(Parts 1 and 2 here and here. This conclusion is a tad long but I decided to post it in one go rather than breaking it up.)
This is the conclusion of a
series of essays about HP Lovecraft. In
the previous instalments, we looked at Lovecraft as a proto-psychedelic author,
noting similarities between certain of his tales and the experiences recounted
by much later psychonauts under the influence of the powerful hallucinogen DMT,
and suggested that perhaps psychedelic voyagers and writers of visionary
fiction (imaginauts?) were accessing similar mental terrains via different
routes. In this final instalment, we’re
going to look at Lovecraft’s work in relation to two mythic archetypes much
beloved of esotericists: the akashic
record of the Theosophists and the Hall
of Records fabled since the days of the “Sleeping Prophet” Edgar Cayce to
be buried in a hidden cavern beneath the Great Sphinx of Giza. First, however, we’ll look at one more of
Lovecraft’s deeply psychedelic tales, and return to that theme in the essay’s
conclusion.
The
feeling of doing DMT is as though one had been struck by noetic lightning. The
ordinary world is almost instantaneously replaced, not only with a
hallucination, but a hallucination whose alien character is its utter
alienness. Nothing in this world can
prepare one for the impressions that fill your mind when you enter the DMT
sensorium.
Terrence
McKenna.
Hypnos is perhaps one of the most
intriguing of Lovecraft’s shorter and lesser known fictions. The germination of the story goes back to a
succinct plot summary recorded in the author’s commonplace book which scooped
the basic premise of Wes Craven’s Nightmare
on Elm Street by several decades: “The man who would not sleep – dares not
sleep – takes drugs to keep himself awake.
Finally falls asleep - &
something happens.” The story can be
read as a combination of Lovecraft’s two preferred literary modes: Dunsanian
dream fantasy and the author’s own brand of cosmic, visionary horror. The Decadent literary movement also provides
a strong influence; as in Celephais
and Ex Oblivione, we find a
preoccupation with the idea that sleep and drugs can operate as doorways into
other worlds and wholly separate planes of existence. Hypnos,
however, is unusually sparse and vague as a tale. An unnamed narrator (who is a sculptor)
encounters a mysterious man at a train station, and the encounter has a
profound effect on him. He recognises
both an ideal artistic subject, and a man with a deep knowledge of hidden and
ineffable things: “ – for I saw that such eyes must have looked fully upon the
grandeur and the terror of realms beyond normal consciousness and reality;
realms which I had cherished in fancy, but vainly sought.” Our narrator thus adopts his new friend as a
guru and guide in attaining states of non-ordinary consciousness. They move in together, the mysterious
stranger modelling for the narrator’s sculpting by day, and the pair taking
drugs by night in order to plunge deeply into alternate realities beyond time
and space. They become essentially
harbingers of a counterculture several decades yet to be born: a pair of boho
acid heads, and perhaps, one might cheekily suggest, lovers.
Of
course, Lovecraft nowhere directly implies a sexual relationship, but Hypnos is infused with a peculiar
ambience of homoeroticism (any kind of eroticism, however subdued, being an unexpected
departure from the norm of the Lovecraftian universe.) The narrator is rhapsodic in his description
of the stranger’s physical aspect:
I think that he was then approaching
forty years of age, for there were deep lines in the face, wan and
hallow-cheeked, but oval and actually beautiful;
and touches of grey in the thick, waving hair and small, full beard which had
once been of the deepest raven black.
His brow was white as the marble of Pentelicus, and of a height and
breath almost godlike. I said to myself, with all the ardour of a sculptor,
that this was a faun’s statue, dug from a temple’s ruins and brought somehow to
life in our stifling age only to feel the chill and pressure of devastating
years.
Afterwards I found
that his voice was music – the music of deep viols and of crystalline
spheres. We talked often in the night,
and in the day, when I chiselled busts of him and carved miniature heads in
ivory to immortalise his different expressions.
To make the
whole thing rather like a blunt Freudian pun, the story is dedicated to
Lovecraft’s friend, the homosexual New York poet Samuel Loveman. (Would it be cheap
and obvious psychoanalytic blundering to suggest that Lovecraft’s profound
sense of alienation and physical loathing may have stemmed from a deeply
repressed homosexuality? Probably –
although it is interesting to note that the only time Lovecraft seems to pay
any attention whatever to physical beauty is in this particular instance.)
Anyway, after
that digression, back to our main theme: tripping balls. Around this vague and suggestive premise,
Lovecraft weaves some of his most otherworldly prose poetry and some of the
most strikingly psychedelic ideas and images in his entire output. The image which completes the following paragraph
reminds us again of William James and his nitrous oxide revelation of different
modes of consciousness parted from everyday reality by the “filmiest of
screens”:
Of our studies it is impossible to speak,
since they hold so slight a connexion with anything of the world as living men
conceive it. They were of that vaster
and more appalling universe of dim entity and consciousness which lies deeper
than matter, space, and time, and whose existence we suspect only in certain
forms of sleep – those rare dream beyond dreams which come never to ordinary
men, and but once or twice in the lifetime of imaginative men. The cosmos of our waking knowledge, born from
such a universe as a bubble is born from the pipe of a jester, touches it only
as such a bubble may touch its sardonic source when sucked back by the jester’s
whim.
Again, as with
From Beyond, there are striking
parallels with the DMT experience. In
the parlance of DMT users, no concept is as crucial as the “breakthrough”. In essence, the difference between properly breaking
through and not is like the difference between foreplay and full
intercourse. Fail to get enough of the
harsh, burnt plastic tasting-DMT vapour into your system, and you’ll just
experience a pleasant but mild display of the type of visuals typical of LSD
and mushroom experiences. Get the full
hit and you’ll experience the sensation of a full (in many cases out of body)
breakthrough into a wholly immersive and astonishing audio-visual realm – a
natural Virtual Reality tech which is aeons ahead of the synthetic variety. Here’s Terence McKenna describing the
breakthrough sensation:
And this is taking,
you know, thirty or forty seconds, and there’s this rising hum, this –
nnnmmMMMM – that rising tone; the flying saucer tone of Hollywood B-movies.…you
actually hear this thing. And then, if
you’ve taken enough DMT (and it has to do entirely with physical capacity; did
you take, did you cross the threshold?) something happens (McKenna claps) for which there are no words. A membrane is rent, and you are propelled
into this “place”. And language cannot
describe it - accurately.
Compare
McKenna’s language to that of Lovecraft’s description of the sculptor and his
muse’s drug voyages in Hypnos:
Human utterance can
best convey the general character of our experiences by calling them plungings
or soarings; for in every period of revelation some part of our minds broke
boldly away from all that is real and present, rushing aerially along shocking,
unlighted, and fear-haunted abysses, and occasionally tearing through certain well-marked and typical obstacles
describable only as viscous, uncouth clouds or vapours.
A
breakthrough, then. In fact, Lovecraft
agrees with McKenna in both the metaphor of breaking through a membrane or
veil, and in the essential inability of language to adequately encapsulate the
experience. This is the defining
characteristic of all peak psychedelic and mystical experiences: they elude the
whole mental machinery by which the bulk of our experience is structured into a
grammar of causality, continuity, and comprehensible meaning. In this realm,
meaning is felt as already complete
and fully self-sufficient; it does not and cannot be translated into words and
familiar concepts. From Hypnos:
Among the agonies of
these after days is that chief of torments – inarticulateness. What I learned and saw in those hours of
impious exploration can never be told – for want of symbols or suggestions in
any language. I say this because from
first to last our discoveries partook only of the nature of sensations; sensations correlated with
no impression which the nervous system of normal humanity is capable of
receiving.
There was a night when
winds from unknown spaces whirled us irresistibly into limitless vacua beyond
all thought and entity. Perceptions of
the most maddenly 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.
There
is one other point about the astral voyaging in Hypnos which I note in passing.
While in the midst of their trips, the narrator is unable to see the
body of his teacher; however, he maintains an awareness of his presence by
means of a peculiar invention which Lovecraft calls the “memory face”. Here Lovecraft’s astral realm begins to feel
peculiarly like a computer-generated environment or Virtual Reality, as I think
the “memory face” conceit would remind many contemporary readers of a computer avatar:
When
we were together, my friend was always far ahead; I could comprehend his
presence despite the absence of form by a species of pictorial memory whereby
his face appeared to me, golden from a strange light and frightful with its
weird beauty, its anomalously youthful cheeks, its burning eyes, its Olympian
brow, and its shadowing hair and growth of beard.
To wrap up,
then, we find in the ambiguous conclusion of Hypnos a version of the now familiar William Wilson/Fight Club twist.
It appears that the mysterious stranger never existed at all, or at any rate,
all that remains of his body is a sculpted bust which the narrator is assured
is a likeness of himself at the age of twenty-five. Was he then a figment of the narrator’s
imagination, his mind having gone febrile with exotic drugs and weirder
ideas? It may be that for Lovecraft
there is a complex, almost unconscious symbol at work here, the bust
representing how the feverish interior journey into horror and madness finally
solidifies into the balanced harmony of creation and art, or how the narrator’s daimon, having pierced the final veil
and journeyed completely beyond matter and time, is now frozen as a timeless
icon, a condition which must have held some appeal to Lovecraft. At any rate, for the present essay, it is
sufficient to note once again the peculiar affinity of Lovecraft’s imagining of dimensions beyond time and
space, and the actual experience of later psychonauts experimenting with strong
hallucinogens. Also, there is the
undeniably mystical compulsion, which
infuses so much of Lovecraft’s stories, to escape from and transcend all the
limits of the human condition: to go beyond the body and its narrowly
circumscribed senses, beyond even the temporal/spatial dimensions within which
the body assumes its morphing and frail form.
In the conclusion of this essay we will explore the contradictory
relationship of this mystical tendency to Lovecraft’s outward materialism and
Schopenhauerian pessimism.
Nature’s Memory: Shadows Out of Time.
I recalled the awesome records
that once lay cased in those rectangular vaults of rustless metal.
There, said the dreams and
legends, had reposed the whole history, past and future, of the cosmic
space-time continuum – written by captive minds from every orb and every age in
the solar system.
H.P.
Lovecraft, The Shadow Out of Time.
The akashic
record and the Hall of Records are two great, closely related occult
mythologies. They are quintessential
occult archetypes because they speak to what is by general agreement the
greatest spur to the occult imagination: the idea of a massive trove of hidden,
forbidden, and preferably ancient knowledge.
Like gnostics and conspiranoids in their divergent fashion, occultists
are always looking for the motherlode of
information which will result in the ultimate unravelling of the
established order of the world – which will make, even if only in the mind of
the recipient, the whole world utterly anew.
The akashic record and the fabled Hall are vast libraries, then, with
the first being immaterial or metaphysical in nature, and the second having an
antique and long hidden physical form.
They are both frequently presented as a means of acquiring knowledge of
mankind’s hidden pre-history, and even, in the case of the akashic record, of
his distant future existence. The
origins of the idea of the akashic record go back to the Astral Light theorized
by Eliphas Levi: “...an agent which is
natural and divine, material and spiritual, a universal plastic mediator, a
common receptacle of the vibrations of motion and the images of form, a fluid
and a force which may be called in some way the Imagination of Nature…..the
existence of this force is the great Arcanum of practical Magic.”
Perhaps what
was appealing to later occultists about Levi’s “universal plastic mediator”,
vague as the concept was, was its capacity to absorb and record the psychic
contents of our widely dispersed and transitory minds; in the hands of the Theosophists,
the Astral Light became the Memory of
Nature. In essence, the idea of the akashic
record is that some property of nature records all the thoughts, desires, and ideas of living beings as a kind of
condensed visual/immaterial library or database. If this weren’t grand (and crowded) enough,
for many theosophists, this database was trans-temporal – it records not only
those thought-forms which stretch back into the distant past, but also those
which are yet to realized in the future.
Nobody has ever accused Theosophists of dreaming small. According to Alice A. Bailey:
The akashic record is like an immense
photographic film, registering all the desires and earth experiences of our
planet. Those who perceive it will see pictured thereon: The life experiences
of every human being since time began, the reactions to experience of the
entire animal kingdom, the aggregation of the thought-forms of a karmic nature (based
on desire) of every human unit throughout time. Herein lies the great deception
of the records. Only a trained occultist can distinguish between actual
experience and those astral pictures created by imagination and keen desire.
However
one is to take this idea (and Theosophical notions rarely cry out for a fully
literal reception) there is something undeniably intriguing at work in it. Levi’s Astral Light and the Theosophical
akashic record have always reminded me a little of the internet, or perhaps it
would be more apt to say that the internet always reminds us of some its
grander theoretical precursors: James Lovelock’s Gaia hypothesis, and
particularly Teilhard de Chardin’s planetary exo-consciousness the Noosphere. It seems that the yearning has been in our
minds for a long time to externalize and immaterialize
a vast quantity of information; to make of the world a mind in the same way
that the world made of our brains a mind capable of surveying things vaster
than itself. In some respects, the
akashic record scoops contemporary posthuman dreams of preserving individual
consciousness by means of conversion into potentially immortal digital memory.
From
the akashic record we move to a more tangible yet still elusive library. Edgar Cayce is yet another chapter in the
fascinating history of American grassroots religion and spirituality, the same
history which produced Joseph Smith, the Fox sisters, L.Ron Habbard, and so
many more, plucked from the obscurity of a bustling continent by visions,
feints, and skulduggery. But Cayce
doesn’t appear to have been a scoundrel, and, unlike Smith and Hubbard, didn’t
really start a new religion. Instead, he
preached a sometimes uneasy mixture of conventional Biblical piety with the
more contemporaneous notions of Theosophists and occultists – trance
mediumship, the reading of the akashic record, reincarnation, and the
ubiquitous preoccupation with Atlantis and the lost antediluvian civilisations
of human pre-history. To his supporters,
Cayce was a trance healer (whose clients included Woodrow Wilson), a
clairvoyant, and a prophet. Most famous
among his prophetic utterances was the assertion that Atlantis (or is it
Ry’leh?) would rise again, and that a library of Atlantean history would be
discovered in a cavern beneath the Sphinx.
According to Cayce, the Hall of Records contained a “record of Atlantis
from the beginning of those periods when the Spirit took form, or began the
encasements in that land; and the developments of the peoples throughout their
sojourn; together with the record of the first destruction, and the changes
that took place in the land; with the record of the sojournings of the peoples
and their varied activities in other lands, and a record of the meetings of all
the nations or lands, for the activities in the destruction of Atlantis; and
the building of the pyramid of initiation, together with whom, what, and where
the opening of the records would come, that are as copies from the sunken
Atlantis. For with the change, it [Atlantis] must rise again.” (The Sources of channelled wisdom have never
been accused of elegant prose.)
Among Cayce’s
followers, the search for the Hall of Records still casts a potent millenarian
spell. It was been discovered that
cavities do exist under the Sphinx,
and Cayce’s Association for Research and Enlightenment (A.R.E.) are a
significant component of the nexus of interested parties that hover around the
Giza Plaza and contribute to its perpetual air of intrigue. The full story of these shenanigans –
involving Cayce devotees, Egyptian authorities, Alternative Egyptologists,
Freemasons, John Michel Jarre, and the Devil or Tsoukalos knows who else –
would probably weave a history every bit as tangled and bizarre as anything
contained in the putative Hall, were it to be known in full. However, for the purposes of this essay, we
are simply examining the power of the idea of the Hall of the Records, which is
again a mainstay of esoteric mythology:
the idea of an ancient knowledge which has been preserved, this time in a
physical form, for a much later generation to rediscover. The rediscovery of this lost knowledge may be
of initiatory import to the individual, or, in the case of lost pre-histories
like the Hall of Records, of millenarian or apocalyptic import to the society
as whole; apocalyptic because the “un-covering” or disclosure of the true past
annihilates the false world as it is conceived in the present.
The
significance of these ideas should be reasonably apparent in relation to Lovecraft’s
literary creations. In roughly the same
time period that Cayce was making his as yet unrealized prophecies, the
wreckage of antediluvian cities was rising out of the ocean, and libraries of
long lost human pre-history were re-emerging from the mists of the deep past –
in Lovecraft’s stories. Dagon (1917) is the first truly
“Lovecraftian” tale in the cannon – an oddity in that the author seemed
abruptly to discover his specific voice and vision, and then lose it again
until the much later “Mythos” stories. In this early tale, we find two crucial
motifs: the return of the pre-historical repressed in the form of fragmented
Cylcopean masonry, and the discovery of a kind of pictographic record of
earth’s long lost and scarcely guessed at history. The shipwrecked narrator finds himself on a
slimy spit of putrid earth which he conjectures to have been spewed up from the
ocean floor by volcanic activity, “exposing regions which for innumerable
millions of years had lain under unfathomable watery depths.” Later on, upon investigating a “vast and
singular object”, he experiences that characteristically Lovercraftian emotion:
the shock of profound terror mixed with a kind of awe upon the realization that
the deep past of our planet is not at all as we imagined it. Cue Also
Sprach Zarathustra:
That it was merely a
gigantic piece of stone, I soon assured myself; but I was conscious of a
distinct impression that its contour and position were not altogether the work
of Nature. A closer scrutiny filled me
with sensations I cannot express; for despite its enormous magnitude, and its
position in an abyss which had yawned at the bottom of the sea since the world
was young, I perceived beyond a doubt that the strange object was a well-shaped
monolith whose massive bulk had known the worship of living and thinking
creatures.
Carven on the
monolith is Lovecraft’s first tentative expression of the Hall of Records
motif, and his first foray into forbidden history: “The writing was in a system
of hieroglyphics unknown to me, and unlike anything I had seen in books;
consisting for the most part of conventionalized aquatic symbols such as
fishes, eels, octopi, crustaceans, molluscs, whales, and the like. Several characters obviously represented
marine things which are unknown to the modern world, but whose decomposing
forms I had observed on the ocean-risen plain.”
Lovecraft’s earth, then, is like a person a shouldering a series of
repressed memories; the memories keep coming to the surface, bubbling up from
an unconscious in the watery oceanic depths and dark, cavernous inner-earth. That Lovecraft would return again and again
to these core images and ideas so briefly sketched out in Dagon – with an obsessive, repetitive, almost monomaniacal
intensity – plays no small part in the existence of many occult readers of the
author, who interpret his work as transcribed
vision rather than mere literary invention.
Without taking a firm stance on this issue, there is certainly an odd compulsiveness about Lovecraft’s art,
and it is arguable that the idea of some kind of race or genetic memory lies at
the centre of his thematic obsessions – that the many visions of primeval
architectures and vast bas-relief histories in his stories constitute an effort
to access some kind of genetic or akashic database in a pulp fiction shorthand.
We next
encounter the Hall of Records motif in The
Nameless City, a 1921 tale in which an explorer in the Arabian desert
discovers the remnants and records of a not quite extinct reptilian
civilisation. Not knowing that Lovecraft
had replaced the largely anthropomorphic visions of the Theosophists with a
teeming bestiary of biological and metaphysical alienage, the explorer at first
takes the reptilians to be allegorical depictions of primeval man: “Now that
the light was better I studied the pictures more closely, and, remembering that
the strange reptiles must represent the unknown men, pondered upon the customs
of the nameless city. Many things were
peculiar and inexplicable. The
civilisation, which included a written alphabet, had seemingly risen to a
higher order than those immeasurably later civilisations of Egypt and Chaldea,
yet there were curious omissions.” The Nameless City, of course, was little
more than a dry run for Lovecraft’s grand elaboration of the Hall of Records
motif in the centrepiece of At the
Mountains of Madness: the long, visionary section where Dyer and Danforth
decipher the history of the Elder Things through
their perusal of an elaborate sequence of hieroglyphic murals. Here is the Hall of Records as apocalyptic
revelation: all traditional western worldviews crumble, as man is found neither
to be made in God’s image (as the Christians supposed), nor to stand at the
intellectual summit of terrestrial evolution (as the humanists of the
Enlightenment supposed.) Dwarfed by
Cyclopean dimensions and the span of incalculable aeons, man becomes the
measure of very small things indeed. Unless, of course, he find some means to
extend the scope of his vision in time and space.
In The Shadow Out of Time, on the other
hand, we discover a library which contains elements of both occult myths we
have been discussing, and a race who have achieved precisely this expansion of
vision. Like the Hall of Records, the
library of the Great Race is a physical structure which is now hidden
underground (“a colossal subterranean structure near the city’s centre”, “this
titan repository surpassed all other buildings in the massive, mountain-like
firmness of its construction”); like the Akashic Record, it is trans-temporal,
in it that encompasses knowledge of both past and future, accumulated by means
of telepathic projection across the aeons:
This, they indicated,
was the greatest race of all; because it alone had conquered the secret of
time. It had learned all things that
ever were known or ever would be known
on the earth, through the power of its keener minds to project themselves into
the past and future, even through gulfs of millions of years, and study the
lore of every age. From the
accomplishments of this race arose all legends of prophets, including those in human mythology.
In its vast libraries
were volumes of texts and pictures holding the whole of earth annuls –
histories and descriptions of every species that had ever been or that ever
would be, with records of their arts, their achievements, their languages,
their psychologies. With this
aeon-embracing knowledge, the Great Race chose from every era and life-form
such thoughts, arts, and processes as might suit its own nature and situation.
The Great Race
had collectively attained to a condition destined only to the few solitary
voices raging in the ephemeral wildernesses of every subsequent civilisation;
the condition of Blake’s Bard in the Songs
of Experience, who “Present, Past, & Future sees.” They have also achieved that mystical goal
which we find in so many Lovecraft characters – the impulse to transcend
utterly one’s present space-time moorings – and they do this, as every mystic
must, not with their physical bodies but only with the mind alone (“their senses could penetrate all material
barriers, their substances could
not…”). It is interesting to note in
this mystical connection that we find in The
Shadow Out of Time a very rare acknowledgement in Lovecraftian fiction that
expanded knowledge of the universe, despite its horrors, constitutes an
intensely exalted experience. Of the minds held captive in the era of the
Great Race, Lovecraft notes that they were allowed to “delve freely into the
libraries containing the records of the planet’s past and future. This reconciled many captive minds to their
lot; since none were other than keen, and to such minds the unveiling of hidden
mysteries of earth – closed chapters of inconceivable pasts and dizzying
vortices of future time which include the years ahead of their own natural ages
– forms always, despite the abysmal horrors often unveiled, the supreme
experience of life.”
Conclusion: “The long
telephone wire of history, which goes back two billions years, and which is
buried somewhere inside your brain and mine.”
I recognise a
distinction between dream life and real life, between appearances and
actualities. I confess an overwhelming
desire to know whether I am asleep or awake – whether the environment and laws
that affect me are external and permanent, or the products of my transitory
brain.
H.P.
Lovecraft, A Letter On Religion.
H.P. Lovecraft
has had a perhaps suitably weird
posthumous legacy. His American Gothic
predecessor Poe has been canonized and made respectable, and hence his presence
in popular culture now feels a little like a dusty heirloom or museum
piece. Lovecraft, however, penniless and
ignored during his own lifetime, now has a more vital pop culture profile than
almost any other pulp writer of his era.
The Cthulhu Mythos, for whatever reason, is part of the lingua franca of the internet, and
Cthulhu, to his dubious honour, has become a mainstay of the daily distraction
stream; what incongruous Cthulhu-related
thing will the internet show us today?
The result of all this is that not only is Lovecraft widely read today,
but his ideas and iconography have saturated culture to the point where they
are immediately recognisable to many people who have never and probably will
never read him. The internet, I suppose,
brings previously marginal and underground material to the foreground; not,
however, without breaking them down into a sometimes trivial byte-size.
Perhaps
more interesting than the scale of Lovecraft’s readership is the type of readings the stories have
accrued through the years. Lovecraft
identified himself during his lifetime as a staunch materialist and atheist (he
is included, for example, in Christopher Hitchens’ anthology The Portable Atheist), and yet no
fictional writer as had such a major impact on the contemporary occult
world. Though the vortices of ancient
astronaut theory and chaos magic, Lovecraft has engendered a comparatively rare
type of reading whereby many have felt that his fictions contained some
essential truth. This is different, to
an extent, from the normal kind of obsessive fandom whereby devotees behave as though the worlds of Tolkien and Star Trek were real. This is the widespread belief that the author
was, in that nebulous but perfectly comprehensible expression, Tapping into Something. To square this with his publically stated
philosophical views, one would have to conclude that either a great many people
were misreading Lovecraft, or that Lovecraft’s stories were expressing a
fundamentally different sensibility than he himself did in everyday life.
There
are some more obvious reasons why Lovecraft’s fiction should have moved into
this liminal, speculative territory.
Positioned where he was historically, Lovecraft was ideally situated to
tap into two contrary cultural streams.
On the one hand, he was absorbed in the modernising tendency of the empirical sciences, which were
themselves becoming considerably exotic and mind-bending during that
period. On the other, the real bread and
butter of Lovecraft’s inspiration came from a contrary, anti-modernist cultural tendency, best represented by the Occult
Revival, Ignatius Donnelly, the Theosophists, and Charles Fort’s serio-comic
philosophical assault on the orthodoxies of both science and religion. Now, all of these influences taken together
sowed the seeds of various cultural manifestations that would explode in the
postwar period of the twentieth century, becoming major popular preoccupations
and quasi-real entities at the speculative edge of mainstream reality: UFOs,
the still reverberating Ancient Astronaut craze, Alternative Archaeology, and
so forth. Lovecraft not only pre-empted
these soon to be widespread cultural fascinations in his fictions, but he also
captured perfectly their ambiguous nature precisely as quasi-real entities. This is
because he was a truly Fortean writer.
The supernatural or extraterrestrial could not be taken for granted in
his stories; it produced ambiguous evidence in the form of blurry photographs,
footprints, tape recordings, and anomalous historical discoveries whose
veracity, meaning, and implications had to be carefully considered by sceptical
academics. As in the case, for example,
of John Keel’s Fortean classic The
Mothman Prophecies, we have to remain alert to the possibility that an
unreliable narrator may be misinterpreting the overall pattern into existence
from a perspective of heightened paranoia.
Hence, anybody who had first read a much later book on UFOs or
speculative archaeology would instantly recognise that Lovecraft’s stories were
written in a similar mode of quasi-realism, or what Pauwels and Bergier
labelled “fantastic realism” in their Fortean masterwork Morning of the Magicians.
So
then, to sceptical readers of the Lovecraft phenomenon, the author had simply
plundered the works of the Theosophists for exotic story ideas (siphoning off
all their cosmic optimism in the process), and in a final riposte from fate, a
generation of posthumous readers simply didn’t get the position of
rationalistic materialism which he was really espousing. This would certainly be the view of Joyce
Carol Oates, who writes in The King Of Weird that weird fiction “can only be a product, Lovecraft saw, of an age
that has ceased to believe collectively in the supernatural while retaining the
primitive instinct to do so, in eccentric, atomized ways. He would hardly have
been surprised, but rather confirmed in his cynicism regarding human
intelligence, could he have foreseen how, from the 1950s onward, hundreds of
thousands, perhaps millions, of purportedly sane Americans would come to
believe in UFOs and “extra-terrestrial” beings with particular, often erotic
designs upon them.” (It seems doubtful that Oates has read much Kenneth
Grant.) Or Jason Colavito, who, in The Cult of Alien Gods: H.P. Lovecraft and
Extraterrestrial Pop Culture and elsewhere, has written extensively on the
influence of the Cthulhu Mythos on the popularity of ancient astronaut and alternate
archaeological theory. Although I
haven’t read Colavito’s work, the gist of his argument I take to be an attack
on the latter on the basis that it derives, in some part, from the ideas of a
fiction writer who did not himself take the ideas in his stories
seriously. However, how seriously
Lovecraft did or not take the content of his stories, and to what extent his
publically espoused position of rationalistic materialism is an accurate
representation of his inner life, seem to me to remain an open question. Looking closely at the stories as a kind of
psychological autobiography, we find instead a figure deeply preoccupied and
enthralled by the power of his subconscious imagination, and possessed of an
uneasy and even contradictory philosophy pitched somewhere between a mystical
idealism and a materialistic despair.
Much
of Lovecraft’s writing addresses itself to the crisis of modern consciousness
which Huysmans expresses so beautifully and succinctly at the end of A rebours (Against Nature):
‘Lord,
take pity on the Christian who doubts, on the unbeliever who would fain
believe, on the galley-slave who puts out to sea alone, in the night, beneath a
firmament no longer lit by the consoling beacon-fires of the ancient hope!’
What
is one to do in a world which seems no longer fashioned for man to exist
in? A world, in fact, where man’s
existence appears like a tiny, transitory accident that might as easily never
have happened, with no lasting or discernible effect on the whole? Lovecraft examines these questions throughout
his fictions, and a consistent enough reply emerges. Again and again, we see a figure that finds
life in the modern world utterly unbearable, and constantly seeks escape. This recurring character can find solace and
meaning in neither religion or
science. Instead, he finds peace only in
a motion towards the past, both in the sense of his own childhood and the deeper,
wider past of the species, a motion which is facilitated by dreams. It is, in fact, always only dreams and the imagination
which provides sure escape from the emptiness of modern life, and engenders a
sense of solace, harmony, and purpose where everything else leads only to cul-de-sac. We find this figure etched out in the dream
piece Celephais:
The
more he withdrew from the world around him, the more wonderful became his
dreams and it would have been quite futile to try to describe them on
paper. Kuranes was not modern, and did
not think like the others who wrote.
Whilst they strove to strip life of its embroidered robes of myth, and
to show in naked ugliness the foul thing that is reality, Kuranes sought for
beauty alone. When truth and experience
failed to reveal it, he sought it in fancy and illusion, and found it on his
very doorstep, amid the nebulous memories of childhood tales and dreams.
Again,
in the fragment The Descendent we
find the would-be gnostic escapee who can find no peace in either “formal
religion” or in the “close vistas of science”:
During
the ‘nineties, he dabbled in Satanism, and at all times he devoured avidly any
doctrine or theory which seemed to promise escape from the close vistas of
science and the duly unvarying laws of Nature.
Books like Ignatius Donnelly’s chimerical account of Atlantis he
absorbed with zest, and a dozen obscure precursors of Charles Fort enthralled
him with their vagaries.
That this is
Lovecraft speaking autobiographically is confirmed, I would suggest, by the
fact that we find the same basic character and ethos elaborated upon in the
figure of Randolph Carter in The Silver
Key (1926.) The Silver Key is the closest thing in Lovecraft’s stories to a
philosophical autobiography, and his most direct tackling of the problem of
modernity – perhaps unsurprisingly the readers of Weird Tales “violently disliked it.” Here Lovecraft, through a Randolph Carter
sliding into middle-aged ennui,
surveys all conceivable adaptations to the modern condition, and finds all
wanting. Religion, despite its mythical
charms, is a done-deal, dodo relic; the “popular doctrines of occultism” show
themselves to be as “dry and inflexible as those of science, yet without even
the slender palliative of truth to redeem them.” Interestingly, though, the scientific
worldview proves to be as futile as the rest of them:
When he complained, and longed to escape into
twilight realms where magic moulded all the little vivid fragments and prized
associations of his mind into vistas of breathless expectancy and unquenchable
delight, they turned him instead towards the new-found prodigies of science,
bidding him find wonder in the atom’s vortex and mystery in the sky’s
dimension, and when he failed to find these boons in things whose laws are
known and measurable, they told him he lacked imagination, and was immature
because he preferred dream-illusions to the illusions of our physical creation.
Here we find a
kind of idealism creeping into the
picture, in that Carter asserts that both real life and dream life consist only
of sensations (“pictures in the
brain”) and there is no reason to privilege one set of sensations over the
other: “Wonder had gone away, and he had forgotten that all life is only a set
of pictures in the brain, among which there is no difference betwixt those born
of real things and those born of inward dreamings, and no cause to value the
one above the other.” Yet, oddly, Carter
continues to maintain Lovecraft’s dour doctrine of the “blind cosmos” that
“grinds aimlessly on from nothing to something and from something back to
nothing again.” Why, one would wonder,
does this particular speculative idea
of the cosmos hold a privileged status among the set of “pictures in the
brain”, since it is presumably derived from “real things”, and as such,
according to Carter’s earlier assertion, holds no special significance or value
over and above things belonging to the imagination and the dream-life? In the same paragraph, Carter critiques the
“superstitious reverence for that which tangibly and physically exists”, and
yet continues to maintain in the same breath Lovecraft’s putative materialistic
philosophy of the blind and meaningless cosmos.
There is clearly something very contradictory afoot here. The two ideas – idealistic privileging of the
imagination, and materialistic despair in the face of the universe’s pitiless
intransigence – only barely hold together.
My personal
feeling is that Lovecraft was in his essential nature a mystic (and even Joyce
Carol Oates concedes this to an extent: “Despite
Lovecraft’s expressed contempt for mysticism, clearly he was a kind of mystic,
drawing intuitively upon a cosmology of images that came to him unbidden, from
the “underside” of his life….”), but was drawn to a pessimistic variety of
materialism because of the contingent emotional and psychological circumstances
of his life. The death of his father in
an asylum owing to untreated syphilis when Lovecraft was seven; the
difficulties of his relationship with his mother; the fact that, for whatever
reason, he seemed to possess little or no sexual drive to render the physical
dimension of his existence purposive and meaningful; all of these factors made
the idea of a blind, meaningless material cosmos emotionally appealing to
Lovecraft. The bleakness of his
emotional existence would make sense in such a cosmos. Yet his mystical tendency drew him in a
different direction, and out of these contradictory impulses emerges the
specifically Lovecraftian creation of cosmic
horror, that is, the mystic part of the brain seeking vast, mind-expanding
epiphanies, and the despairing materialist part colouring those epiphanies
decisively with a sense of deep inadequacy and physical loathing and
disgust. Lovecraft becomes a negative
gnostic for whom the flash of true awareness only cements the despair of
imprisonment; he becomes what Huxley in The
Doors of Perception calls a
negative visionary:
And then there is the
horror of infinity. For the healthy
visionary, the perception of the infinite in a finite particular is revelation
of divine immanence; for Renee (a
schizophrenic), it was a revelation of what she called ‘the System’, the
vast cosmic mechanism which exists only to grind out guilt and punishment,
solitude and unreality.’
For them, as for the
positive visionary, the universe is transfigured – but for the worse. Everything in it, from the stars in the sky
to the dust under their feet, is unspeakably sinister or disgusting; every
event is charged with a hateful significance, every object manifests the
presence of an Indwelling Horror, infinite, all-powerful, eternal. (The Doors
of Perception.)
Bearing these
contradictions in mind, it seems to me that however one feels about Kenneth
Grant’s occult reading of Lovecraft, he was surely right that the author was
enthralled and terrified by the power of his subconscious imagination. In fact, it isn’t difficult to see a distinct
autobiographical echo in the predicament of Nathaniel Wingate Peaslee, the
narrator of The Shadow Out of Time. Like Lovecraft, Peaslee is haunted by vivid,
alien dreams which he desperately wants to be nothing more than figments of his
imagination: “the glimpses still seemed damnably like memories, though I fought off this impression with a goodly measure
of success.” Haunted by the vividness
and consistency of the alien world of his dreams, Peaslee must console himself
with rational explanations which ultimately make his dreams insignificant
delusions:
Suppose I did see strange things at
night? These were only what I had heard
and read of. Suppose I did have odd
loathings and perspectives and pseudo-memories?
These, too, were only echoes of myths absorbed in my secondary
state. Nothing that I might dream,
nothing that I might feel, could be of any actual significance.
Hence, in The Shadow, we find both the culmination
of Lovecraft’s fictional art, and the perfect expression of the myth of
Lovecraft: the artist as dream-haunted pedant, bitterly conflicted between the
modern, daylight realm of reason, and the deeper wellsprings of the unconsciousness,
which show him visions of puzzling consistency and vividness, and draw him
always further back along a vast ancestral stream.
Since we
started by drawing comparisons between Lovecraft stories and DMT trips, it’s
time to wrap things up by looking at the story of an anthropologist who consumed
a large dose of ayahuasca, and experienced something peculiarly like a HP Lovecraft story. In 1960-61, Michael Harner was living with
and studying the customs of the Conibo Indians in the Peruvian Amazon. Attempting to better understand the religious
traditions of the Conibo, Harner drank something in the region of a third of a
bottle of ayahuasca. After several
intense visions involving a “carnival of demons” and “large numbers of people
with the heads of blue jays and the bodies of humans, not unlike the
bird-headed gods of ancient Egyptian tomb paintings”, Harner became convinced
that he was dying. What follows is pure
Lovecraft, and worth quoting at length (from Jeremy Narby’s The Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of
Knowledge):
Then he saw that his visions emanated from
“giant reptilian creatures” resting at the lowest depths of his brain. These creatures began projecting scenes in
front of his eyes, while informing him that this information was reserved for
the dying and the dead: “First they
showed me the planet Earth as it was eons ago, before there was any life on
it. I saw an ocean, barren land, and a
bright blue sky. Then black specks
dropped from the sky by the hundreds and landed in front of me on the barren
landscape. I could see the ‘specks’ were
actually large, shiny, black creatures with stubby pterodactyl-like wings and
huge whale-like bodies….They explained to me in a kind of thought language that
they were fleeing from something out in space.
They had come to the planet Earth to escape their enemy. The creatures then showed me how they had
created life on the planet in order to hide within the multitudinous forms and
thus disguise their presence. Before me,
the magnificence of plant and animal creation and speciation – hundreds of millions
of years of activity – took place on a scale and with a vividness impossible to
describe. I learned that the dragon-like
creatures were thus inside all forms of life, including man.”
Narby’s thesis
in The Cosmic Serpent is worth
dwelling upon for a moment. He concluded
that when in trance, shamans “take their consciousness down to the molecular
level and gain information related to DNA.”
The idea in essence, however, was not entirely new. Timothy Leary had come to more or less the
same conclusion after experimenting with mushrooms and (copiously) with
LSD. In a television interview from the
Millbrook days, Leary spoke of gaining access to “the long telephone wire of
history, which goes back two billion years, and which is buried somewhere
inside your brain and mine….we are neurologically and biochemically in touch with
thousands of generations that came before us, and the record of these previous
evolutionary attempts are there, it’s just that our mental/symbolic minds can’t
decode these messages.” In the idea of
an accessible database of genetic memory contained in our DNA, we find a new
quasi-scientific metaphor for the major idea which has recurred throughout this
essay, be it the Platonic Mind At Large
of Huxley, the occult Akashic Record of the Theosophists, or the Indiana
Jones-like lost temple of Cayce’s Hall of Records. In his treatment of Leary’s eight circuit model
of consciousness in Prometheus Rising,
Robert Anton Wilson calls this the Collective Neurogenic Circuit, which “processes
DNA-RNA-brain feedback systems and is “collective” in the sense that contains
and has access to the whole evolutionary “script”, past and future.” All of this speaks to a fascinating notion
which is perhaps preeminent among the religious ideas of the modern west: that
our minds contain something far older and smarter than ourselves, and with
which we attain a fleeting communication in the shared register of myths,
dreams, and the fantastic or weird. To attain communion with these deeper strata of consciousness is perhaps the shared heretical goal of Jungians, surrealists, psychedelic voyagers, and a certain type of fantastic or popular artist who embodies elements of all of the above, sometimes unconsciously. Philip K. Dick observed that the symbols of the Divine appear first in the trash stratum. William James conceded that many religious manifestations and visions could be accounted for by appealing to the individual's psyche and unconscious, but he left it open that the unconscious might itself be precisely designed to receive the influx of higher transmissions: "The notion of the subconscious self certainly ought not at this point of our inquiry be held to exclude of notion of a higher penetration. If there be higher powers able to impress us, they may get access to us only through the subliminal door".
Whether such vast storehouses of ancestral and possibly futuristic knowledge actually exist or not, and whether it happened that a Providence misanthrope of dubious literary reputation was tapping into one due to nightly soakings of DMT from his overactive pineal gland, I leave as usual to the reader to decide. Interestingly, though, the idea of the Hall of Records within seems to have occurred to Lovecraft, as we find in the conclusion to the earlier quoted fragment The Descendent:
Whether such vast storehouses of ancestral and possibly futuristic knowledge actually exist or not, and whether it happened that a Providence misanthrope of dubious literary reputation was tapping into one due to nightly soakings of DMT from his overactive pineal gland, I leave as usual to the reader to decide. Interestingly, though, the idea of the Hall of Records within seems to have occurred to Lovecraft, as we find in the conclusion to the earlier quoted fragment The Descendent:
There rose within him
the tantalizing faith that somewhere an easy gate existed, which if one found
would admit him freely to those outer deeps whose echoes rattled so dimly at
the back of his memory. It might be in
the visible world, yet it might be only in his mind and soul. Perhaps he held within his own half-explored
brain that cryptic link which would awaken him to elder and future lives in
forgotten dimensions; which would bind him to the stars, and to the infinities
and eternities beyond them.
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