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Howard Philips Lovecraft

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H.P. Lovecraft
[1890–1937]
 
 
H. P. LOVECRAFT
[20 August 1890–15 March 1937]
is widely recognized as a luminary in the genres of weird fiction and horror fiction. He was a pioneer in the genre known as cosmic horror and the progenitor of the popular Cthulu Mythos. He was notably precocious as a youth and was an avid reader from an early age. His early years were tinged by tragedy. When he was two years old, his father suffered a nervous breakdown, likely resulting from neurosyphilis. Five years later his father died. Subsequent years brought the death of his grandparents, with whom he was close, as well as the dwindling of the family fortune. This series of unfortunate tragic events was noted to create an atmosphere of gloom in his immediate family from which it never fully recovered. It is hypothesized that these various traumatic stimuli may have influenced the character of his later work. The period of 1908 to 1913 was largely dedicated to indolence and solitude. Reflecting on this period, Lovecraft himself once said: “In 1914, when the kindly hand of amateurdom was first extended to me, I was as close to the state of vegetation as any animal well can be..." Lovecraft immersed himself in the world of amateur journalism during the period beginning 1914 to around 1920. It was during this period that he released some of his first fictional stories. In late 1919, after a period of isolation, he began joining friends in trips to gatherings of writers. These trips were likely influential on his literary development. The year 1920 saw the advent of the Cthulu Mythos with the story 'The Nameless City' and marked the beginning of his most prolific period which lasted for nearly the remainder of his life. The last two or three years of his life, however, were marked by hardship. His cherished aunt, Mrs. Clark, died, his close friend, Robert E. Howard, unexpectedly committed suicide, and he himself developed intestinal cancer. He undoubtedly felt the pain and melancholy associated with that disease, to which he ultimately sucumbed on March 15, 1937.
 
- Written by F.J. Palladino
 
 
 
 
 
H.P. Lovecraft on the Web:
 
 
The H.P. Lovecraft Archive
The best Lovecraft site!

HP Podcraft
Very professionally done readings!

Horror Babble
Another great source for readings!

Cthulu Files
Featuring the Cthulu Universalis!


 
 
 
Photo Gallery
 
 
 
THE COLLECTION OF LITERARY WORKS

At the Mountains of Madness
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Azathoth
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Beyond the Wall of Sleep
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Celephaïs
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Collapsing Cosmoses
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and
R. H. Barlow

Cool Air
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Dagon
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Ex Oblivione
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

From Beyond
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Alchemist
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Battle that Ended the Century
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Beast in the Cave
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Book
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Call of Cthulhu
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Cats of Ulthar
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Challenge from Beyond
Written By C.L. Moore,
A. Merritt, H.P. Lovecraft,
Robert E.Howard, and
Frank Belknap Long

The Colour Out of Space
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Crawling Chaos
Written By Elizabeth Berkeley and Lewis Theobald, Jun.
[Winifred Virginia Jackson and
H. P. Lovecraft]

The Curse of Yig
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Zealia Bishop

The Descendant
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Diary of Alonzo Typer
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and William Lumley

The Disinterment
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Duane W. Rimel

The Doom That Came to Sarnath
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Dreams in the Witch House
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Dunwich Horror
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Electric Executioner
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Adolphe de Castro

The Evil Clergyman
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Festival
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

He
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Herbert West—Reanimator
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Hypnos
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Ibid
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

In the Vault
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

In the Walls of Eryx
Written By H. P. Lovecraft
With Kenneth Sterling

The Green Meadow
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Winifred V. Jackson

The Haunter of the Dark
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The History of the Necronomicon
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Hoard of the Wizard-Beast
Written By R. H. Barlow and
H. P. Lovecraft

The Horror at Martin’s Beach
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Sonia H. Greene

The Horror at Red Hook
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Horror in the Burying-Ground
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald

The Horror in the Museum
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald

The Hound
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Medusa’s Coil
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Zealia Bishop

Memory
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Nyarlathotep
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Old Bugs
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Out of the Aeons
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald

Pickman’s Model
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Poetry and the Gods
Written By H. P. Lovecraft with Anna Helen Crofts

Polaris
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Last Test
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Adolphe de Castro

The Little Glass Bottle
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Lurking Fear
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Man of Stone
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald

The Moon-Bog
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Mound
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Zealia Bishop

The Music of Erich Zann
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Mysterious Ship
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Nameless City
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Night Ocean
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and
R. H. Barlow

The Other Gods
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Outsider
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Picture in the House
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

A Reminiscence of Dr. Samuel Johnson
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Sweet Ermengarde
Written By Percy Simple
[H. P. Lovecraft]

The Quest of Iranon
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Rats in the Walls
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Secret Cave, or John Lees Adventure
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Shadow out of Time
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Shadow over Innsmouth
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Shunned House
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Silver Key
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Slaying of the Monster
Written By R. H. Barlow and
H. P. Lovecraft

The Statement of Randolph Carter
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Strange High House in the Mist
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Street
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Temple
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Terrible Old Man
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Thing on the Doorstep
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Tomb
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Transition of Juan Romero
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Trap
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Henry S. Whitehead

The Tree
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Tree on the Hill
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Duane W. Rimel

The Unnamable
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Very Old Folk
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The Whisperer in Darkness
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

The White Ship
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Through the Gates of the Silver Key
Written By H. P. Lovecraft
(with E. Hoffmann Price)

“Till A’ the Seas”
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and R. H. Barlow

Two Black Bottles
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Wilfred Blanch Talman

Under the Pyramids
Written By H. P. Lovecraft
(with Harry Houdini)

What the Moon Brings
Written By H. P. Lovecraft

Winged Death
Written By H. P. Lovecraft and Hazel Heald



Quotes:
 
"That is not dead which can eternal lie, And with strange aeons even death may die."
 
- The Nameless City
 
 
"What has risen may sink, and what has sunk may rise. Loathsomeness waits and dreams in the deep, and decay spreads over the tottering cities of men. A time will come—but I must not and cannot think!"
 
- The Call of Cthulu
 
 
"The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the deadly light into the peace and safety of a new dark age."
 
- The Call of Cthulu
 
 
"The Old Ones were, the Old Ones are, and the Old Ones shall be. Not in the spaces we know, but between them, They walk serene and primal, undimensioned and to us unseen. Yog-Sothoth knows the gate. Yog-Sothoth is the gate. Yog-Sothoth is the key and guardian of the gate. Past, present, future, all are one in Yog-Sothoth."
 
- The Dunwich Horror
 
 
"Life is a hideous thing, and from the background behind what we know of it peer daemoniacal hints of truth which make it sometimes a thousandfold more hideous. Science, already oppressive with its shocking revelations, will perhaps be the ultimate exterminator of our human species — if separate species we be — for its reserve of unguessed horrors could never be borne by mortal brains if loosed upon the world."
 
- Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family
 
 
"When I speak of poor Norrys they accuse me of a hideous thing, but they must know that I did not do it. They must know it was the rats; the slithering, scurrying rats whose scampering will never let me sleep; the daemon rats that race behind the padding in this room and beckon me down to greater horrors than I have ever known; the rats they can never hear; the rats, the rats in the walls."
 
- The Rats in the Walls
 
 
"Before he realised it, he was looking at the stone again, and letting its curious influence call up a nebulous pageantry in his mind. He saw processions of robed, hooded figures whose outlines were not human, and looked on endless leagues of desert lined with carved, sky-reaching monoliths. He saw towers and walls in nighted depths under the sea, and vortices of space where wisps of black mist floated before thin shimmerings of cold purple haze. And beyond all else he glimpsed an infinite gulf of darkness, where solid and semi-solid forms were known only by their windy stirrings, and cloudy patterns of force seemed to superimpose order on chaos and hold forth a key to all the paradoxes and arcana of the worlds we know."
 
- The Haunter of the Dark
 
 
"From even the greatest of horrors irony is seldom absent. Sometimes it enters directly into the composition of the events, while sometimes it relates only to their fortuitous position among persons and places. The latter sort is splendidly exemplified by a case in the ancient city of Providence, where in the late forties Edgar Allan Poe used to sojourn often during his unsuccessful wooing of the gifted poetess, Mrs. Whitman."
 
- The Shunned House
 
 
"Searchers after horror haunt strange, far places. For them are the catacombs of Ptolemais, and the carven mausolea of the nightmare countries. They climb to the moonlit towers of ruined Rhine castles, and falter down black cobwebbed steps beneath the scattered stones of forgotten cities in Asia. The haunted wood and the desolate mountain are their shrines, and they linger around the sinister monoliths on uninhabited islands. But the true epicure in the terrible, to whom a new thrill of unutterable ghastliness is the chief end and justification of existence, esteems most of all the ancient, lonely farmhouses of backwoods New England; for there the dark elements of strength, solitude, grotesqueness, and ignorance combine to form the perfection of the hideous."
 
- The Picture in the House
 
 
"Madness rides the star-wind . . . claws and teeth sharpened on centuries of corpses . . . dripping death astride a Bacchanale of bats from night-black ruins of buried temples of Belial. . . . Now, as the baying of that dead, fleshless monstrosity grows louder and louder, and the stealthy whirring and flapping of those accursed web-wings circles closer and closer, I shall seek with my revolver the oblivion which is my only refuge from the unnamed and unnamable."
 
- The Hound
 
 
"It was the faces, Eliot, those accursed faces, that leered and slavered out of the canvas with the very breath of life! By God, man, I verily believe they were alive! That nauseous wizard had waked the fires of hell in pigment, and his brush had been a nightmare-spawning wand."
 
- Pickman's Model
 
 
"It is not pleasant to see a stout man suddenly grown thin, and it is even worse when the baggy skin becomes yellowed or greyed, the eyes sunken, circled, and uncannily glowing, the forehead veined and corrugated, and the hands tremulous and twitching. And if added to this there be a repellent unkemptness; a wild disorder of dress, a bushiness of dark hair white at the roots, and an unchecked growth of pure white beard on a face once clean-shaven, the cumulative effect is quite shocking. But such was the aspect of Crawford Tillinghast on the night his half-coherent message brought me to his door after my weeks of exile; such the spectre that trembled as it admitted me, candle in hand, and glanced furtively over its shoulder as if fearful of unseen things"
 
- From Beyond
 
 
"Avenues of limitless night seemed to radiate in every direction, till one might fancy that here lay the root of a contagion destined to sicken and swallow cities, and engulf nations in the foetor of hybrid pestilence. Here cosmic sin had entered, and festered by unhallowed rites had commenced the grinning march of death that was to rot us all to fungous abnormalities too hideous for the grave’s holding. Satan here held his Babylonish court, and in the blood of stainless childhood the leprous limbs of phosphorescent Lilith were laved. Incubi and succubae howled praise to Hecate, and headless moon-calves bleated to the Magna Mater. Goats leaped to the sound of thin accursed flutes, and aegipans chased endlessly after misshapen fauns over rocks twisted like swollen toads. Moloch and Ashtaroth were not absent; for in this quintessence of all damnation the bounds of consciousness were let down, and man’s fancy lay open to vistas of every realm of horror and every forbidden dimension that evil had power to mould. The world and Nature were helpless against such assaults from unsealed wells of night, nor could any sign or prayer check the Walpurgis-riot of horror which had come when a sage with the hateful key had stumbled on a horde with the locked and brimming coffer of transmitted daemon-lore."
 
- The Horror at Red Hook
 
 
"Cursed the ground where dead thoughts live new and oddly bodied, and evil the mind that is held by no head. Wisely did Ibn Schacabao say, that happy is the tomb where no wizard hath lain, and happy the town at night whose wizards are all ashes. For it is of old rumour that the soul of the devil-bought hastes not from his charnel clay, but fats and instructs the very worm that gnaws; till out of corruption horrid life springs, and the dull scavengers of earth wax crafty to vex it and swell monstrous to plague it. Great holes secretly are digged where earth’s pores ought to suffice, and things have learnt to walk that ought to crawl."
 
- The Festival
 
 
"Then, superimposed upon these pictures, were frightful momentary flashes of a non-visual consciousness involving desperate struggles, a writhing free from clutching tentacles of whistling wind, an insane, bat-like flight through half-solid air, a feverish burrowing through the cyclone-whipped dark, and a wild stumbling and scrambling over fallen masonry. Once there was a curious, intrusive flash of half-sight—a faint, diffuse suspicion of bluish radiance far overhead. Then there came a dream of wind-pursued climbing and crawling—of wriggling into a blaze of sardonic moonlight through a jumble of debris which slid and collapsed after me amidst a morbid hurricane. It was the evil, monotonous beating of that maddening moonlight which at last told me of the return of what I had once known as the objective, waking world."
 
- The Shadow out of Time
 
 
"Then, close to the hour of midnight, all the bronze gates of Sarnath burst open and emptied forth a frenzied throng that blackened the plain, so that all the visiting princes and travellers fled away in fright. For on the faces of this throng was writ a madness born of horror unendurable, and on their tongues were words so terrible that no hearer paused for proof."
 
- The Doom that came to Sarnath
 
 
"Onward unswerving and relentless, and tittering hilariously to watch the chuckling and hysterics into which the siren song of night and the spheres had turned, that eldritch scaly monster bore its helpless rider; hurtling and shooting, cleaving the uttermost rim and spanning the outermost abysses; leaving behind the stars and the realms of matter, and darting meteor-like through stark formlessness toward those inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond Time wherein black Azathoth gnaws shapeless and ravenous amidst the muffled, maddening beat of vile drums and the thin, monotonous whine of accursed flutes."
 
- The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath
 
 
"There was a night when winds from unknown spaces whirled us irresistibly into limitless vacua beyond all thought and entity. Perceptions of the most maddeningly untransmissible sort thronged upon us; perceptions of infinity which at the time convulsed us with joy, yet which are now partly lost to my memory and partly incapable of presentation to others. Viscous obstacles were clawed through in rapid succession, and at length I felt that we had been borne to realms of greater remoteness than any we had previously known."
 
- Hypnos
 
 
"The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown."
 
- Supernatural Horror in Literature

What's New
28 March 2019: 
The H. P. Lovecraft section of this website is going live!
 
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