ultimately being “merely one extreme member of this series” (JONES 343). Indeed, Jones goes on, “The erotic character [of such dreams] may be so evident that the oppressing agent, however hateful at first, becomes more or less suddenly transformed into a most attractive being of the opposite sex”. (JONES 48)

This same ambivalence can be also noted even in Lovecraft’s most nightmarish fiction, in which an alluring element is still somehow present. One instantly thinks here of Lovecraft‘s necrophilic “The Tomb”, in which the carrion “odour of the place [i.e., the tomb of the Hydes] repelled but bewitched me” [emphasis mine] (D 6); of what Delapore calls the “ecstatic fear” (DH 44) he experiences as he runs downward into the subterranean depths in “The Rats in the Walls”; of those “opposite extremes of ecstasy and horror” (HM 13) experienced by the narrator in “The Crawling Chaos”; and even of Lovecraft’s description of his own writings as “my nightmares and fantasies”. (SL II:124) Delapore’s literal descent into madness in “The Rats in the Walls”, meanwhile, in which an almost sexual desire and loathing for cannibalism are equally intermixed is later paralleled by yet another scene of ecstatic and involuntary running into subterranean depths in “The Shadow Out of Time”, (again in relation to the father), who will speak of what he calls “my strange sense of compulsion” (DH 425) as he ecstatically races on a “downward incline“ (DH 423) leading into “profounder depths“ (DH 423) -observing tellingly “Of the particular goal of my insane racing, my conscious mind held no hint.” [emphasis mine] (DH 423) (The fact, however, that this “insane racing” [DH 423] is linked by Lovecraft with “a certain rhythm which set my right hand twitching in unison” [DH 423], suggests the suppressed autoerotic motivations underlying the ambivalent/ecstatic dream imagery, here.) As Peaslee tells us, in language redolent of the narrator‘s mole-like digging through subterranean (and sadistic/incestuous) depths in “The Lurking Fear”: “Onward through the blackness of the abyss I leaped, plunged, staggered” (DH 419) while in a state of “madness” (DH 418), a state which Lovecraft goes on to link with “some daemonic dream or illusion born of delirium” (DH 418) (sexual delirium?)

Cf. here, again, the unhinged narrator’s frantic digging in “The Lurking Fear”, “leaping, screaming, panting, bounding toward the terrible Martense mansion” (D 197) in his search for the source of the subterranean horror. Indeed, one thinks that Lovecraft in this chapter is perhaps speaking from personal experience when he links what he calls his protagonist‘s “virtual convulsions of fright” (D 195) (here associated with “glaring” [D 195] “eyes” [D 195] -the eyes of Medusa/the gorgon?) with the giddy pleasures of the night flight:

“But that fright was so mixed with wonder and alluring grotesqueness, that it was almost a pleasant sensation. Sometimes, in the throes of a nightmare when unseen powers whirl one over the roofs of strange dead cities toward the grinning chasm of Nis, it is a relief and even a delight to shriek wildly and throw oneself voluntarily along with the hideous vortex of dream-doom into whatever bottomless gulf may yawn.” [emphases mine](D 195)

At the end of the “The Shadow Over Innsmouth“, too, Lovecraft’s narrator will suddenly “feel queerly drawn to the unknown sea-depths instead of fearing them” (DH 367) -the narrator’s ambivalence here, one notes, being significantly characterized by an implicitly incestuous context, in the form of what he calls “a frightful dream in which I met my grandmother” [emphasis mine] (DH 366) (again, note the alternation here between attraction and fear.) In “The Haunter of the Dark”, too, one notes the markedly sexual aspect of Robert Blake’s ambivalent/hypnotic desires -Blake, under the hypnotic influence of the egg-shaped stone in the cyclopean church steeple, soon displaying “the dangerous extent of his fascination” (DH 107) by admitting to “a morbid longing- pervading even his dreams- to visit the accursed tower and gaze again into the cosmic secrets of the glowing stone.” (DH 107)

In Lovecraft‘s “The Po-et’s Nightmare”, too, “the elfin train / That dance each midnight o’er the sleeping plain” (AT 19), will be supplanted later on in the poem by what Lovecraft calls “a demon train, / Grinning and smirking, …” (AT 21) While in Lovecraft‘s “Under the Pyramids”, too, what Lovecraft calls the “beautiful Queen Nitokris” (D 241), described in erotic terms as a “subterranean nymph“ (D 227) and as the “lady of the Pyramid“ (D 227), will be seen “in profile for a moment” (D 241), revealing “half her face was eaten away by rats or other ghouls” -the voluptuous suddenly giving way to the cannibalistic/sadistic imagery of “The Rats in the Walls.” The sudden revelation of the true identity of the narrator in “The Outsider”, too, in which the ghoul suddenly sees himself in a mirror at the climax to the story, and is revealed to be “a compound of all that is unclean, uncanny, unwelcome, abnormal, and detestable” (DH 51), “a leering, abhorrent travesty on the human shape” (DH 51), seems to mirror what Ernest Jones calls this “transformation of a very attractive into an extremely repellant object, a situation frequently met with in both myths and dreams.” (JONES 81)

Cf. here, too, the naked vampire Lilith in “The Horror at Red Hook”, whose simultaneously sexual and horrific nature is perhaps best indicated by Lovecraft’s inversion of the New Testament story of the prostitute Mary Magdalene anointing Jesus’ feet with oil in John 12:3, and washing them with her own hair. In Lovecraft’s version, “several dark men” (261) carrying a “gangrenous corpse” (D 261) bring the corpse to Lilith, after which they “produced bottles from their pockets” (D 261) (an allusion to alcoholic flasks) and ”anointed its feet with red, whilst they afterward gave the bottles to the thing to drink from.” (D 261) Lovecraft’s phrasing in this passage makes it difficult, at first, to tell exactly whose feet are being thus anointed: whether the corpse’s or Lilith’s -although Lovecraft elsewhere confirms how “in the blood of stainless childhood the leprous limbs of phosphorescent Lilith were laved.” (D 260) What is not difficult to see, however, are the multitudinous and erotic inversions of the anointing story from the New Testament: with oil here replaced by sadistic blood, Black men substituted for Jesus, and the repentant Mary Magdalene replaced by a woman drinking the blood given to her by the men, in a symbolic circumlocution for an oral sex orgy. (That Lovecraft intends, here, a nasty satire/caricature of Winifred Jackson’s various sexual relationships with Black men, may also be likely.)



III. Causes of the Nightmare in Repressed Incest

Ultimately, this frequent alternation between what Ernest Jones calls “extreme attractiveness and the most intense disgust” (JONES 238) in nightmares, Jones argues, would seem to reflect a common source for both in “some form of repressed sexual desire” [italics Jones‘] (JONES 44), which results in the intense anxiety experienced by the dreamer. We have already noted, for example, the connection between nightmare symptoms and male repression of feminine sexual masochism. By far the most “intense mental conflict” [italics Jones‘] (JONES 44), however, which underlies both nightmares and repressed sexual conflicts, centers about “incestuous desire” [italics Jones‘] (JONES 44) -since incest is both the earliest manifestation of, and also the most consciously, socially, and ruthlessly repressed aspect of human sexuality. As J. Paul de River explains in his revealing study, The Sexual Criminal (1956):

“…we must not overlook the fact that the child-parent fixation often has, with utmost regularity, an erotic or sexual tone, which may or may not be admitted and recognized on the side of the parent. The mere fact that any reference or any thought of this type of situation has been interpreted as being sinful and infamous, gives us an insight as to the profoundness of the incest fear. Love for the mother and hostility for the father is more frequently met among the males, […] We must remember that many abnormalities of behavior may be traced directly to the Oedipus complex, for this complex has the faculty of transferring itself and generalizing itself…” [emphasis mine] (deRIVER 226)

If then, as Ernest Jones suggests, the nightmare is basically a “form of anxiety attack…essentially due to an intense mental conflict centering around some repressed component of the psycho-sexual instinct” (JONES 75) -and since the source of nightmare “lies in the region of maximum ‘repression’, i.e. of maximum conflict” (JONES 44), then it logically follows that the nightmare derives from sublimated incestuous desires -with a higher degree of horror apparently reflecting a higher degree of repression. And, given both the intensity and the frequency of Lovecraft’s own attacks of nightmare/strange dreams, his degree of repression can be seen to be quite large, even without considering the evidence of what we know of his marital life, asexual relationships, and complex maternal bond. (Cf. here, too, the marked sadistic, cannibalistic, and necrophilic aspects of both Lovecraft’s stories and his dreams -ecstatic and pleasurable horrors which, I would suggest, constitute a form of transference or transfiguration of originally incestuous desires. As biographer Roger Lewis observes in his Anthony Burgess: A Biography [2002]: “Cannibalism, the consumption of one’s own species, is the very extremity of incest” [LEWIS 116] Footnote 2 -and it would seem, given the sadistic/cannibalistic complexion of his various fictions, that Lovecraft unconsciously, if not consciously, realized this.)

There have long been many differing theories, of course, on the causes of the nightmare. Ernest Jones, in On the Nightmare, discusses several, “The earliest and still the most popular” (JONES 31) of which is the origin of the nightmare in “gastric disturbances” (JONES 31) -an idea which Lovecraft reflects throughout his writings. In “The Po-et’s Nightmare”, for example, which is prefaced with the Latin motto (translated as) “Disturbance is always caused by excess” (AT 474), the young poet is called Lucullus Languish -his first name derived from Lucinius Lucullus (born ca. 110 B.C.E.), who was known for the “inordinate magnificence” (SMITH 393) of “His feasts at Rome” (393) and his devotion to “the pleasures of the table”. (SMITH 393) Lovecraft’s Languish, too, is described as a “connoisseur of rarebits and mince pies” (AT 18), whose “lips” (AT 20) have “lately thrill’d with frosted cake” (AT 20) -the poet, after he awakens from his nightmare, vowing “No more to feed on cake, or pie, or Poe.” (AT 25) In his 1927 letter to Wandrei, too, Lovecraft will directly associate his dream of the abandoned streetcar with his having “gorged” (SL II:199) himself the previous evening with “a Thanksgiving feast of the utmost peril to my 140-lb. standard”. (II:199) Even in “The Po-et’s Nightmare”, however, the sensual element is still present, albeit just below the surface: the poet’s “lips” [emphasis mine] (AT 20), for example, having “lately thrill’d with frosted cake” [emphasis mine] (AT 20); a sensual and dancing “elfin train” (AT 19) afterward being sent to “…cast a warning spell / On those who dine not wisely, but too well”. [emphasis mine] Languish’s dreams, meanwhile, are at first filled, Lovecraft writes, with “Dreams of the moon-or what he ate at tea” [emphasis mine] (AT 20) -the poet’s own astronomical leanings (AT 18) here merging, perhaps, in the relaxed moral atmosphere of sleep, with that feminine/sexual moon ladder of “The Moon-Bog”, which elsewhere lifts an unwilling Denys Barry on a frenzied night flight to his doom. Not surprisingly, either, we eventually find this same sexualized-eating imagery inverted along the usual sadistic/cannibalistic/necrophilic lines in this same poem -Languish dreaming of demons carrying “carrion viands for an impious feast” (AT 21), while “the stunted trees with hungry arms / Grop’d greedily for things I dare not name; …” (AT 21)

But while the food-theory of the nightmare had the definite advantages, for Lovecraft at least, of a deliberate archaism, as well as functioning as a cloak for a more troubling and unmentionable sexual etiology, it is striking the degree to which both Lovecraft’s life and his writings conform to the theory of nightmare origins in a “hysteria” (JONES 231) over “incest conflict” (JONES 231) posited by Jones. One notes here Lovecraft’s sending to poetess Winifred Jackson a photograph of his mother two weeks after Mrs. Lovecraft’s death, and observing how “‘her youthful pictures would form close rivals to your own in a contest for aesthetic supremacy’” (JOSHI 263), thus suggesting a direct connection between a sexual subject (Jackson) and his own mother in Lovecraft’s mind, and perhaps a posthumous attempt (just as in “The Thing on the Doorstep”) to transfer his affections from one to the other. (S.T. Joshi, in his Lovecraft: A Life, doubts the level of closeness between Lovecraft and Jackson in this letter, observing, “This letter is, however, still very formal, and I have trouble envisioning any real intimacy between the two”. [JOSHI 263] Even with H.P. Lovecraft’s own wife, however, Lovecraft’s expressions of personal affection were similarly restrained, his “idea of verbal love-making” [deCAMP 215], for example, being to tell Sonia, “‘My dear, you don’t know how much I appreciate you.’” [deCAMP 215]; it’s obvious that Lovecraft’s letter to Jackson is intended as a form of courtship.) One notes, too, the fact that the two women with whom Lovecraft was romantically-linked, Winifred Jackson and Sonia Greene, were both older than him by some years, and thus maternal figures; Jackson being “fourteen years older than Lovecraft” (JOSHI 200), while Greene was seven years older, thus reflecting a transference or a continuation of the maternal role. As Rheinhart Kleiner observes, “She [Jackson] was a fairly mature matron, too, as was Mrs. Greene-…” [emphasis mine] (KLEINER 161) (Even nowadays, the popular term for such “matrons”, i.e. “MILF”, or “Moms I’d Like to Fuck”, preserves an essentially incestuous complexion.) Cf. here, too, Edward Derby’s cries of “‘Mother, mother! Dan! Save me...save me…’” (DH 297) in “The Thing on the Doorstep”, in response to the nightmare-horror of his wife, the “she-devil” (DH 294) Asenath -the mother here functioning as an alternative, or as an equivalent, to the wife. In “The Rats in the Walls”, similarly, the mother will provide salvation from another “daemon” (FH 30) wife, Lady Mary de la Poer, “who shortly after her marriage to the Earl of Shrewsfield was killed by him and his mother, both of the slayers being absolved and blessed by the priest to whom they confessed what they dared not repeat to the world” [emphasis mine] (DH 30) -the secret of incest here being outwardly embodied in the murdered Lady de la Poer herself. As Winfield Townley Scott later summarized the hospital record notes about mother-Susan Lovecraft, after her admission to Butler Hospital: “‘The psychiatrist’s record takes note of an Oedipus complex, a ‘psycho-sexual contact’ with the son, but observes that the effects of such a complex are usually more important on the son than on the mother, and does not pursue the point’” (JOSHI 195) -“effects” clearly confirmed by the odd contours and complex morbidity of the son’s later weird-fiction.

As discussed elsewhere (cf. my essay Arsenic and Pale Face), a large part of Lovecraft’s aesthetic, intellectual, and possibly even social views would seem to have been derived from his parents and family. And although a search for a surrogate father, of sorts, would seem to also have figured in Lovecraft’s concomitant militarism, Romanism, Anglophilia, and conservatism, Lovecraft’s mother would seem to have strongly influenced the fastidious, Puritan, and racial aspects of Lovecraft’s make-up (cf. Lovecraft’s private joke with his mother in 1921, “To think I owe a post-prandial triumph to a set of Jews!” [SL I:124]) Of course, there was quite a bit of overlap between these twin paternal and maternal desires. Cf. here, for instance, the markedly incestuous aspects of Lovecraft’s Romanism and Anglophilia; Lovecraft, in his 1918 essay “The Literature of Rome”, criticizing those European nations (in strikingly Freudian terms) which never had the fortune to come “beneath the sway of the Imperial Mother”. [emphasis mine] (LOVECRAFT/QUEBEC 57) And even as late as 1933, Lovecraft would write of his “touchy Roman patriotism which resents any slight toward the ancient mistress of the World” [emphasis mine] (SL IV:335) -language which reflects Lovecraft’s own similar devotion to the Mistress of His Household. In his poem “An American to Mother England”, too, Lovecraft will sing a song of praise to Britain, called the “World-conquering Mother!” (AT 400), whom he contrasts the “mongrel slaves” (AT 400) (i.e. foreign immigrants) which pour “upon our shore” (AT 400): “From such an alien crew in grief I turn, / And for the mother’s voice of Britain burn.” [emphasis mine] (AT 401) “I cannot feel any real difference betwixt the States and the Motherland”, Lovecraft writes in 1918, his desires for Anglo-American reunion, here, touching uncomfortably on the incestuous, “and believe there ought not to be.” [emphasis mine] (SL I:72) Even as a child, Lovecraft observes, “Her Majesty, Victoria, Queen of Great Britain & Ireland & Empress of India commanded my allegiance. ‘God Save the Queen!’ was a stock phrase of mine.” [emphasis mine] (SL I:34) Cf. here, too, unconscious incestuous overtones underlying Lovecraft’s playful addressing of his own aunts in correspondence as “‘My darling daughter’” (deCAMP 4), Lovecraft here adopting the father’s role, in yet another one of his standard inversions/reversals of parental and child roles.

Further indication of the role played by H.P. Lovecraft’s mother in the shaping of his lifelong aesthetic and philosophical stance, is provided by Lovecraft’s 1921 letter to his mother in the hospital, in which he begins by thanking her for her letter, as well as for “the small primroses -which adorn this apartment- the Weekly Review, the banana, that most captivating cat picture, which I shall give a permanent place on the wall” [emphasis mine] (SL I:123) (presumably right beside his pictures of Confederate leaders Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee.) And while it is certainly possible in this instance that Lovecraft’s mother was simply acknowledging Lovecraft’s own love for cats via the latter gift, it seems much more likely that Lovecraft’s love for cats was first inculcated by his mother, and that, perhaps, Lovecraft’s love for cats functioned also an extension of his love for her. Vide in this regard “The Dunwich Horror”, in which the disturbed Mrs. Gardner is shown to have a love for cats, Lovecraft pointedly specifying that “only Mrs. Gardner had made pets of the graceful felines.” [emphasis mine] (DH 67) All of which only serves to make Lovecraft’s paean to both cats and fascism, the essay “Cats and Dogs” (1926), that much more disturbing to read. And although S. T. Joshi is undoubtedly correct to say that, in this essay, Lovecraft manages to unite his “philosophy, aesthetics, and personal sentiments in a triumphant evocation of that species that Lovecraft admired more than any other (including his own)” (MW 412), the fact that Lovecraft utilizes this great fund of wit and historical/literary knowledge in the service of such a staunchly fascistic, Puritan, aristocratic, and in fact incestuous vision, in no way diminishes, and in fact only serves to increase, the unsettling effect of the essay upon the reader -so that, in the end, reading “Cats and Dogs” is rather like reading an essay by Norman Bates on the virtues of the extreme passivity of birds, and the quiet dignity of dead figures after taxidermy. And although I am only a lay reader, without any psychiatric schooling or degree, it is not difficult to discern the psychological/sexual basis for Lovecraft’s dislike for the figure of the Dog in this essay (Lovecraft describing dogs as “panting, wheezing, fumbling, drooling, scratching” [MW 551] creatures, as “slovenly wolves” [MW 548], as “hieroglyphs of blind emotion” [MW 548], etc.), or for his simultaneous praise for “Pussy.” (MW 548) As Lovecraft mockingly observes, “One can imagine how they [the peasants of the Middle Ages] must have resented Pussy’s magnificent reposefulness, unhurriedness, relaxation, and scorn for trivial human aims and concernments.” (MW 548) Only in relation to his mother was Lovecraft ever able to praise pussy.

One notes, here, again, the markedly incestuous aspects of Lovecraft’s controversial coda to “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” -a fascination here centered, interestingly, on the figure of the narrator’s grandmother, rather than the mother. As Lovecraft observes (in language in which the attractive is again confounded with the horrific), “My Arkham-born grandmother had seemed strange and almost terrifying to me, and I do not think I grieved when she disappeared” (DH 363) -although later he experiences “certain dreams” (DH 367) in which “The tense extremes of horror are lessening”. (DH 367) Indeed, in language which seems to reflect the occurrence of a voluptuous, rather than a horrific dream, Lovecraft here writes of how “I hear and do strange things in sleep” (DH 367) (masturbation/seminal emission?), “and awake with a kind of exaltation instead of terror.” (DH 367) Of course, all of this would be perfectly normal if Lovecraft’s protagonist were, say, a sailor far from home dreaming about a mermaid; the pathological aspect

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 04:54PM
here is derived from the blatantly incestuous context, and the narrator’s desire to join his grandmother, great-grandmother, and young cousin beneath the waves.

The role played in “Innsmouth” by the grandmother is significant, since it was in 1896, in connection with the death of Lovecraft’s grandmother, Rhoby Place Phillips (Joshi and de Camp spell it “Robie”, while Lovecraft spells it “Rhoby” [MM 242, SL V:167]), that Lovecraft’s nightmares of Night Gaunts apparently first began, stimulated by the morbid atmosphere of mourning in the Lovecraft household, especially amongst the women. As L. Sprague de Camp observes, “Since mourning was taken seriously in those days, the Phillips girls donned black attire, which ‘terrified & repelled me [Lovecraft] to such an extent that I would surreptitiously pin bits of bright cloth or paper to their skirts for sheer relief…’” (deCAMP 25) And, as S.T. Joshi explains, “…so begins Lovecraft’s career as one of the great dreamers” (JOSHI 21); and although Joshi suggests that “Robie” Phillips and Lovecraft do not seem to have been particularly close (JOSHI 20), and accepts Lovecraft’s affidavit that his stress at the time of her death was due merely to the mourning affected by the female members of the household, I cannot help but think there is some connection between the tickling of the Night Gaunts in Lovecraft’s nightmares, and the playing or dandling Lovecraft may have experienced with his grandmother before her demise; her death having the effect of forever afterward tingeing Lovecraft’s childish ecstasies with an edge of necrophilia, which went on to color Lovecraft’s weird-fiction until the end of his days -almost as if Lovecraft was somehow frozen at this infantile stage. (Certainly, she was haunting him during the writing of “Innsmouth”, in which the narrator’s undead grandmother and her immortal, 80,000- year-old great-grandmother “dwell amidst wonder and glory forever” [DH 367] beneath the sea.) Intriguingly, in The Dreams in the Witch House, Lovecraft will go so far as to bypass the Night Gaunts entirely, by having the aged witch Keziah Mason herself (described repeatedly as “the old woman” [MM 286]) “advancing toward him [Walter Gilman] over the carpeted floor” (MM 286), after which “the hideous crone seized Gilman by the shoulders, yanking him out of bed and into empty space” [emphasis mine] (MM 286) -the old woman thus appropriating within her own person the faculty of Lovecraft’s Night Gaunts, whose function, as we have already seen, was to grab-up the sleeping dreamer/young boy and pull him through an “infinitude of the shrieking twilight abysses.” (MM 286) That Keziah Mason’s assumption of the Night Gaunts’ role occurs in a symbolically sexual (and therefore incestuous) context is doubly significant: the “old woman” (common slang for a wife or mother) here being pointedly accompanied in Gilman’s nightmare by what Lovecraft calls “the small furry thing” (MM 286) (her vulva?), Brown Jenkin, whom Lovecraft earlier associated with the reaching of “climax” (MM 281) in Gilman’s dreams, and whose advances Gilman had previously tried to forestall by stopping “up the hole” (MM 281) where Jenkin lives, by “wedging in a candlestick which seemed of about the right size” (MM 281) (all obvious references to sexual intercourse.)

As Lovecraft himself observes, “‘the death of my grandmother plunged the household into a gloom from which it never fully recovered’” [emphasis mine] (JOSHI 20); indeed, Lovecraft never did. Cf. in this regard, too, the revealing preamble to H.P. Lovecraft and C.M. Eddy’s collaborative story “The Loved Dead” -in which some writers have seen autobiographical elements from Lovecraft’s own life- and in which the narrator’s first necrophilic desires are aroused by the funeral of his grandfather, and his sight of his grandfather’s corpse -here also called, more suggestively, “my grandparent”. (HM 350) “I looked down upon the calm placid face with its multitudinous wrinkles and saw nothing to cause so much sorrow“ (HM 350), Lovecraft/Eddy write, in language which eerily parallels Lovecraft‘s own attempts to circumvent the mourning of his female relatives, above; after which, however, “My whole being seemed charged with some ecstatic electrifying force… […] Wild, wanton, soul-satisfying sensuality engulfed me.” (HM 350) And although one doubts that Lovecraft ever consciously harbored such overtly sensual thoughts about his grandmother, that Lovecraft’s unconscious was stimulated by her death, again, is easily demonstrated by his weird-fiction and his nightmares.

Nor is it difficult to adduce numerous instances of this largely infantile orientation of Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, in relation to sadistic, necrophilic and cannibalistic imagery. Cf. here the cannibalistic/necrophilic ghoul in “Pickman’s Model”, which “held in its bony claws a thing that had been a man, gnawing at the head as a child nibbles at a stick of candy” [emphasis mine] (DH 23) -Lovecraft pointedly juxtaposing the infantile with the sadistic, the childish with the charnel. Lovecraft himself maintained an inordinate interest in sweets and candies all his life, preferring ice cream, highly-sweetened coffee, and candy to more adult foods, all of which suggests an underdeveloped and largely infantile palate. As L. Sprague de Camp observes, “Susie [Lovecraft] let her son [H.P.] eat what he pleased. Perhaps as a result, he became an avid consumer of sweets and ice cream at the expense of healthier foodstuff, and he never did get over childish aversions to sea food and some common vegetables.” (deCAMP 3) One visitor to Lovecraft’s home reported seeing his bathtub filled with empty candy boxes, and Lovecraft’s ice cream binges would go on to become legendary within early science-fiction fandom (although one wonders what Lovecraft‘s friends would have thought, had they managed to connect Lovecraft’s continuing ice cream-obsession with that milk which Lovecraft’s mother fed to him every hour during his youth. [KLEINER 196])

One notes here, too, Lovecraft‘s odd description in “The Nameless City” of “those brooding ruins that swelled beneath the sand like an ogre under a coverlet” (D 100) -language which strangely combines domestic (parental/maternal?) imagery with grotesque nightmare/fairy tale imagery; while the idea of “brooding” and swelling suggests a mainly sexual and in fact maternal function. As Ernest Jones points out, “The sadistic view of sexual functions which so many children hold explains why the parent so often appears in the dream in the symbolic guise of an aggressive animal or monster” (JONES 81) Footnote 3 -an idea reflected, again, in that parental giganticism which Lovecraft so often associates with his monsters (as with, to name one example amongst many, the “elephantine bulk” [MM 391] associated with the paternal Shantak-Birds, etc..) Cf. here, too, Lovecraft‘s oddly-revealing phraseology in “The Music of Erich Zann”, in which the violinist Zann is described by the narrator as having “clutched at my coat as a child clutches at its mother’s skirts” [emphasis mine] (DH 88) -language obviously suggestive or reflective of some overt maternal attachment or control, here embodied in the ambivalent, slightly-sinister figure of the violinist. Lovecraft himself, as it turns out, studied the violin at a young age: in lessons instigated, of course, by his mother (“An infantile fondness for simple tunes led my mother to start me on violin lessons when I was seven years old… […] In 1899 violin practice made me so nervous that it was stopped by doctor’s orders-…” [emphasis mine] [SL I:75])

Lovecraft’s grandmother will reappear in various other curious guises throughout his weird-fiction. Aspects of her can be found in the maternal nurse in “The Outsider”, described as “shockingly aged, […] distorted, shriveled, and decaying like the castle…” (DH 47) The witch Keziah Mason, as we have seen, will be described throughout “The Dreams in the Witch House” as an “old woman” (MM 286), a “crone” (MM 287), and an “evilly grinning beldame” (MM 281), her nightly dream-attacks upon student Walter Gilman being characterized by a nightmarish and sadistic sexuality. Cf. here too the end of “The Horror at Red Hook”, in which it is, somewhat incongruously, an ambiguously-described “small child” (D 265) to whom the “swarthy squinting hag” is shown to transmitting her corrupt occult tradition. If this child is a boy, this would certainly supply the origin for the young male toughs shown throughout the tale, it is true: but why isn’t the witch shown explicitly transmitting her lore to a young girl, who would be the more obvious repository for her fund of feminine wiles? In “The Shunned House”, meanwhile, Lovecraft will give Rhoby’s name to a disturbed, Mrs. Gardner-like maternal figure named Rhoby Harris, a widow, whose relationship with her son instantly suggests the troubled dynamics of Susan Lovecraft’s relationship with H.P. Lovecraft. As Lovecraft explains, “The widowed Rhoby Harris never recovered from the shock of her husband’s death, and the passing of her firstborn Elkanah two years later was the final blow to her reason” (MM 241), Rhoby falling “victim to a mild form of insanity” (MM 241) after which was “confined to the upper part of the house.” (D 241)

And it is significant to note, given Lovecraft‘s association of his grandmother with incestuous dream-imagery, that Lovecraft’s grandmother Rhoby Phillips was herself part of an incestuous union, as Lovecraft himself was well-aware. As Lovecraft observed in a 1935 letter to young fan Robert H. Barlow, “As you see, I have a double dose of Rathbone (and Casey) blood because two of the daughters of John R. (1750-1810) are great-grandmothers of mine. Sarah’s daughter married Rhoby’s son -from which union my mother was born.” (SL V:167) Incest, too, seems to have figured in some way in the marriage of Dr. Franklin Chase Clark to Lovecraft’s aunt, Lovecraft blithely observing in 1916 how Dr. Clark was “a distant relative who had become a closer kin through marriage to my aunt, …” (SL I:38) And although Lovecraft obviously sees nothing odd in this, both his dreams and his fictions clearly reveal the tensions which such incestuous unions naturally entail: from the inbred Martense family members in “The Lurking Fear”, to the casual incests of “The Dunwich Horror” (DH 157, 172) and “The Unnamable”, as well as the symbolic father-daughter union in “The Thing on the Doorstep”. (As Edward Derby observes: ”Tell me, Daniel Upton -what devilish exchange was perpetrated in the house of horror where that blasphemous monster [the father, Ephriam Waite] had his trusting, weak-willed, half-human child at his mercy?…” [DH 289]) Indeed, incest is the natural end-result of all racism: which is necessarily defined as the preference of one’s own tribe, or family, for the members of another family. Lovecraft was openly racist. And although incest certainly alleviates what the racist sees as the stigma of marrying outside one’s own race, tribe, or bloodline, it also, much like cannibalism, brings along with it its own set of complex problems and difficulties -including, it would seem, horrible nightmares. And although Lovecraft would outwardly observe (perhaps somewhat defensively) in a 1931 letter: “..science long ago exploded the myth that there is necessarily anything unhealthy about the offspring of close kin. In ancient Egypt the marriage of brothers & sisters was very common, & no harm ever came of it. All that a consanguineous union really does, is to intensify in the offspring whatever latent hereditary weakness or strength the parties may possess…” (SL III:424), one thinks that he was far less at ease with the implications of his devotion to family, and to mother, than such statements would seem to indicate. Lovecraft would likewise have been intimately reminded of the horrors of incest, too, by the strangeness of his own visage, which caused his mother so much horror, and which strongly, especially in the odd contours of Lovecraft’s mouth and jaw, reveals the physiognomy of inbreeding.

Lovecraft’s mother, of course, and not his grandmother, is the presiding feminine figure in Lovecraft’s writings, and even in those figures in which one can discern aspects of Lovecraft’s grandmother, aspects of Lovecraft’s all-powerful mother are also present. The aged nurse in “The Outsider”, for instance, is basically a maternal figure, since she apparently raises the narrator as a child -and nursing, of course, (as from a breast), is ultimately a maternal function. Indeed, Lovecraft’s obsession with maternal figures in his weird-fiction, is matched only by his obsession with paternal/patriarchal figures (as discussed in my essay, HPL & Theseus); and, given Lovecraft’s own admitted failure or inability to emancipate himself substantially from his parents, whether materially, philosophically, or sexually, it is only natural that this should be so. (As Lovecraft himself said, “Always a recluse, with no varied events of life to mark the transition from boyhood to manhood, I have retained more of the old juvenile point of view and sympathy than I would care to acknowledge publicly. I have grown up without knowing it…” [SL I:71] But “acknowledge it publicly” Lovecraft did: in the form of his weird-fiction.) Cf. here Lovecraft’s “The Thing on the Doorstep”, in which Edward Derby’s revolt from his wife Asenath derives partially from the fact that she “had concentrated in herself all his [Derby’s] vital sense of family linkage” (DH 285) -i.e., she disrupted his incestuous equilibrium. As Ernest Jones observes, nightmare experiences are “sexual and predominantly incestuous” (JONES 183), and have their origin in those ambivalent “motives of love and hate” (JONES 129) which the child feels toward its parents -the “deepest conflicts” (JONES 129) which a person feels often being directly related to one’s “earliest relationships to the parents” (JONES 129) (an ambivalence, once again, which is reflected in the horror of the Night Gaunts - which frighten yet which also tickle the young Lovecraft.) And it is striking, indeed, the transparency of Lovecraft’s recurring parental theme in his weird-fiction, with Lovecraft’s married-couples often, just as with his depictions of the father alone, appearing in both benevolent and malevolent aspects throughout his stories:

[CHART 2]

Fig. 3 Benevolent Couples vs. Malevolent Couples in HPL’s weird-fiction.

As Ernest Jones observes, the practice of ancestor worship, like so many other myths and superstitions, had its origins in unconscious dream and nightmare imagery, with “The attitude of awe and fear in respect of dream visitors from the dead” (JONES 63) later giving rise (as in Africa, China, Asia, and other primitive societies) to the apotheosis of the ancestral dead (and, ultimately, to the creation of God the Father and the Mother Goddess, personages which ultimately derive from the infantile perception of the parent as an all-powerful figure.) As Jones explains, “Dreams of people who are dead occur most frequently, and are most heavily charged with emotion when the dead person represents the father or mother.” (JONES 68) Cf. here Denton Welch’s novel In Youth is Pleasure (1945), in which the youthful narrator Orvil’s deceased mother constitutes an unspeakable/unnamable topic within Orvil’s family -and in which Orvil has recurring necrophilic/incestual dreams/fantasies about her (WELCH 14, 61), mixed with fantasies of suicide:

“…If only his fascinating suburnt mother could rise out of the grave and come back to him in her curious ugly red-and-green tartan dress […] If he could put her rings on for her once again, and make her eyebrows up at night, just as he used to so cleverly, with the tiny black brush.
“In a half-dream he saw it all happen -his mother rising up from the grave. But she did not wear her red-and-green dress; she was in a tousled peach nightgown, her eyes were shut, her golden toast-coloured hair matted and pressed down with earth. The earth crumbled out of her eye-sockets; Orvil saw a piece roll down and disappear between her breasts. Her nose had rotted away.” (WELCH 14)


(Compare this imagery, again, with Lovecraft’s description of Queen Nitokris in “Under the Pyramids”: simultaneously described as “beautiful” [D 241] and as horrific, with half “her face eaten away.” [D 241]) Intriguingly, movie director Stuart Gordon will refer to a similar such dream about his deceased father in the commentary track to his film version of H.P. Lovecraft’s Re-Animator (1985), observing: “…My father passed away when I was a teenager, and I often had dreams about him. And as a matter of fact, one of the dreams that I remember having, was one in which my father came back from the dead, and looked horrible. And …I didn’t care, I was just glad to see him.” (Lovecraft will present a similarly affectionate/benevolent picture of a dead “good old man” [DH 82] [“old man” being common slang for one’s father] haunting one’s dreams at the end of “The Colour Out of Space”, in which Ammi Pierce is described as a “grey, twisted, brittle monstrosity which persists more and more in troubling my sleep.” [DH 82]) The second-section of Lovecraft’s poem “The Po-et’s Nightmare”, too, will be set in macabre nightmare-world, populated by “the werewolves, and the souls / Of those that knew me well in other days” [emphasis mine] (AT 21) -language which surely, given Lovecraft’s lack of emancipatory and sexual relationships, surely refers to some parental connection.

Lovecraft’s stories are replete with this infantile, almost tribal, belief in the persistence of life after death. In “The Thing on the Doorstep”, Lovecraft will write of how “A soul like hers [Asenath’s] -or Ephraim’s- is half detached, and keeps right on after death as long as the body lasts” (DH 302); in “The Colour Out of Space” too, Mrs. Gardner and the animals of the farm will persist to live even after being partly consumed, as will some of the corpses discovered by Randolph Carter in The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath -with Lovecraft‘s undead/undying Cthulhu perhaps representing the apex of this attitude. One notes here, too, Lovecraft’s odd phraseology in his 1935 genealogical letter to Barlow, in which he observes that his grandmother Rhoby Place was “named after the aunt who became -posthumously- her mother-in-law” (SL V:167) -suggesting a reality and a continuation of life after death, consistent with a racist and incestuous obsession with family. This same idea, Ernest Jones asserts, would also be twisted by the human unconscious to create the superstitious ideas of returning revenants, vampires, and other creatures with the power “of returning from the grave and visiting the living, especially by night”. (JONES 65) In Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, of course, as shown in the above chart, both extremes are represented: so that on the one hand, we find what Lovecraft and Winifred Jackson call the “radiant pair” (HM 14) and the “strange child” (14) in “The Crawling Chaos” -an idealized version of H.P. Lovecraft himself and his parents, in which the parents are literally transformed into divine/god-like figures: “A god and goddess they must have been” (HM 14) Lovecraft observes, “for such beauty is not mortal; and they took my hands, saying, ‘Come, child, …’” [emphasis mine] (HM 14) And on the other hand, we find what Lovecraft calls the “Magnum Innominandum” (DH 223) and the “dark worship” (DH 29) of the “Magna Mater”. (DH 29) Here, as elsewhere, the ultimate source Lovecraft’s weird-fiction imagery is again shown to derive from within the depths of Lovecraft’s unconscious.

As discussed in my essay HPL & Theseus, Lovecraft will refer to such apparently paternal/fatherly revenants throughout his weird-fiction: whether the reanimated ghoul of “The Outsider”, the undead Cthulhu, or the patriarchal and “archaic father of all the rumoured shantak-birds” (MM 363) in The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, who, like Cthulhu, sends “out queer dreams to the curious” (363) -revenants whose mutual restlessness and hungers reflect the restless desires of their living kin. But whereas in real life, both nightmares and revenants are inspired by incest anxieties, Lovecraft elides over this unnamable desire by substituting another, ostensibly cosmic, version of this unnamable: Cthulhu himself. Lovecraft’s recurring phrases in his correspondence, too, “God Save the King!” and “God Save the Queen!” (SL I:72), also testify to the strength of this parental bond/obsession within his imagination: with the father/mother being symbolized by both “God” and the “King/Queen”; and with Lovecraft’s injunction for God to “Save” this king/queen representing the benevolent obverse to Lovecraft’s undead Cthulhu, who survives semi-alive and “sleeping” (children are often told by parents that that dead are merely sleeping) through endless aeons. It makes no difference that “God Save the King” is a benevolent expression of this parental obsession, and that the undead Cthulhu is a malevolent expression; both ideas are indicative of an ambivalent positive/negative parental obsession -with the latter merely being indicative of the troubling and incestuous anxieties which underlie Lovecraft’s overt devotion to the family.

As Ernest Jones writes, the “theme of the ‘returning dead’” (JONES 169) is intimately connected with both “ancestor worship and incest” (JONES 169) -with the restlessness of the dead, often regarded as being the result of some sin on the part of the deceased, merely reflecting the unaddressed and brooding anxieties of the living. (An idea which Lovecraft tacitly acknowledges, by having the Outsider look into a mirror: the Outsider’s revelation of self-identity perhaps corresponding to this origin of revenant anxieties within the author himself -with incest being one of the most socially unthinkable crimes.) Lovecraft ably depicts such a sin-complex in relation to a vampire/werewolf in “The Hound”, where the revenant-creature slowly hunts down the two decadent necrophiliacs who have desecrated his tomb -the tone of repentance demonstrated by the narrator over his necrophilic acts clearly indicating that the principal sin of the story is not the theft of the vampire’s amulet, but rather the narrator’s “unspeakable” life with St. John. Ernest Jones, too, cites a myth from Agathius Scholasticus’ Historia in connection with the restlessness of the undead, “where the dead person himself explained why the earth had refused to receive his body by admitting that he had committed incest with his mother” (JONES 104) -such incest interfering, according to Jones, with that larger “incestuous re-union with the Mother Earth” (JONES 104) after death (an idea which perhaps bears some relation with Lovecraft’s troublesome idea of the corrupt “pit” [DH 154] of the inner earth throughout his weird-fiction.) Of course, Lovecraft never reveals what sin, if any, accounts for the Outsider’s restlessness -merciful “nepenthe“ (DH 52), Lovecraft tells us, allowing the Outsider to forget “what had horrified me, and the burst of black memory vanished in a chaos of echoing images“ (DH 52)- although perhaps this same sin later makes him accepted by the other ghouls, who alone are “friendly“ (DH 52) and playful with him -incest (perhaps with his aged “nurse”?), here being given Lovecraft’s usual necrophilic and cannibalistic complexion.

IV. Nightmares Given Form: Lovecraft’s Tic Symptoms as a Child

“In the twilight he hastened home, the screams of the mad woman and the nervous child ringing horribly in his ears.”
-H.P. Lovecraft, “The Colour Out of Space”, (DH 68)


Nor is all of this theorizing about the psychological and parental bases of Lovecraft’s weird writings in any way unprovable or merely academic. Indeed, Lovecraft’s parental/familial, and specifically maternal obsessions, actually manifested themselves as physical symptoms: in the form of that chorea-like tic-syndrome from which H.P. Lovecraft apparently suffered at an early age, and which was so severe that he was eventually pulled from school. And, if Lovecraft’s chorea/tic symptoms can be proven to reflect such an underlying psycho-sexual dynamic, then so can his weird-fiction. As S.T. Joshi observes in his biography of Lovecraft:

“…One remarkable admission Lovecraft made late in life was as follows: ‘My own nervous state in childhood once produced a tendency toward chorea, although not quite attaining that level. My face was full of unconscious & involuntary motions now & then-& the more I was urged to stop them, the more frequent they became.’” [emphasis mine] (JOSHI 41)

(As we shall see, this increase in symptoms under adult/parental [read maternal] prohibitions is typical of tic-syndrome.) Lovecraft’s friend, Harry Brobst, later reinforced Lovecraft’s account of his symptoms in an interview with Will Murray -Brobst himself having met and spoken with a woman who knew Lovecraft at school, and who:

“‘…described these terrible tics that he had-he’d be sitting in his seat and he’d suddenly up and jump-I think they referred to them as seizures. The family took him out of high school, and then whatever education he got presumably was done by private tutors. I guess he scared the student body half to death!’
“Brobst has his own theories as to the meaning of these strange symptoms.
“‘It may have been some type of hysteroid seizure, without any organic basis, purely psychological in origin. Sometimes you get chorea-like symptoms following pneumonia or following influenza. They might very well have been psychogenic in their origin. He had led this very secluded life, and when he got out of that kind of situation, he may not have been able to adjust. These tics and seizures were ways of dealing with or escaping from the situation.’” (MURRAY 390)


Such tics were possibly the root of Lovecraft’s later view of himself as an invalid, an idea reflected in the various fits experienced by Lovecraft’s narrators and protagonists in his weird-fiction. In “Polaris”, for example, Lovecraft‘s narrator describes himself as being “feeble and given to strange faintings when subjected to stress and hardships” (D 22), so that he is “denied a warrior’s part” (D 22) in the defense of his city. Lovecraft‘s “The Horror at Red Hook”, too, will begin with Thomas Malone, although described as a “large, robust, normal-featured, and capable-looking” (D 245) man, having a hysterical fit (Lovecraft calls it “his astonishing lapse” [D 244] and “a sudden nervous attack” [D 245]) in the streets, emitting “a series of terrified, hysterical shrieks” (D 244) before “breaking into a frantic run which ended in a stumble and fall at the next crossing.” (D 244)

As Harry Brobst’s comments suggest, there is some confusion both about the nature of chorea itself, and also about whether Lovecraft himself suffered from an organic disturbance such as chorea, or from some underlying psychological trauma (or both.) As J. Vernon Shea observes in his very brief essay “Did HPL Suffer from Chorea?” (1977), biographer L. Sprague de Camp, contra Harry Brobst, seems certain that Lovecraft’s ailment was purely organic in origin:

“In L[ovecraft]: A B[iography], Sprague de Camp mentions (27ff) that HPL suffered from a tendency to chorea minor in his youth… […]
“Chorea minor manifests itself in uncontrollable facial tics and grimaces…
“[…]
“When I question Sprague further about the matter, he replied, in a letter to me dated November 21, 1976: ‘[…]…The Mds tell me that chorea minor is a commonplace result of rheumatic fever, that it normally lingers on for several years (e.g., through most of adolescence), and then gradually fades away.’” (SHEA 30-31)


Discussing this de Camp/Shea hypothesis, Joshi seems to partly agree, observing:

“…Lovecraft does not exactly date these chorea-like attacks, but context suggests that they occurred before the age of ten. All this led J. Vernon Shea to suspect that Lovecraft might actually have had chorea-minor, […] Certainty on the matter is, of course, impossible, but I think the probability of this conjecture is strong. And although Lovecraft maintains in the above letter that ‘in time the tendency died down’ and that his entrance into high school ‘caused me to reform’, I shall have occasion to refer to possible recurrences of these chorea-like symptoms at various periods in Lovecraft’s life, even into maturity.” (JOSHI 41)

The peculiar circumstances surrounding Lovecraft’s affliction, however: the disease first manifesting itself at school, for example, at the moment that Lovecraft was finally wrested from his maternal bosom, as well as Lovecraft’s own direct connection of his symptoms to presumably familial prohibitions (“‘-& the more I was urged to stop them, the more frequent they became’” [JOSHI 41]), make Brobst’s hypothesis about a mainly psychogenic origin seem equally probable. And, as Margaret S. Mahler’s various (and now “classic” [MAHLER x]) papers on the subject of tic syndrome, “Tics and Impulsions in Children: A Study of Motility” (1944), “Outcome of Tic Syndrome” (1946), and “A Psychoanalytic Evaluation of Tic in Psychopathology of Children: Symptomatic Tic and Tic Syndrome” (1949), make clear, Lovecraft’s own childhood “chorea” symptoms have much in common with those of children suffering with tic syndrome, as well as chorea. Indeed, Lovecraft’s life and writings read almost like a case history of a child with tic syndrome.

As Mahler observes, tic syndrome “is very often mistaken for Sydenham’s chorea (St. Vitus’s dance)” (MAHLER 39); indeed, Mahler cites a case history which she herself treated/studied, a boy named Johnnie, who presented “muscular twitching” at the age of six, and who was, she writes, “falsely diagnosed” (MAHLER 54) with “St. Vitus’ dance”. (MAHLER 54) As Mahler goes on in her 1944 paper, the “generalized jerkiness, darting about, and tossing” (MAHLER 86) of the tic sufferer:

“…are usually confused with the symptoms of chorea minor. The differential diagnosis between the tic and chorea is indeed often very difficult. It sometimes happens that children known to have had multiple tics acquire rheumatic fever and chorea years later (Wilson 1941). We have seen in our follow-up study at least one case in which a child with severe recurrent chorea and rheumatic endocarditis finally ended up with generalized incapacitating tics of a gestural and vocal quality (paroxysms).” (MAHLER 86)

Thus, as Brobst indicates, there would also seem to be some sort of overlap between tic syndrome and chorea, which suggests, as Margaret Mahler notes, that some young children are “particularly susceptible to tic, chorea, and other motor symptoms.” (MAHLER 87) As Mahler observes in her papers, incidence of symptoms before or around age 10 is common, with the climax of “systematic motor neuroses in children” (MAHLER 43) usually occurring “between the ages of six to eleven years” (MAHLER 43), and with “the age of incidence of permanent tics” (MAHLER 87) being “at six or seven, regardless of whether the tic belongs to the functional or to the organic type” (MAHLER 87) -the same age at which, as Mahler observes, “the psychomotor apparatus, even of the normal child, is all but overburdened by the need to prevent the objectionable oedipal cravings from being expressed in motility”. (MAHLER 42) (Cf. here again S.T. Joshi, who regards Lovecraft’s symptoms as having “occurred before the age of ten” [JOSHI 41], just as Lovecraft was beginning his career at public school.) “As school age is approached,” Mahler explains, “the expressive manifestations of the Oedipal claims” (MAHLER 78) become “more objectionable” (MAHLER 78) to the child, which results in greater tension and conflict. And, as Margaret Mahler observes in her 1949 paper, the chorea-like tic is (much like those nocturnal nightmares studied by Ernest Jones), “a rather conspicuous example of neurotic symptom formation within an underlying conflict“ (MAHLER 38) -usually, in the case of the male child, involving the relationship between mother and son- all of which, given Lovecraft’s additional nightmare symptoms, discussed above, strongly suggests that Lovecraft’s tics had a purely, or mainly, psychological origin.

Lovecraft’s admission that “My face was full of unconscious & involuntary motions now & then”, closely mirrors the case histories of the male child tiqueurs studied by Mahler. One such tiqueur, for example, a seven-year-old (MAHLER 58) named Henry, presented “a pulling tic of the neck, jerking his head forward, down and sideward, a blinking tic of the eyes, retracting motion of the limbs, and rapid upward thrusts of one or both forearms…, and he would say ‘f---, f---’ spasmodically…” (MAHLER 64) What Mahler calls such “coprolalic tics” (MAHLER 81) (i.e., obscene paroxysms), interestingly, would seem to be a fairly common aspect of tic symptoms -the tiqueur’s repetitive and obsessive use of what Mahler terms ‘the usual four letter words” (81) functioning as a release for “oral, anal, phallic, libidinal and aggressive tendencies” (81) by the tiqueur. Indeed, Mahler cites a very instructive case study, in which the male child tiqueur himself unconsciously associates his compulsive behavior with both “belching” and “flatus“. (MAHLER 82) We have already noted a concern with these same forbidden anal, flatulent, excretory, and odorous tendencies, needless to say, in various facets of Lovecraft’s weird-fiction (where they are further conflated/overwritten by necrophilic and sadistic/cannibalistic desires); which also leads one to wonder whether coprolalia figured in any way in Lovecraft’s symptoms at school, and whether this influenced in any way in the decision to withdraw him from the classroom.

In a 1912 sex-manual entitled Facts for the Married by William Lee Howard, M.D. (“Author of ‘Plain Facts on Sex Hygiene,’ ‘Confidential Chats with Boys,’ ‘Confidential Chats with Girls’”), Dr. Howard likewise notes the extreme coprolalic behavior engaged in by chorea minor sufferers:

“I remember the case of a beautiful little girl of nine years of age who was in the children’s ward being treated for St. Vitus’ dance (chorea). Her actions became so indecent that she had to be removed to a private room. Soon after this removal she would go off into paroxysms of such a nature that even the physicians and nurses were shocked by her horrible oaths and expressions. Such vile language, such a pouring out of filthy expressions and indecent ribaldry, I have never heard even in the delirium of the gutter degenerate.” (HOWARD 121)

This coprolalic aspect of tic symptoms also illuminates another aspect of Lovecraft’s fiction: i.e., his depiction of depravity via a derangement of language. Cf. here the final speech in “The Rats in the Walls”, in which cries of “Magna Mater! Magna Mater!” [DH 45], i.e., the Great Mother, and references to the castrated demi-god “Atys” [DH 45], eventually give way to meaningless jargon: “Dia ad aghaidh‘s ad aodann…’” [DH 45] -Lovecraft, like Mahler later on, directly tracing Delapore’s degeneracy to an ambivalent maternal/ancestral bond. One also thinks here of the incongruously archaic speech of the vampiric Joseph Curwen in The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, as well as of the marked changed in behavior (and equally ribald language) of Jervas Dudley after his first night in the ancestral tomb in “The Tomb”. As Lovecraft writes, “My speech, always susceptible to environmental influences, was the first thing to succumb to the change; and my suddenly acquired archaism of diction was soon remarked upon” [emphasis mine] (D 9), what Lovecraft calls “a queer boldness and recklessness” (D 9) suddenly coming “into my demeanor” (D 9), until finally “My parents” (D 10) became alarmed at the altered manner and appearance of their only son”. (D 10) Of course, Lovecraft is writing mainly in this story about the incidence of adolescence -but a parallel with the seemingly premature sexual awareness evinced by the child tic/chorea sufferer is also not difficult to discern.

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 04:58PM
Like Lovecraft, too, who, while not shy as a child, was certainly alienated from his fellows (“As a child I was very peculiar and sensitive, always preferring the society of grown persons to that of other children“ [SL I:6]; “Amongst my few playmates I was very unpopular… […] Thus repelled by humans, I sought out refuge and companionship in books“ [SL I:7]; I was “an awkward, nervous and retiring youth” [SL I:9], who was “forced by ill health to absent myself for long periods“ [I:9] from school; “The children I knew disliked me, & I disliked them” [SL I:35], etc.), one notes that Margaret Mahler’s case-study Henry is described by Mahler as being “’shy and timid’” (MAHLER 60), and as being “‘fearful of other children’” (MAHLER 60), as well as being prone to temper tantrums. (As was Lovecraft, during his younger period; as Lovecraft observed in 1919: I “hardly know what an emotion is like [outside of a few bursts of honest anger once in a while!]…” [SL I:87-88] -Lovecraft further admitting that he was “considered a bad boy“ [SL I:38] as a child, with an “ungovernable temperament“. [SL I:39]) Henry was also, one notes, like many of the male children in Mahler’s study, of “superior” (MAHLER 59) intelligence, obese in stature (Mahler calls him “flabby-looking“ [MAHLER 58]) -while “The mother and child‘s interdependence seemed to have been quite extreme at all times.” [italics Mahler‘s] (MAHLER 60) As we shall see, all of these traits -shyness, high intelligence, a temper, obesity, and an overt/ambivalent maternal bond- tend to be typical of many male tiqueurs -and they were also representative of Lovecraft. (One also notes here the marked excremental obsessions shared by Henry and his mother; as Mahler writes:

“…But in the area of anal habit training the mother also infantilized and overprotected the child. Fixation in the anal sphere was indicated by the mother’s constant watching over her son’s excretory functions. She used suppositories almost daily to ‘give him the habit of moving his bowels once a day.’ The patient would sit on the toilet from a half an hour to an hour at a time, and even when he was seven his mother would accompany him to the toilet and forbid him to flush the water before she inspected the bowel movement, The boy stated, ‘Mother always wants to see if I make enough.’” [MAHLER 59-60]

One thinks here, again, of Lovecraft‘s own excremental obsessions, and wonders if it shares a similar origin in maternal oversolicitude.)

Lovecraft’s pitiable lament, too, that “the more I was urged to stop them [the tics], the more frequent they became”, Lovecraft stressing the “‘unconscious & involuntary’” (JOSHI 41) nature of his spasms, also mirrors what Mahler notes regarding the etiology of the tic, in a vicious cycle fueled by parental control. As Mahler observes, the “child becomes aware of his parents’ disapproval of the motor expression…by which he has been acting out certain impulses and affective problems. He then tends to suppress or disguise the free expression of these desires. He tries to hide his gestures and actions by automatically speeding up the sequence of motions, and/or by executing the innervations surreptitiously” (MAHLER 45-46) -after which, however, the motion “loses its discharge function” (MAHLER 46) in a relief of tensions, and becomes “a mere symbol of motions.” (MAHLER 46) Discharge often leads to punishment- which only leads to more tics. As one boy studied by Mahler pathetically observed regarding his own inability to stifle what Mahler calls his “compulsive tics” (MAHLER 80) -in this case, compulsive blinking: “’…later I couldn’t help blinking any more’” (MAHLER 80), while another boy, Mahler writes, “…felt very guilty about his coprolalic tics, and felt them to be ego-alien and overwhelming… ‘Sometimes I can hear myself saying it but sometimes it sounds so low that I don’t even hear myself saying it.’” (MAHLER 64-65)

In Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, too, this same issue of a loss of bodily control -whether as a result of feminine, lunar, or bacchanalian hypnotism, or as a result of beheading (either of the Old Ones in At the Mountains of Madness; of the old gentleman by the Native Americans in “He”; of Herbert West at the hands of his creations in “Reanimator”; or of the masters at the hands of the peasant rabble in Lovecraft’s political essays on Bolshevism, etc.), representing a loss of voluntary mental control over the rest of the body- will reappear consistently and regularly. As ever, Lovecraft’s conservative ethos, and his obsession with hierarchy, whether of race or class, would seem to have had an ultimate psychological motivation. One thinks here, again, too, of Lovecraft’s recurring themes of mind-body transference in his dreams and stories (“The Shadow Out of Time“, “The Evil Clergyman“, “Through the Gates of the Silver Key“, “The Thing on the Doorstep”, etc.) Significantly in this regard, Victoria Nelson in her book The Secret Life of Puppets (2001), will likewise note what she sees as a parallel between Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, and the case-history of a German madman named Daniel Paul Schreber, author of Memoirs of my Nervous Illness (1903), whose psychosis, interestingly, also involved the same issues of bodily control by external alien powers. According to Nelson, Schreber believed he was under “continual bombardment by God’s rays” (NELSON 109), while paranoid “voices from inside told him” (109) he was the victim of an act of “‘soul murder’” (109) by his doctor; “‘No wall however thick,’ Schreber complained, ‘no closed window can prevent the ray filaments penetrating in a way incomprehensible to man and so reaching any part of my body, particularly my head.’” (NELSON 110) In much the same way, Margaret Mahler writes, children overwhelmed by tics also “constantly had to bear the experience of being overwhelmed by ego-alien unpredictable forces” (MAHLER 70-71); as Mahler goes on: “Tics are motor automatisms, which the child tiqueur considers ego-alien. Hence he constantly struggles with them by watching his bodily sensations, particularly those of his musculature, and his attitude toward his motor impulses is a mixture of awe and submission, with uncertainty as to which element will emerge victorious.” (MAHLER 104) Of course, later on in puberty and adulthood, sexuality and orgasm will be characterized by a similar such involuntary/automatic condition, especially with regard to those night flights and voluptuous dreams which so haunted Lovecraft.

Tic syndrome symptoms, according to Mahler, can usually involve “the entire striate musculature” (MAHLER 39), including “the face, neck, arms, hands, legs, abdominal wall, and the trunk. They may also involve the muscle of phonation and vocalization, resulting in grunting, barking and yelling tics, which are path gnomonic of the disease” [emphasis mine] (MAHLER 39) -all of which, of course, recalls the degenerative tics and odd behavior of Mrs. Gardner in “The Colour Out of Space”; Lovecraft, typically, inverting the symptoms of his disease by transferring them from the child onto the parent (in this case, significantly, the mother), by speaking of how Mrs. Gardner’s son “Thaddeus nearly fainted at the way she made faces at him, …” [emphasis mine] (DH 65) Elsewhere, Mahler describes a male child she studied, whose tics developed from blinking, to arm movements, and finally to “vocal tics- animal-like grunting, barking, and squealing noises- as well as echolalia and echopraxia.“ (MAHLER 81) One thinks here, too, of such things as the “dog-like” (DH 356) gait and sub-human “bayings” (DH 360) of the batrachian Deep Ones in “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”, as well as the animalistic “howls and squawking ecstasies” (DH 137) of the Cthulhu cult-voodoo worshippers during the orgy-scene in “The Call of Cthulhu”. (Indeed, what William Seabrook, Robert Eisler and others have described as the animalistic aspects of voodoo and Dionysian ceremonies would seem to reflect a tribal/communal form of release for such unconscious animalistic behaviorisms, much in the same way that Dionysian human sacrifice reflected a communal manifestation of the homicidal instinct.) Other tics, Mahler goes on, manifest themselves in the form of “echo phenomena” (MAHLER 81), so much so that Mahler feels compelled to speak of the “tiqueur’s tendency to imitate.” Indeed, Mahler will observe that the child tiqueur is often “a talented actor” (MAHLER 83), commenting upon how “children with a disposition to a tic are commonly known as imitative and particularly talented in dramatics and otherwise” (MAHLER 85) -which further suggests the imitative aspects of the Shoggoths in Lovecraft’s weird-fiction.

The tic “movement” (MAHLER 38), according to Mahler, contains both “elements of discharge gratification and of punishment” [emphasis mine] (MAHLER 38) (cf. here, again, Lovecraft’s being “urged to stop“, which suggests some punitive measures or threats), originating from an “original, instinctual impulse” (MAHLER 38) which is being unconsciously “censored” by the child’s “superego” (i.e., the internalized restraints of society -in this case, as implemented by Lovecraft’s mother/aunts/grandmother), resulting in “a quick, more or less involuntary, repetitious gesture or movement.” (38) In many ways, indeed, Mahler goes on, the symptoms of tic syndrome represent an “attempt at relief” (MAHLER 66) from what she calls “unbearable emotion” (MAHLER 66) -emotions which, in the adult, usually find relief in sexual activity (or, in more dubious cases, sadism)- and while, as Mahler observes, the adult’s “principal organ of discharge of instinctual tension is the genital, the child’s principal means of discharge is action”. (MAHLER 42) Tic syndrome, in fact, is associated by Mahler with “a chronic state of affective tension” (MAHLER 67), the tics thus representing “an attempted drainage- of the emotional tensions with a (secondary?) symbolic meaning”. (MAHLER 67) (Cf. here the similarly unbearable, uncontainable emotions suffered by the protagonists of Lovecraft’s “The Rats in the Walls” and “The Loved Dead” -not to mention Lovecraft himself, who even as a young man was characterized by what friend Rheinhart Kleiner called “a certain tenseness of manner, which a stranger might have taken, in some of its manifestations, as a desire for argument.” [KLEINER 195])

Indeed, the parallels here with Lovecraft’s later weird-fiction -with its “unnamable”, “forbidden”, unmentionable themes- are clear. Lovecraft, in other words, continued the “censoring” initially exercised by his own mother’s superego- even while the fictional medium still allowed him a certain amount of relief from the strictures which she (and later he himself) imposed. Of course, since Lovecraft would have been denied any sexual/autoerotic outlet for relief at the advent of adolescence, due to both his family’s and his own Puritanical prohibitions, one can well understand the reasons behind, and the nature of, that mental/physical implosion suffered by Lovecraft at the onset of puberty (what Lovecraft calls his “general nervous breakdown of 1908-1909” [SL I:30]), which entailed his long withdrawal from the world -Lovecraft, like his fictional Outsider, feeling himself to be guilty of some crime which he could not accept (in Lovecraft’s case, feelings of sexual desire, and perhaps furtive and ambivalent attempts at masturbation -which Lovecraft, recalling his maternal prohibitions, possibly connected with the sexuality associated with his father‘s illness.) As Lovecraft writes in a 1915 letter, “In 1908 [at age 18] I should have entered Brown University, but the broken state of my health rendered the idea absurd. I was and am prey to intense headaches, insomnia, and general nervous weakness…” (SL I: 9) -this despite the fact that, as Lovecraft elsewhere admits, “I have no actual disease or abnormal organs” (SL I:47), and was later pronounced “so sound organically, that I fear I have many weary years to drag out, …” (SL I:47) Lovecraft’s mother, too, suffered from psychosomatic illness -as Lovecraft admitted, “Nerves have always been the bane of the Phillips family!” (SL I:83) -Lovecraft even openly observing that “my mother’s state is not dangerous; […] the apparent stomach trouble is neurotic & not organic.” (SL I:78)

Like those dandling, “tickling”, childhood movements, too, which so haunted the nightmares of the young Lovecraft, and which represented stimulations of a pregenital, infantile sexuality, the tic is likewise, Mahler writes, “classified in psychoanalytic literature in the category of a pregenital conversion symptom.” (MAHLER 38) Indeed, Mahler astutely notes a similarity between tic symptoms and autoerotic habits -both of which display the same dynamics of tension and release, jerky discharge and guilty self-punishment (MAHLER 37), so that the tic is often “a masturbation equivalent”. (MAHLER 71) Indeed, Mahler writes, tics “frequently coinciding with or followed by a general bodily jerkiness” (MAHLER 86) sometimes appear “a few weeks after the child has given up autoerotic activities” (MAHLER 86) due to parental pressure. (Interestingly in this connection, one notes Lovecraft’s youthful setting of a small fire, which he had supposedly intended to be one foot by one foot square in size [COOK 112] -an effort which suggests both Lovecraft’s early penchant for order and control, as well as that sexual interest in fire found sometimes in children and adults; with Lovecraft’s search for control in this instance perhaps reflecting Lovecraft’s concern with that loss of control which both caused and was exemplified by his spasmodic tic symptoms.) This same concern over Lovecraft’s bodily movements and freedom, as well as Lovecraft’s ambivalent desire for liberation from the maternal hold, would likewise seem to have underlay Lovecraft’s youthful flirtation with suicide while on his exploratory bicycle rides as a youth -Lovecraft fantasizing about drowning himself in the Barrington River. Lovecraft’s bicycle represented freedom, and Lovecraft’s desire for movement -while the desire for death in the river, represented a concurrent fear of this liberation from the maternal leash, as well as a desire for a reabsorption within the mother (here represented as oblivion, whether of death, or the aquatic womb.)

Indeed, with male tiqueurs, such issues of bodily control are most often centered around the female parent. As Margaret Mahler observes, in many of the tic syndrome cases she studied, “There was a prolonged appersonation by and of the mother: a kind of emotional symbiosis between mother and son was marked by reactive overprotection, pampering, and infantilization.” (MAHLER 69) As Mahler goes on, the mother of the tiqueur often reacts to any attempt at emancipation or aggressiveness on the part of her son with a display of separation anxiety, resulting simultaneously in a display of “threats” (MAHLER 70) on the one hand, and “oversolicitude” (MAHLER 70) on the other -a dynamic reflected as much in Lovecraft’s life, as in his writings (particularly his weird-fiction, in which all attempts at parental emancipation are frustrated or stymied.) Indeed, Mahler also speaks of what she calls “the habitual typical affective attitude of the mother and the child tiqueur” (MAHLER 62), which reflects a struggle of wills, and what Mahler calls “an exceptionally violent and complex struggle between the tendency to repetitive and obstinate motor activity (the child’s impulsions), and the external forces in the environment that strive to moderate and restrict” (MAHLER 80) them. And whereas by age three or four a child normally begins attempts at some form of maternal emancipation, in the incipient tiqueur these fledgling attempts are often curtailed, resulting, Mahler writes, in a “state of being damned up” (MAHLER 70) -crystallizing, Mahler writes, “into the involuntary motor symptoms of true tics” (MAHLER 38) “at school age” (38), the very time, again, of the first manifestation of Lovecraft’s tic symptoms.

As Mahler observes, some tiqueurs:

“…from early age on were prohibited from crying, shouting, running, hammering, or playing with abandon, because of over concern for some member of the family or neighbor [in Lovecraft‘s case, perhaps his disturbed father, or his dour grandmother]. More pathogenic still was the indirect and subtle restriction….through the mother’s emotional attitude toward the son‘s motor independence (e.g., constant admonition about all the risks concerned with freedom of activity, watching over every move, etc.)” (MAHLER 68-69)

As Mahler concludes, “The combined effects of their position and their mother’s neuroses resulted in […] an emotional interdependence which made these children peculiarly susceptible to psychosomatic disease” (MAHLER 69) -with the tic sufferer “afraid not only to show aggression, but to move about freely lest they lose their mother’s love, or hurt themselves.“ (MAHLER 70) All of this, of course, more than adequately describes the troubled, overprotective relationship between his mother and Lovecraft; as early Lovecraft-biographer L. Sprague de Camp explains:

“Without her husband, Susie [Lovecraft] became obsessed by the idea that little Howard was all she had. Since her narrow interests were now concentrated on her son, she protected, coddled, pampered, and indulged the boy to a degree that even the staunchest advocate of permissive upbringing might deem excessive. From the Victorian rocking chair in which she used to rock him to sleep while singing airs from Pinafore and The Mikado, she had the ornamental knobs planed off lest he hurt himself on them. Furthermore:
“‘On their summer vacations at Dudley, Massachusetts….Mrs. Lovecraft refused to eat her dinner in the dining room, not to leave her sleeping son alone for an hour on the floor above. When a diminutive teacher friend Mrs. Sweeney, took the rather rangy youngster for a walk, holding his hand, she was enjoined by Howard’s mother to stoop a little lest she pull the boy’s arm from its socket. When Howard pedaled his tricycle along Angell Street, his mother trooped beside him, a guarding hand upon his shoulder.’” (deCAMP 2)


(Cf. here, again, the aged witch Keziah Mason’s seizing of the sleeping Walter Gilman by his “shoulders” [MM 286] at the beginning of a nocturnal/voluptuous night flight, Lovecraft’s maternal bond here being transfigured into a dream of sexual domination and control.)

As Lovecraft observed in 1919, regarding his mother’s sudden absence from their household (right before her final illness), she has left “my younger aunt as autocrat of this dwelling. My aunt does splendidly- …” [emphasis mine] (SL I:78); of course, if Lovecraft’s aunt is only merely now assuming such a position, then it means his mother was likewise an autocrat, as well. Indeed, as Lovecraft elsewhere avers, “I am obliged to look forward to a long & dreary interval wherein home will be but half a home for want of its dominant figure.“ [emphasis mine] (SL I:81) Susan Lovecraft also controlled her son’s friendships, too -Lovecraft referring in 1918 to how, at age fifteen, he had “frequently” (SL I:70) “entertained” (I:70) another young boy in “my library”, “despite maternal protest.“ [emphasis mine] (SL I:70) Lovecraft’s futile attempt at maternal emancipation in 1917, too, in the form of his abortive enlistment with the Rhode Island National Guard, reveals the extent and nature of his mother’s prohibitions and control. As Lovecraft explains:

“As you may have deduced, I embarked upon this desperate venture without informing my mother; & as you may also have deduced, the sensation created at home was far from slight. In fact, my mother was almost prostrated with the news, … […] Her activities soon brought my military career to a close for the present… […] My mother has threatened to go to any lengths, legal or otherwise, … […] If I had realised to the full how much she would suffer through my enlistment, I should have been less eager to attempt it; … […] Still, I might have known that mothers are always solicitous for their offspring, no matter how worthless said offspring may happen to be!” (SL I:46)

For weeks afterward, Lovecraft would still be writing of what he calls “…the almost frantic attitude of my mother; who makes me promise every time I leave the house that I will not make another attempt at enlistment!” (SL I:48) One thinks here of what Lovecraft calls that “some kind of restlessness” (D 191) of young Jan Martense in “The Lurking Fear”, a restlessness which impels Martense to leave his incestuous “paternal roof” (D 191) and join “the colonial army” (D 191), after which he was “hated as an outsider by his father, uncles, and brothers” (60) -Lovecraft’s racism and his devotion to family coexisting uneasily with an unconscious realization of and revulsion against the taboo of incest, which is closely allied with the error of racism; what Lovecraft here accurately calls the twin “peculiarities and prejudices of the Martenses, …” (60) As ever, incest (peculiarities) and racism (prejudices) go hand in hand. (Interestingly, in her 1946 follow-up study of several male child tiqueurs now entering young adulthood, Mahler found that out of ten males studied, seven had reached military age [MAHLER 91], and that four of the seven had been classified 4F [i.e. unfit], three for mental reasons.) Cf. here, too, the bizarre incident of Lovecraft’s mother and the milk, described by Rheinhart Kleiner as occurring during his first visit to Lovecraft‘s home, “his mother” (KLEINER 196) appearing “in the doorway with a glass of milk” (196) “at every hour” (196), “and Lovecraft forthwith drank it” -an idea perhaps later reflected in the nurse/nursing language in Lovecraft’s weird stories. (DH 47, D 85, DH 277) Indeed, Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, despite what some Lovecraft critics and readers have seen as the lack of female figures in his writings, is replete with images of feminine and maternal domination and control.

And while Lovecraft was able to affirm, elsewhere, that “My family are as delightful and kind as any family could be -my mother is a positive marvel of consideration-” (SL I:69), his mother’s kindness and pampering solicitude were also a prison, which were partially responsible for the psychosomatic illnesses from which Lovecraft suffered, both within and outside her presence. (As Lovecraft observed at the beginning of his mother’s 1919 illness, during her absence: “I cannot eat, nor can I stay up long at a time. Pen-writing or typewriting nearly drives me insane. But my nervous system seems to find its vent in feverish & incessant scribbling with a pencil…” [SL I:78]) One sees a parallel here, between what Mahler terms the alternating and interrelated “threats” and “over solicitude” (MAHLER 70) in the mother-child relationship of tic syndrome sufferers, in which “separation from the mother -amounting to not more than a gradual psychobiological separation tendency on the part of the child- was felt as a threat and reciprocated by threats, on the one hand, and increased oversolicitude on the other.” (MAHLER 70) As Lovecraft’s wife Sonia later observed, Susan Lovecraft “‘lavished both her love and her hate on her only child.‘” (JOSHI 85)

“An only child,” Lovecraft writes in “The Thing on the Doorstep”, “he [Edward Derby] had organic weaknesses which startled his doting parents [tic symptoms?] and caused them to keep him closely chained to their side.” [emphasis mine] (DH 277) Strong language indeed- “chained”; suggestive of a prison-like atmosphere, perhaps also reflected in the charnel, dungeon-like atmosphere of the childhood-scenes in Lovecraft‘s “The Outsider.” “He [Derby] was never allowed out without his nurse,” Lovecraft goes on, “and seldom had a chance to play unconstrained with other children” (DH 277) -with “imagination” (277) being “his one avenue of freedom.” (That- and perhaps also tic-like seizures.) And, like Lovecraft, who never stayed away from home overnight until well into adulthood, Derby’s “parents would not let him board away from them.” (DH 278) That these issues of dominance and control are primarily associated with Derby’s mother, meanwhile, is demonstrated by the thirty-four-year-old Derby’s eventual reaction to his mother’s death, Derby being “incapacitated” (DH 279) for months “by some odd psychological malady” (279), after which “he seemed to feel a sort of grotesque exhilaration, as if of partial escape from some unseen bondage.” (In “The Shunned House”, too, Lovecraft will prove to be quite acute in his diagnosis of his tic symptoms, and their origin in an interdependent and destructive relationship between his mother and himself: Lovecraft observing how “The boy would seem to improve after these visits [to his cousin], and had Mercy been as wise as she was well-meaning, she would have let him live permanently with Peleg.” [MM 242])

Later on, too, even after Derby’s mother has been replaced by his sinister wife, Asenath Waite, Derby’s principle complaint about Asenath is the threat of physical control over his body -suggestive as much of the involuntary physical processes of intercourse and orgasm, as of the ineluctable dominance of the parent over the child. “She [Asenath] was getting hold of him,” Lovecraft writes, “and he knew that some day she would never let go” [emphasis mine] (DH 288); Asenath “constantly took his body” (DH 288) Lovecraft tells us, “leaving him in her body and locking him upstairs” (DH 288) (one being reminded, here, of a mother punishing a “bad boy” by locking him in his room.) As Derby complains, Asenath is “stealing my body-crowding me out-making a prisoner of me” (DH 293) -Derby’s complaint eventually dissolving into a delirium, in which the sexual/nocturnal realm of Lovecraft’s nightmares is confused with the unstoppable “force“ of a dominant mother‘s power:

“-Again, again-she’s trying-I might have known-nothing can stop that force; not distance nor magic, nor death-it comes and comes, mostly in the night-I can’t leave-it’s horrible-oh, God, Dan, if you only knew as I do just how horrible it is…” [emphasis mine] (DH 297)

Lovecraft visits this same theme of overt maternal control in his fantasy story “Celephais”, in which Kuranes only finds happiness as a child during one afternoon, “when he had slipt away from his nurse… […] He had protested then, when they had found him, waked him, and carried him home, …” [emphasis mine] (D 85) -much in the same way, again, that the Night Gaunts carried away the hapless sleeping Lovecraft. Cf. here, too, “The Dreams in the Witch House”, in which “the old woman [witch Keziah Mason] had been” (MM 289) seen “dragging the youth [Walter Gilman]” [emphasis mine] (MM 289) after her through the mud en route to an act of child sacrifice, with Gilman himself being described in infantile terms as “a young white man in his night-clothes.” (MM 289) During the act of sacrifice itself, too, Gilman is described as being “unable to control his own motions” (MM 291) -which, again, recalls Mahler’s association of the origin of tic symptoms in the “parents’ disapproval of the motor expression (in speech and behavior) by which he has been acting out certain impulses and affective problems.” (MAHLER 45) In Lovecraft and C.M. Eddy’s disturbing and necrophilic “The Loved Dead”, too, Lovecraft/Eddy will refer to maternal control twice -tantalizingly, in the context of the death of the narrator’s “grandparent”. (HM 350) And both times, it is a blow from the mother’s elbow which serves to disturb the son’s nascent sexual/necrophilic reveries: “Roused from my momentary reverie by a nudge from my mother’s sharp elbow, I followed her across the room to the casket where the body of my grandparent lay.” (HM 349-350) While at the coffin, too, it is “the vigorous prod of a maternal elbow” (HM 350) which suddenly “jarred me into activity.”

In “The Colour Out of Space”, meanwhile, as we have already seen, Lovecraft will obviously invert/reverse the symptoms of his childhood chorea, instead attributing them to the mother in the story; who is surely, given what Mahler has to say about the origins of male tic syndrome in overt maternal control over the child, an appropriate target for such an inversion. As Lovecraft observes -closely reflecting what Mahler also has to say about the interdependent and ambivalent nature of mother-son relationships in such instances (and incidentally caricaturing and diagnosing his own maternal difficulties as he does so)- “In the twilight he [Ammi] hastened home, the screams of the mad woman and the nervous child ringing horribly in his ears” [emphases mine] (DH 68) -the shared madness of mother and son feeding off of and further reinforcing each other. Despite his fictional medium, Lovecraft was very acute in his diagnosis. Lovecraft also strengthens this connection with his own tic symptoms when he describes how the two Gardner boys, Thaddeus and Merwin, suddenly withdrew from school -closely paralleling Lovecraft’s own withdrawal from school due to tic symptoms: “…the boys were in a constant state of nervous tension,” [emphasis mine] (DH 66) Lovecraft writes; “They shunned people, and when school opened the boys did not go” (66) (Lovecraft’s diagnosis here of “nervous tension” also being surprisingly acute, and further paralleling Margaret Mahler’s own diagnosis of the origins of tic syndrome, in unresolved infantile tensions which have no outlet save for uncontrollable tics.) This pathological interdependence between mother and sons finally culminates in Thaddeus’ eventual madness -Thaddeus being shut “in an attic room across the hall from his mother’s” (DH 66); after which, in an echo of the obscene/coprolalic seizures of some tic syndrome and chorea sufferers, mother and son begin to talk to each other in a glossolalic idiom incomprehensible to everyone else: “The way they screamed at each other from behind their locked doors was very terrible, especially to little Merwin, who fancied they talked in some terrible language that was not of earth.” (DH 66) Later on, after Thaddeus dies, Lovecraft will further connect the madness of Mrs. Gardner with her children, writing of how “Now and then Merwin’s screams were answered faintly from the attic” (DH 67) -suggesting direct connection between the turmoil experienced by Merwin and the mental state of the mother.

It is also possible that Lovecraft’s grandmother was another source of unwanted or overt familial control; certainly, Lovecraft’s fleeting description of Rhoby Place suggests a formidable person -a presumably religious Victorian woman who was educated “at Lapham Seminary” (SL I:7), further described as “a serene, quiet lady of the old school” (SL I:33), who, Lovecraft admits, “did her best to correct my increasingly boorish deportment -for my nervousness made me a very restless & uncontrollable child.” [emphases mine] (SL I:33) Here, just as in “The Dreams in the Witch House”, in which the crone Keziah Mason controls Gilman’s movements with her grip on his pajamas, we can see an aged, stern female disciplinarian attempting to control Lovecraft’s restless and uncontrollable motions. And, just as in “The Colour Out of Space”, in “The Shunned House” Lovecraft will invert/reverse his own chorea/tic syndrome symptoms onto a dominant female figure: in this case “The widowed Rhoby Harris” (MM 241), who likewise seems to be suffering from tics involving coprolalic obscenities/vocal paroxysms. As Lovecraft observes here about Rhoby, “Just what Mrs. Harris cried out in her fits of violence, tradition hesitates to say” (MM 242), Rhoby giving voice “to dreams and imaginings of the most hideous sort” (MM 242) during her “long periods“ (MM 243) of “madness” (MM 242) -language as fitting for coprolalic/sexual obscenities as it is for the language of occult transgression.

One discerns an overriding concern with parental/maternal control, too, in Lovecraft’s recurring picture of child sacrifice and child murder throughout his weird canon, often at the hands of a dominant female figure. Cf. here what Lovecraft calls the “small white figure -an infant boy, unclothed and unconscious” (MM 291) (also called “the small white victim” [emphasis mine] [MM 291] -language which presents a startling contrast with Lovecraft’s numerous instances, elsewhere, of parental giganticism), who is sacrificed by “the ancient crone” (MM 291) in “The Dreams in the Witch House”, and whom Lovecraft pointedly juxtaposes with “the monstrous, leering old woman with a gleaming, grotesque-hafted knife in her right hand, …” (MM 291) One thinks here of the Magna Mater in Lovecraft‘s “The Rats in the Walls”, there juxtaposed with the castrative rites of Atys, and associated with an unending ossuary of countless skeletons from millennia of the Delapores’ acts of human sacrifice. And in “The Dreams in the Witch House“, too, Lovecraft ends his story with the shocking discovery in witch Keziah Mason’s former loft of “a veritable ossuary of the bones of small children -some fairly modern, but others extending back in infinite gradations to a period so remote that crumbling was almost complete” (MM 298) -Lovecraft further refining his ossuary-picture in the latter tale, into an image in closer concordance with the psychological and childhood origins of Lovecraft’s imagery; the Magna Mater kills/castrates her own children. Cf. here, too, what Lovecraft calls “the blood of stainless childhood” (D 260) which is spilled to satisfy the “phosphorescent Lilith” [emphasis mine] (260) in “The Horror at Red Hook” -a phosphorescence, intriguingly, which is later replicated by Mrs. Gardner in “The Colour Out of Space”, who is, Lovecraft tells us, seen to be “slightly luminous in the dark” (DH 65) ! (All imagery which represents the malevolent obverse of that divine luminosity which characterizes the “radiant pair” [HM 14] in “The Crawling Chaos.”)

Margaret Mahler lists a series of very specific traits which are characteristic of the male child tiqueur. The personality of the tiqueur, she writes, presents “very constant and typical traits. It is characterized by a peculiar mixture of high intellectual endowment, emotional immaturity, and proneness to intermittent affect motor outbursts (temper tantrums)” [emphasis mine] (MAHLER 39) -tantrums which Mahler goes on to connect with the same “suppressed aggression” and “affective tension” (MAHLER 52) which supposedly underlie tic syndrome itself. As Mahler goes on elsewhere, “all children with organ neurotic tic syndrome (except those with organic brain damage) had an I.Q. which placed them into the bracket of superior intelligence.” (MAHLER 59) The tiqueur too, Mahler goes on, is typically male (MAHLER 67), (a fact which Mahler associates with the close integration of the male “neuromuscular apparatus” [MAHLER 67] with its function “as the organ of erotic, aggressive attack.” [67]) The tiqueur is likewise, according to Mahler, typically obese (MAHLER 68), with 50% of the male tiqueurs that Mahler studied/treated being overweight (MAHLER 51) -a fact which, again, presents an interesting parallel with both Lovecraft himself, as well as Lovecraft’s fiction.

Early on, indeed, Lovecraft was, as Muriel Eddy observes, “inclined to plumpness” (EDDY 51); he loved fattening foods like ice cream and candy; and the photographs of a young adult Lovecraft in 1922, reprinted on page 84 of Willis Conover’s Lovecraft at Last, do reveal a rather more stout Lovecraft than one is used to from later photographs. As an amused Lovecraft later wrote to Robert Bloch in 1933:

“Someday, when in a comedy mood, I’ll send you a snap or two of Grandpa taken in the 1922-24 period. Can you imagine my trunk hitched to a fat man’s face? Incidentally, it was during my fat period that I had my only personal meeting with our friend Moe- what a mental picture he must carry!” (SL IV:204)

Of course, Lovecraft was in his thirties when these pictures were taken, but it may be that he was also stout during certain periods as a child, especially with his mother plying him with a glass of milk every hour. One recalls here, too, the numerous incidences of corpulence (the plump Norrys in “The Rats in the Walls”; the fat cook in “The Moon Bog”; and the corpulent Suydham in “The Horror at Red Hook”) in Lovecraft’s weird-fiction -as well as the notable baby fat seen on the precocious but immature Edward Derby in “The Thing on the Doorstep”, Lovecraft writing of the “sickly flabbiness caused by his [Derby‘s] indolent habits.” (DH 288) Tellingly, all of these male figures end up being sacrificed to female fertility figures in Lovecraft’s fiction (the Magna Mater in “Rats”; Demeter [i.e., “the mother”] in “The Moon Bog”, Asenath in “Doorstep”, and Lilith in “Red Hook”) -a fact which mirrors Mahler’s own supposition that the obesity of such male tiqueurs is seen by them as paralleling female pregnancy and fertility. As Mahler writes, the obesity of certain child tiqueurs would seem to unconsciously reflect “their wanting to have babies, to be pregnant” (MAHLER 68), with the murder of these men in Lovecraft‘s weird-fiction perhaps being an instance of vengeful female deities revenging themselves for the usurpation of their “stolen” procreative function.

The typical tiqueur too, Mahler goes on, is also usually “inhibited, often depressed, anxious” (MAHLER 58), and usually had no “athletic pursuits and avoided the competitive games of contemporaries.” (MAHLER 58) He often suffered from “an accumulation of sicknesses which restricted motor freedom” (MAHLER 68), there often being a “cumulation of childhood diseases at the period of learning to master the independent motility function“. (68) Likewise, the child tiqueur also often demonstrated “a tendency toward accidents” (68), as well as (much like H.P. Lovecraft) a tendency toward “hypochondriacal self-observation.” (MAHLER 87) Much like H.P. Lovecraft, too, the tiqueur often:

“…occupied a position of abnormally increased importance in the family setting. In about 90 percent of our cases tiqueurs occupied an inordinately important or exceptional position within the family group. This position became their either because they were the only children or ‘the baby’, sometimes of old parents; or they were the first living child (in six cases, after miscarriages, death of older siblings or habitual abortions); or they were ‘only sons’ among several sisters.” (MAHLER 69)

Lovecraft, of course, fits this profile precisely. Lovecraft’s high intellect, his aversion to physical sports, and his emotional stuntedness, are easily confirmable. Lovecraft also suffered from numerous bouts of illness and accidents as a child, and apparently fell on his head while exploring a neighboring construction site. As young as seven in 1898, Joshi writes, Lovecraft “had his first nervous breakdown” (JOSHI 40), while “Another ‘near-breakdown’ occurred in 1900” (40), Lovecraft reporting that “‘I didn‘t inherit a very good set of nerves, since near relatives on both sides of my ancestry were prone to headaches, nerve-exhaustion, and breakdowns.’” (JOSHI 40) Lovecraft, indeed, was often inclined, especially in early-life, to hypochondria: describing himself as an “invalid” -an idea which sometimes startled his correspondents when they finally met him in person- and found him (much like Thomas F. Malone in “The Horror at Red

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 05:02PM
Hook”) to be a tall, strapping, and in no way incapacitated individual. Lovecraft, too, was not only an only child, but also the sole male of his age-group among mainly female relatives; and, while his parents were not especially old, neither were they an especially fertile or happy couple; Winfield and Susan‘s “old age” was premature, so to speak (as was Lovecraft’s.)

The solutions which Margaret Mahler advocates for the sufferers of tic syndrome, too, strongly correspond to the solution which H.P. Lovecraft himself hit upon, via his devotion to literature, writing, correspondence, amateur journalism, architectural exploration, and literary art. As Mahler observes in her follow-up essay, “Outcome of the Tic Syndrome” (1946): “the vicious circle” (MAHLER 99) of a “neurotic” (99) parental environment is often, Mahler goes on, only broken by adherence to a rigid code of work. The “opportunity for and strong emphasis on organized physical work out of doors” (99) Mahler tells us, “seems to be one of the most important auxiliary factors in the recovery or improvement of the tic syndrome.” (MAHLER 99) Mahler further suggests that, in addition to “athletic exercise outdoors” (106), “wherever possible, artistic outlets should be encouraged.” [emphasis mine] (106) Instinctively, perhaps, or perhaps through sheer force of will, it can be seen that Lovecraft’s writing, whether weird and intellectual, and whether fantastic and nightmarish, perhaps conveyed some unconscious therapeutic benefit -a process similar to that with which Lovecraft, during his last days in the hospital, greeted and fought against the process of dying. A writer to the end, he wrote against that end. To that extent, Lovecraft’s weird-fiction -salutary for him, and reflective of an active intelligence striving against its stricken and confining environment- is heroic.

In reaching this tentative diagnosis of his symptoms, however, Lovecraft was feeling his way in the dark. Indeed, Mahler’s papers were only published in the decade following Lovecraft’s death -and the theories advanced by medical science during Lovecraft’s own formative years to explain the odd symptoms of childhood chorea were sometimes disturbing in the extreme. This, plus the fact that Lovecraft’s chorea/tic symptoms were startlingly similar to the altered behavior apparent in his own father’s manner under the influence of syphilis, is significant -and suggests the degree to which the two syndromes were perhaps related, if not in fact, then at least in Lovecraft’s own mind. Lovecraft, as well as his mother, may well have feared that he had become infected by the same sexual taint which had either first led to or was inculcated by his father’s “depravity” -hence the mirror scene in “The Outsider”, in which the unclean and diseased decay of the corpse is revealed to be none other than the narrator himself.

Consider, for instance, the odd theories of chorea minor advanced by Dr. William Lee Howard in his book Facts for the Married, Dr. Howard being quick to directly link the symptoms of childhood chorea to parental depravity -what he calls “evil thinking and culpable negligence as existed in the parents” (HOWARD 118)- although Dr. Howard forgoes Dr. Mahler’s later and purely psychological approach, and instead posits the incredible idea of “evil impressions” (HOWARD 120) from the parents being directly and physically received by the “reproductive plasm” (118) of the unborn child in the womb. (!) As Dr. Howard observes, regarding coprolalic tics in young children: “I have seen such extraordinary outbursts of blasphemy, such immoral gestures and acts in the little child, that surely it must have received the words and witnessed the acts in some previous existence” (HOWARD 120), i.e. “prenatal conditions which allow the impression of words and acts coming from outside to remain forever fixed in the unborn.” (HOWARD 121) In support of this hypothesis, Dr. Howard cites the unlikely example of a morally deficient male youth -whose penchant for truancy Dr. Howard traces to an incident when his pregnant mother, called here the “‘the silent and loving wife’” (HOWARD 109), accidentally saw her husband come “‘home for the first time showing the influence of liquor.’” (109) As Dr. Howard goes on:

“‘…the shock of seeing her heretofore temperate husband under the influence of drink, did affect the sightless, the growing babe in the womb.
“‘He could not see, but he could receive blood and juices from the mother which had been poisoned by the effects of her shock.’ […]
“[…]
“‘If, when this child was five years of age -supposing it to have been normally born- he had been seized by his father and poison injected into his little body, what would we think? Murderous; inhuman! And the law? Take hold of the case -assuredly.
“‘Yet, by the father’s unthinking act; coming home drunk to his pregnant wife, he did the same thing -injected poison into the tender body of his child….’” (110)


Of course, if our misguided Dr. Howard finds fault with something as innocuous as this, one can easily imagine what he has to say about such things as the “gross sensuality on the part of either parent while the child is growing in the womb” (HOWARD 118) -i.e., parental sexuality: Dr. Howard equally condemning both what he calls “some one” (HOWARD 119) momentary lapse in parental sexual probity, as well as “continuous outbursts of sensuality”, either one of which can serve to infect the embryo with things “it should never have heard or seen”. (HOWARD 119) (Dr. Howard makes the mistake, here, of crediting an embryo in the womb with possessing as much imagination as himself.) As Dr. Howard observes, the spectacle of “the father” (HOWARD 123) allowing “his inherent animal nature to be aroused by artificial stimulants” (123) and then forcing “his wife against her desire” (123) to engage in sexual intercourse thus “runs the risk” (123) of transferring “the effect of his cruel act [to the unborn child] through the emotional disgust of his wife”. (123) Indeed, Dr. Howard directly goes on to link “girls who were born natural prostitutes” (HOWARD 119) to the “uncontrollable sensuality” (HOWARD 120) of their parents -observing of a young girl born of a prostitute, who was later adopted and reared by respectable parents, but who then came to display the more obscene symptoms of chorea, “Cannot you imagine what scenes, what words, what acts, this little unborn being witnessed and heard for nine months?” (HOWARD 122) (Ironically in this instance, Dr. Howard here unknowingly goes on to confirm Dr. Mahler’s own later theories: describing this nine-year-old adopted female chorea-sufferer as having been “surrounded by wealth and culture, her nurses and governesses were good and decent women” [emphases mine] [121], with “the father and mother devoting much time to her -the foster mother especially giving her the wealth of her overflowing maternal instincts” [emphases mine] [HOWARD 121-122] -language which closely parallels Dr. Mahler’s own later diagnosis of overt familial/maternal control as a deciding factor in the development of tic-syndrome, not to mention prefiguring Lovecraft’s own “nurse” and control-related language throughout his weird-fiction.) Not surprisingly, Dr. Howard sagely counsels “that intercourse cease during pregnancy, for otherwise the risk to the unborn is great” (HOWARD 120), observing in fastidious language which echoes Lovecraft‘s own later and practiced asexuality: “There is no excuse for breaking this law of nature unless sensuality and indecency be an excuse”. (HOWARD 123) (Cf. here, too, Lovecraft’s description of the “grotesque” [D 205] “psychic emanations” [D 205] of the “morbid blasphemy against nature“ [205] in “The Unnamable”.) Indeed, with the linkages which Dr. Howard posits here between alcohol, sensuality, and corruption, one naturally thinks here of both Lovecraft’s temperance household and his “‘touch me not’” (deCAMP 17) mother -the latter characteristic also being, as Margaret Mahler notes, typical of the mothers of the child tiqueur. (“The mothers of such patients”, Mahler observes, “showed an intolerance of ‘phallic aggression,’ coupled with markedly high standards of intellectual achievement” [MAHLER 69] -such mothers often being “overprotective, vindictive, and extremely intolerant of any manifestation of phallic aggression or exhibitionistic tendencies in their sons.“ [MAHLER 69])

Of course, there is no knowing whether Lovecraft and his mother were aware of Dr. Howard’s theories, nor do I have any authoritative information as to how widespread or prevalent Dr. Howard’s odd ideas were. That such ideas of parental imprinting were widespread around the turn-of-the-20th-century, however, is further suggested by Otto Weininger’s seminal book Sex and Character, whose ideas about the imitativeness and malleability of both Jews and women so resemble Lovecraft’s own, and in which Weininger, in passing, espouses a semi-mystical theory of impression to account for inherited characteristics on the part of offspring, suggesting that “a man” may have “an influence on a woman so great that her children of whom he is not the father” (WEININGER 218) may still “resemble him” (WEININGER 218), “although physical relations between him and the mother have not taken place”. (WEININGER 218) As Weininger goes on, (more than a little questionably):

“White women who have borne a child to a black man, are said if they bear children afterwards to white men, to have retained enough impression from the first mate to show an effect on subsequent children. All such facts, grouped under the names of ‘telegony’, ‘germinal infection,’ and so on, although disputed by scientists, speak for my view… […] and the ‘actual’ father has to share his paternity with perhaps other men and many other things….” (WEININGER 233)

-an idea which suggests that, if Lovecraft was aware of such an idea, perhaps something other than normal intercourse may account for the bizarre progeny in “The Unnamable”, “The Horror at Red Hook” and “The Dunwich Horror”.

At any rate, if Lovecraft’s mother were aware of Dr. Howard’s bizarre theories of paternal impression, or of ideas like them, then she may have taken Lovecraft’s bizarre childhood malady as the outward manifestation of some familial -or, more specifically, paternal taint. The fact that Lovecraft’s own childhood tic symptoms so closely mirror that degeneracy which affects the characters in his fiction: both the children (“The Tomb”) and the parents (“The Colour Out of Space”, “The Rats in the Walls”), also suggests a similar interchangeability and interrelation between parental corruption and inherited defects, as does Lovecraft’s curious process of parental transference/inversion in his stories, whereby he makes Jervas Dudley and Charles Dexter Ward, rather than their fathers, the madmen in their respective stories.

Ultimately, both Lovecraft’s paternal/undead Cthulhu, sending dreams to men from his grave at the bottom of the ocean, and Dr. Howard’s “immaculate conception” theory of inherited corruption, represent mythological versions of the purely psychological processes posited by Margaret Mahler and Ernest Jones. Save that whereas Dr. Howard writes of nameless sensual crimes, perceived by the innocent child within the mother’s womb (whether drunkenness, vice, prostitution, sensuality, etc.), Lovecraft writes of equally nebulous and nameless monsters, often perceived by Lovecraft’s protagonists on the other side of locked (vaginal) trapdoors, in either the basement or attic -almost as if Lovecraft has refracted Dr. Howard’s pseudo-Freudian idea of parental corruption and infantile malleability through the lens of the classical myths he read as a child, and the pulp-fiction he devoured as an adolescent.


V. Conclusions

All these things: H.P. Lovecraft’s weird-fiction; Lovecraft’s cannibalistic/necrophilic/ and sadistic imagery; Lovecraft’s recurring intense dreams and nightmares; and his youthful chorea/tic symptoms, can be seen to have a mutual origin in repressed psychosexual and incestuous conflicts, stemming largely from his intense and ambivalent relationship with his mother. Indeed, both Lovecraft’s life and his symptoms read almost like a textbook case -although Lovecraft, unlike the many cases cited by Dr. Margaret Mahler and Ernest Jones, was a writer, able to embody his pathology and nightmares in a tangible and, one thinks, ultimately beneficial form. And although Lovecraft’s adolescence -normally a period of emancipation and potential liberation- instead coincided for Lovecraft with a nervous breakdown which saw him withdrawing inwards, dropping out of both high school and avoiding college, and entering in upon an isolated existence with his mother and aunts at home, Lovecraft did affect an escape (of a kind) through those very same nightmares which his unnatural environmental conditions spawned. Incest conflicts, repression, and racism spawned terrors- but Lovecraft learned to control these terrors, and to rearrange these horrors into art.

H.P. Lovecraft himself seems to have been very much aware of this pathological aspect of his weird-fiction. And although Lovecraft would occasionally deride any psychological or Freudian explanations for the weird-phenomena in his tales, one also notes the degree to which Lovecraft’s own stories so closely mirror psychological case studies in their form and composition. “The Tomb”, for instance, is narrated by a madman in his cell, during which he enumerates a tale of parental/ancestral relationships, successive symptoms, and increasing degeneration, all from within a purely clinical context. In “The Horror at Red Hook”, too, the entire bacchanalian back-story of the tale is presented in the form of a (psychological?) explanation for the protagonist’s hysterical screaming and fainting fit at the start of the story, with “All the specialists” (D 260) later telling him that “Of course” (260) everything that happened in the tale “was all a dream” (D 260); a dream which represented Lovecraft’s true psycho-sexual motivations. The narrative of “Pickman’s Model” is likewise presented as an explanation for the “nervous” (DH 12) narrator’s sudden queer prejudice: i.e., his fear of subterranean places; while in “The Shadow out of Time”, in perhaps the most telling and significant example of a Lovecraftian inversion of parental madness, Lovecraft will have Nathaniel’s Peaslee’s son be a “psychologist” (DH 433), who attempts to interpret his father’s dreams and apparent madness. The very title of Lovecraft‘s “Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family”, too, both suggests the degree to which the revelations of the story violate the rules of Victorian probity (revealing family secrets), as well as the way in which this revelation parallels modernistic (Freud, Krafft-Ebing, Magnus Herschfeld, etc.) psychological case studies.

Significantly however (and ironically, given the fact that he himself is a psychiatric intern in a mental hospital!), Lovecraft’s narrator in “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” will be quick to dismiss what he calls Freud’s “puerile symbolism” (D 25) of dreams -suggesting instead that dreams represent something of an “immundane and ethereal” (D 25) existence, an “incorporeal life” separate from “terrestrial consciousness.” Freud’s symbolism is only puerile, however, if the beliefs of Lovecraft’s narrators about dreams being windows into another existence are the truth: and they are not. In much the same way that Lovecraft reverses history in “The Whisperer in Darkness”, so that his own fictional alien entities are seen to be the origin of classical Arcadian and sylvan deities, so too does Lovecraft here set his own myth-making abilities the task of explaining, via his patented extra-dimensional means, the basic psychological structures and unconscious imagery which haunts the human mind. Lovecraft’s later (and keynote) declaration in “The Call of Cthulhu”, that “The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents” (DH 125), says less, one thinks, about the universe itself, than about Lovecraft’s mind in particular, and those elaborate circumlocutions designed to ignore and obscure, while at the same time confess and reveal, his incestual motivations (or perhaps actions?) And although S.T. Joshi, in his essay “Time, Space, and Natural Law” (2010), attempts to ground Lovecraft’s overriding concern with the issues of devolution, bestiality, and incest in Lovecraft’s scientific (specifically, evolutionary) concerns, it seems more likely that Lovecraft’s bleak scientific views merely formed a corroboration for an inherent fascination with the depths of nightmare-imagery.

It is striking that for an such ostensibly cosmic writer, so many of Lovecraft’s weird tales deal with such mundane (read sadistic) matters as cannibalism, incest, and necrophilia -Lovecraft’s weird-fiction preserving infantile sadistic fantasies in crystallized form. The place of such “mundane” horrors in Lovecraft’s ostensibly “cosmic” weird-fiction has always been problematic; but dreams, too, are “mundane” -and often concerned with sex and excretory functions- reflecting mental issues which are repressed in waking life. And thus, to the extent to which Lovecraft’s weird-fiction embodies nightmare ideas and imagery: night flights, ambivalence of desire, predatory female sexuality, paralysis, etc., it will always be “mundane.” The ultimate irony is thus that Lovecraft chose the medium of the macabre to express his notion of the cosmic in the first place -since, (although this fact becomes obscured in Lovecraft’s horror stories), the cosmic and the macabre are two intrinsically different things.

The final form which Lovecraft’s weird writings eventually assumed, of course, was also molded by his polemical intentions, and by his very exacting aesthetic ideas. And while Lovecraft’s troubled dreams and nightmares may have given rise to the basic contours of his so-called “Mythos”, (in much the same way that human nightmares and neuroses earlier gave rise to the superstitions of Ancient Greece and the Middle Ages), this would still not explain the polemical function of certain stories (such as the sociological parable embedded in At the Mountains of Madness, or the neo-Puritan apocalypticism embodied in “The Call of Cthulhu“ or “The Shadow Over Innsmouth.”) In the midst of his nightmares, Lovecraft could still not resist pontificating. The fact that many of Lovecraft’s most ardent socio-political notions, however, whether his Anglophilia or his racism, were ultimately grounded in the same irrational repressions which fueled his nightmares, does much to undermine these notions themselves -even if they were not already, on the face of them, so obviously ridiculous. The ultimate value of Lovecraft’s weird-fiction, lies solely in the uncanny terror which Lovecraft, with unerring accuracy, manages to communicate to the reader; whether one agrees with Lovecraft or not, nightmares form a context of commonality. Sexuality, desire, repression, sadism, reside alike in all of us, as do the terrors that arise therefrom. In Lovecraft’s nightmares, we recognize our own.

Footnotes

Footnote 1 For a dream of unalloyed eroticism in Lovecraft‘s weird-fiction, one thinks of what young Jervas Dudley calls “the wild dances” (D 4) of “the presiding dryads” (D 4) in “The Tomb”, which he has “often” (D 4) watched “in the struggling beams of a waning moon” (D 4) -visions which Dudley explicitly links with his time spent “reading, thinking, and dreaming.” [emphasis mine] (D 4) (Compare Lovecraft’s classical/erotic language, here, with his own definition of erotic love in a letter to future wife Sonia Greene: “‘…Youth brings with it certain erogenous and imaginative stimuli bound up in the tactile phenomena of slender, virginally-postured bodies and visual imagery of classical aesthetic contours symbolizing a kind of freshness and Springtime immaturity which is very beautiful…’” [deCAMP 208]) All of this sensual imagery in “The Tomb”, however, is but a prelude to necrophilia and incest, with Dudley’s “strange dreams” (D 7) becoming inextricably linked with his ancestral and charnel obsessions by the time he comes “of age”. (D 7)

Footnote 2 As Ernest Jones observes in On the Nightmare, “The cannibalistic idea of devouring human flesh, so characteristic of the Werewolf superstition, is derived from both […] erotic and the hostile” (JONES 151) motivations, involving “the wish to devour both the loved and the hated object.” (JONES 151) Serial killer John Joubert’s violent fantasies, for example, first began “at age six or seven” (RESSLER 107), when he dreamed of “coming up behind his baby-sitter, strangling her, and then eating her until she disappeared.” (RESSLER 107) (Interestingly, “six or seven” is the same age at which Margaret Mahler likewise locates the crystallization of child tic symptoms.)

Footnote 3 John Munder Ross, in his book Sadomasochism of Everyday Life (1997), confirms this basically sadistic infantile view (as Ross observes, for the child, it “seems that the mother, moaning in pleasure, is being beaten or hurt by the father. The watching child links his or her own pleasurable and painful bodily experiences -defecating, getting spanked, having enemas, having his or her temperature taken, being hit by another child- with the mother‘s feminine position and further conceives of this as masochistic.“ [ROSS 144-145])


Works Cited
Baring-Gould, Sabine. The Book of Werewolves. Intro. by Nigel Suckling. First published in 1865. Senate, London: 1995.

Cook, W. Paul, “In Memoriam: Howard Phillips Lovecraft: recollections, Appreciations,
Estimates.” Lovecraft Remembered. Ed. by Peter Cannon. Arkham House, Sauk
City, WI: 1998.

De Camp, L. Sprague. Lovecraft: A Biography. Paperback, abridged edition. Ballantine, Books, New York: 1976.

De River, M.D., F.A.C.S.., J. Paul, editor. The Sexual Criminal, A Psychoanalytical Study. Second edition. Charles C. Thomas, Publisher, Springfield, IL:1956.

Eddy, Muriel, “The Gentleman from Angell Street.” Lovecraft Remembered. Ed. by Peter Canon. Arkham House, Sauk City, WI: 1998.

Hirschman, M.D., Louis J.. Hand Book of Diseases of the Rectum. C.V. Mosby Medical Book & Publishing Co., St Louis: 1909.

Howard, M.D., William Lee. Facts for the Married. Edward J. Cole, Publisher, New York: 1912.

Jones M.D., Ernest. On the Nightmare. New Edition. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation, 1951.

Joshi, S.T. H.P. Lovecraft: A Life. Third printing. Necronomicon Press, West Warwick, RI: 2004.

Lewis, Roger. Anthony Burgess, A Biography. Thomas Dunne Books, St. Martin’s Press, New York: 2004.

Lovecraft, H.P. From Quebec to the Stars. Ed. by L. Sprague de Camp. Donald M. Grant, West Kingston, RI: 1976.

Kleiner, Rheinhart, “Discourse on H.P. Lovecraft.” Lovecraft Remembered. Ed. by Peter Canon. Arkham House, Sauk City, WI: 1998.

Mahler, Margaret. The Selected Papers of Margaret S. Mahler. Volume One: Infantile Psychosis and Early Contributions. Volume Two: Separation-Individuation. Intro. by Marjorie Hartley, Ph.D. & Annemarie Weil, M.D. 2nd printing. Jason Aronson, 1982.

Murray, Will, “Autumn in Providence: Harry K. Brobst on Lovecraft.” Lovecraft Remembered.
Ed. by Peter Canon. Arkham House, Sauk City, WI: 1998.

Nelson, Victoria. The Secret Life of Puppets. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts: 2001.

Ressler, Robert. Whoever Fights Monsters. With Tom Shachtman. St. Martin’s Press, New York: 1992.

Ross, John Munder, PhD. The Sadomasochism of Everyday Life. Why We Hurt Ourselves
-and Others- and How to Stop. Simon & Shuster, New York: 1997.

Scott, Winfield Townley, “His Own Most Fantastic Creation, Howard Phillips Lovecraft.” Lovecraft Remembered. Ed. by Peter Canon. Arkham House, Sauk City, WI: 1998.

Shea, J. Vernon, “Did HPL Suffer From Chorea?”, Outré, No. 5., pp. 30-31. May, 1977.

Summers, Montague. The Vampire in Europe. University Books: 1968.

Webster, John, & Cyril Tourneur. Four Plays. Intro. & notes by John Addington Symonds. Eric Bentley, General Editor. New York: Hill & Wang, 1956.

Weininger, Otto. Sex and Character. Trans. from the Sixth German Edition. Originally published G.P. Putnam’s Son’s, New York. Reprinted Kessinger Publishing, No date.

Welch, Denton. In Youth is Pleasure. Intro. by William S. Burroughs. A Dutton Obelisk paperback, E.P. Dutton, New York: 1985

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: wilum pugmire (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 05:32PM
This is superb. May I print it out and keep it in my files once I have purchased a new ink cartridge? This is something I will want to study repeatedly and dream on. Many thanks for posting.

"I'm a little girl."
--H. P. Lovecraft, Esq.

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 05:36PM
Thanks- You kinda have to print it out -the font on this website hurts my eyes! (Although I really like the black-aesthetic, so I try never to complain about it-)

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: jdworth (IP Logged)
Date: 23 October, 2011 05:42PM
Hi, Gavin -- Unfortunately, I'm unlikely to be able to read through this until much later today, but I look forward to doing so. While I don't always agree with your ideas or interpretations, I do tend to find them well worth consideration, and both fascinating and argued well.

I do have one question, though: has this essay been published elsewhere?

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: K_A_Opperman (IP Logged)
Date: 24 October, 2011 01:55AM
Quote:
jdworth
I do have one question, though: has this essay been published elsewhere?

It better have been....

As someone who is in the business of frequently sending off works of fiction to various 'ezines' and other magazines/anthologies, I can tell you that the above essay is considered published now that it is posted here, and most editors will not pay for it now--or even accept it at all. It would be considered a reprint. Anything that has ever appeared on the internet (with the possible exception of non-public forums) is considered published, which greatly limits the potential publications it can appear in, and the payment (if any) an editor will pay for it (reprint rates are always less than for original [non-published] material, if they are accepted).

Gavin, I hope your essay has been published elsewhere--it appears to be a solid essay, well researched. As a scholar, it is likely that you are well aware of everything that I've just said. But--there may be newer writers reading this that don't know the strange rules of the publishing world yet. Writers must guard their work with their life--as tempting as it is to just post things here and there! I wish I could sprinkle my poetry all over the internet--but that would be folly. And I've come to regret letting some of my fictions be published by obscure, non-paying zines, which forevermore must be cited if ever they are published again!--forevermore! It's not like in the pulp days, when one could publish in an amateur zine, then sell the thing to WT later.... (HPL did this, didn't he?) The internet is our friend--and enemy.

Thus concludes this rant.

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 24 October, 2011 04:25PM
Good advice Opperman. No, HPL & Nightmares was not published anywhere else yet, (other than here.) Just had another one, however, HPL & Boxers, printed in Lovecraft Annual #5, now out.

I've got 12 more HPL essays, totalling several hundred thousand words, awaiting publication. Both Hippocampus and Scarecrow want massive reductions, however, and this essay is way at the bottom of the pile, so I figured I could chance sending it out into the world, since it likely wouldn't be seeing the light of day for years, anyway... No use posting it on any of the HPL websites, either, since most of the kids which frequent the HPL forums seem...less than literate, to say the most. Not to denigrate the ways of kids, tho- since I used to be one myself-

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Noivilbo (IP Logged)
Date: 25 October, 2011 02:00PM
Gavin, That's an interesting essay, and thanks for posting it. I'll be contrarian by saying there is still a chance you could get it published somewhere. What Opperman has said is quite true, and very sound advice. However, some venues ('some' being the key word here) do not consider a post to a discussion forum as a publication, as such appearances don't go through an editorial process for acceptance or rejection. But some of those some will indeed want to know if the work in question was posted on a private or public forum. In any event, a query note to the editors will answer any questions on the matter. Good luck, N.

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: K_A_Opperman (IP Logged)
Date: 25 October, 2011 02:11PM
Noivilbo Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Gavin, That's an interesting essay, and thanks for
> posting it. I'll be contrarian by saying there is
> still a chance you could get it published
> somewhere. What Opperman has said is quite true,
> and very sound advice. However, some venues
> ('some' being the key word here) do not consider a
> post to a discussion forum as a publication, as
> such appearances don't go through an editorial
> process for acceptance or rejection. But some of
> those some will indeed want to know if the work in
> question was posted on a private or public forum.
> In any event, a query note to the editors will
> answer any questions on the matter. Good luck, N.

Of course, some publishers are more lenient than others--they vary as widely as does the human personality! I think Gavin has a good chance of publishing the essay later; I only spoke in a grave tone to emphasize the worst case scenario. I certainly understand his angle in posting it here.... However, if it were published later, and he wanted to published it as 'original,' it would be prudent to say nothing at all about having posted it anywhere, and quietly have it removed from the forum....heh heh heh...the ol' vanishing act. Never done it--but it works in theory....

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: calonlan (IP Logged)
Date: 25 October, 2011 04:07PM
Always, always, in anything you may wish to publish, first print a copy, then send it to yourself in an envelope through regular mail of the type requiring a signature to receive. Thus you have absolute dated proof as primary author - the poor man's copyright - certified mail is the term I think - I've been using Stamps.com so long I no longer know what the inside of Post Office looks like.

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: Gavin Callaghan (IP Logged)
Date: 25 October, 2011 04:45PM
K_A_Opperman Wrote:
> Of course, some publishers are more lenient than
> others--they vary as widely as does the human
> personality! I think Gavin has a good chance of
> publishing the essay later; I only spoke in a
> grave tone to emphasize the worst case scenario.

The only problem is I can't think of any market for it! Aside from the Lovecraft Annual (which obviously only comes out once per year) and this forum, what else is there? Especially for something of this length (69 pages, double-spaced).

Re: HPL & Nightmares -my essay
Posted by: K_A_Opperman (IP Logged)
Date: 25 October, 2011 05:50PM
Gavin Callaghan Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> K_A_Opperman Wrote:
> > Of course, some publishers are more lenient
> than
> > others--they vary as widely as does the human
> > personality! I think Gavin has a good chance of
> > publishing the essay later; I only spoke in a
> > grave tone to emphasize the worst case scenario.
>
>
> The only problem is I can't think of any market
> for it! Aside from the Lovecraft Annual (which
> obviously only comes out once per year) and this
> forum, what else is there? Especially for
> something of this length (69 pages,
> double-spaced).

Quite the quandry, Gavin...sounds like it (maybe all of your essays together?) should constitute its/their own book. If Hippocampus isn't going for it, or you don't want to cut the length down like you said they wanted, you may have to seek another publisher. And then there's self-publishing--but don't ask me about that; I haven't a clue how it works. But I have a sneaking suspicion I will have to find out someday....

You should hunt down someone who knows the Lovecraftian market in and out. They might be able to direct you to a potential publisher who would do a whole book of your essays! Slap Cthulhu on the front cover and it's sales, sales, sales! (I find strange pleasure in repeating the word 'sales'...). Perhaps this expert lurks among us--on the threshold--even now? Come forth, and help this fella!

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