Poem (40 lines in 5 stanzas); written c. February 19, 1919. First published in
A brooding, pessimistic poem speaking of “Sweet Oblivion” to be found “beyond the groans and grating/Of abhorrent Life.” HPL notes (
Desrochers,———.
In “The Dreams in the Witch House,” a French Canadian who lives in the room directly below Walter Gilman’s in the Witch House in Arkham, and who sees and hears numerous odd things during the time of Gilman’s dreams and sleepwalking.
Dexter, Mercy.
In “The Shunned House,” the maiden sister of Rhoby (Dexter) Harris, who moves into the Shunned House in 1768 to tend to Rhoby, who had lapsed into insanity after the death of her husband and several of her children. Her health begins to fail from the moment she occupies the house, and she dies in 1782.
[Diary: 1925.]
Diary; unpublished (ms., JHL).
A small pocket diary in which HPL wrote very compressed records of his activities during 1925, when he was living alone at 169 Clinton Street. A sample entry: [March 1] “Up noon—call on GK [George Kirk]—SH [Sonia] get dinner here—eggs—pot. chips—crackers—cheese GW coffee—read papers— write Sonny [Frank Belknap Long] telephone—SL [Samuel Loveman] GK RK [Rheinhart Kleiner] call & go out to dinner—Wrote LDC [Lillian D. Clark]////Boys return—Session at Kirk’s—out to Scotch Bakery—GK & HP return to talk till dawn—retire.”
“Diary of Alonzo Typer, The.”
Short story (8,260 words); ghostwritten for William Lumley, October 1935. First published in
In a spectral house in upstate New York, strange forces were summoned by a Dutch family, the van der Heyls, that had resided there. Alonzo Typer, an occult explorer, attempts to fathom the mysteries of the place. He senses several strange presences in the house, especially in the cellar. He realizes that he will
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probably not be allowed to leave and that some great cataclysm is to occur around Walpurgisnacht (May Eve). At length he discovers that an “ancient forgotten One” is lurking beneath the house who will show Typer “the gateway I would enter, and give me the lost signs and words I shall need.” At the climactic moment, Typer realizes that he himself is related to the van der Heyls and that he has been called here for the fulfilling of some hideous purpose. Typer continues writing in his diary to the last: “Too late—cannot help self—black paws materialise—am dragged away toward the cellar….” The story was based upon a nearly illiterate draft produced by Lumley (published in
HPL revised the story for no pay, thinking that it would encourage Lumley’s efforts at writing. Lumley promptly submitted the story to
“Disinterment, The.”
Short story (4,600 words); written in collaboration with Duane W.Rimel, September 1935. First published in