Delphi Complete Works of H. P. Lovecraft (Illustrated) (251 page)

BOOK: Delphi Complete Works of H. P. Lovecraft (Illustrated)
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Festiv
al

 

    
There is snow on the ground,
         
  
And the valleys are cold,
     
And a midnight profound
           
Blackly squats o’er the wold;
But a light on the hilltops half-seen hints of feastings unhallow’d and old.

 

    
There is death in the clouds,
           
There is fear in the night,
   
  
For the dead in their shrouds
           
Hail the sun’s turning flight,
And chant wild in the woods as they dance round a Yule-altar fungous and white.

 

    
To no gale of earth’s kind
           
Sways the forest of oak,
     
Where the sick boughs entwin’d
           
By mad mistletoes choke,
For these pow’rs are the pow’rs of the dark, from the graves of the lost Druid-folk.

 

    
And mayst thou to such deeds
           
Be an abbot and priest,
     
Singing cannibal greeds
           
At each devil-wrought feast,
And to all the incredulous world shewing dimly the sign of the beast.

 

Hallowe’en in a Subu
rb

 

The steeples are white in the wild moonlight,
     
And the trees have a silver glare;
Past the chimneys high see the vampires fly,
     
And the harpies of upper air,
     
That flutter and laugh and stare.

 

For the village dead to the moon outspread
     
Never shone in the sunset’s gleam,
But grew out of the deep that the dead years keep
     
Where the rivers of madness stream
     
Down the gulfs to a pit of dream.

 

A chill wind weaves thro’ the rows of sheaves
     
In the meadows that shimmer pale,
And comes to twine where the headstones shine
     
And the ghouls of the churchyard wail
     
For harvests that fly and fail.

 

Not a breath of the strange grey gods of change
     
That tore from the past its own
Can quicken this hour, when a spectral pow’r
     
Spreads sleep o’er the cosmic throne
     
And looses the vast unknown.

 

So here again stretch the vale and plain
     
That moons long-forgotten saw,
And the dead leap gay in the pallid ray,
     
Sprung out of the tomb’s black maw
     
To shake all the world with awe.

 

And all that the morn shall greet forlorn,
     
The ugliness and the pest
Of rows where thick rise the stones and brick,
     
Shall some day be with the rest,
     
And brood with the shades unblest.

 

Then wild in the dark let the lemurs bark,
     
And the leprous spires ascend;
For new and old alike in the fold
     
Of horror and death are penn’d,
     
For the hounds of Time to rend.

 

The Wo
od

 

They cut it down, and where the pitch-black aisles
     
Of forest night had hid eternal things,
They scal’d the sky with tow’rs and marble piles
     
To make a city for their revellings.

 

White and amazing to the lands around
     
That wondrous wealth of domes and turrets rose;
Crystal and ivory, sublimely crown’d
     
With pinnacles that bore unmelting snows.

 

And through its halls the pipe and sistrum rang,
     
While wine and riot brought their scarlet stains;
Never a voice of elder marvels sang,
     
Nor any eye call’d up the hills and plains.

 

Thus down the years, till on one purple night
     
A drunken minstrel in his careless verse
Spoke the vile words that should not see the light,
     
And stirr’d the shadows of an ancient curse.

 

Forests may fall, but not the dusk they shield;
     
So on the spot where that proud city stood,
The shuddering dawn no single stone reveal’d,
     
But fled the blackness of a primal wood.

 

The Outpo
st

 

When evening cools the yellow stream,
     
And shadows stalk the jungle’s ways,
     
Zimbabwe’s palace flares ablaze
For a great King who fears to dream.

 

For he alone of all mankind
     
Waded the swamp that serpents shun;
     
And struggling toward the setting sun,
Came on the veldt that lies behind.

 

No other eyes had vented there
     
Since eyes were lent for human sight —
     
But there, as sunset turned to night,
He found the Elder Secret’s lair.

 

Strange turrets rose beyond the plain,
     
And walls and bastions spread around
     
The distant domes that fouled the ground
Like leprous fungi after rain.

 

A grudging moon writhed up to shine
     
Past leagues where life can have no home;
     
And paling far-off tower and dome,
Shewed each unwindowed and malign.

 

Then he who in his boyhood ran
   
  
Through vine-hung ruins free of fear,
     
Trembled at what he saw — for here
Was no dead, ruined seat of man.

 

Inhuman shapes, half-seen, half-guessed,
     
Half solid and half ether-spawned,
     
Seethed down from starless voids that yawned
In heav’n, to these blank walls of pest.

 

And voidward from that pest-mad zone
     
Amorphous hordes seethed darkly back,
     
Their dim claws laden with the wrack
Of things that men have dreamed and known.

 

The ancient Fishers from Outside —
     
Were there not tales the high-priest told,
     
Of how they found the worlds of old,
And took what pelf their fancy spied?

 

Their hidden, dread-ringed outposts brood
     
Upon a million worlds of space;
     
Abhorred by every living race,
Yet scatheless in their solitude.

 

Sweating with fright, the watcher crept
     
Back to the swamp that serpents shun,
     
So that he lay, by rise of sun,
Safe in the palace where he slept.

 

None saw him leave, or come at dawn,
     
Nor does his flesh bear any mark
     
Of what he met in that curst dark —
Yet from his sleep all peace has gone.

 

When evening cools the yellow stream,
     
And shadows stalk the jungle’s ways,
     
Zimbabwe’s palace flares ablaze,
For a great King who fears to dream.

 

The Ancient Tra
ck

 

There was no hand to hold me back
That night I found the ancient track
Over the hill, and strained to see
The fields that teased my memory.
This tree, that wall — I knew them well,
And all the roofs and orchards fell
Familiarly upon my mind
As from a past not far behind.
I knew what shadows would be cast
When the late moon came up at last
From back of Zaman’s Hill, and how
The vale would shine three hours from now.
And when the path grew steep and high,
And seemed to end against the sky,
I had no fear of what might rest
Beyond that silhouetted crest.
Straight on I walked, while all the night
Grew pale with phosphorescent light,
And wall and farmhouse gable glowed
Unearthly by the climbing road.
There was the milestone that I knew —
“Two miles to Dunwich” — now the view
Of distant spire and roofs would dawn
With ten more upward paces gone. . . .

 

There was no hand to hold me back
That night I found the ancient track,
And reached the crest to see outspread
A valley of the lost and dead:
And over Zaman’s Hill the horn
Of a malignant moon was born,
To light the weeds and vines that grew
On ruined walls I never knew.
The fox-fire glowed in field and bog,
And unknown waters spewed a fog
Whose curling talons mocked the thought
That I had ever known this spot.
Too well I saw from the mad scene
That my loved past had never been —
Nor was I now upon the trail
Descending to that long-dead vale.
Around was fog — ahead, the spray
Of star-streams in the Milky Way. . . .
There was no hand to hold me back
That night I found the ancient track.

 

The Messeng
er

 

To Bertrand K. Hart, Esq.

 

The thing, he said, would come that night at three
From the old churchyard on the hill below;
But crouching by an oak fire’s wholesome glow,
I tried to tell myself it could not be.
Surely, I mused, it was a pleasantry
Devised by one who did not truly know
The Elder Sign, bequeathed from long ago,
That sets the fumbling forms of darkness free.

 

He had not meant it — no — but still I lit
Another lamp as starry Leo climbed
Out of the Seekonk, and a steeple chimed
Three — and the firelight faded, bit by bit.
Then at the door that cautious rattling came —
And the mad truth devoured me like a flame!

 

Fungi from Yuggo
th

 

I. The Book

 

The place was dark and dusty and half-lost
In tangles of old alleys near the quays,
Reeking of strange things brought in from the seas,
And with queer curls of fog that west winds tossed.
Small lozenge panes, obscured by smoke and frost,
Just shewed the books, in piles like twisted trees,
Rotting from floor to roof — congeries
Of crumbling elder lore at little cost.

 

I entered, charmed, and from a cobwebbed heap
Took up the nearest tome and thumbed it through,
Trembling at curious words that seemed to keep
Some secret, monstrous if one only knew.
Then, looking for some seller old in craft,
I could find nothing but a voice that laughed.

 

II. Pursuit

 

I held the book beneath my coat, at pains
To hide the thing from sight in such a place;
Hurrying through the ancient harbor lanes
With often-turning head and nervous pace.
Dull, furtive windows in old tottering brick
Peered at me oddly as I hastened by,
And thinking what they sheltered, I grew sick
For a redeeming glimpse of clean blue sky.

 

No one had seen me take the thing — but still
A blank laugh echoed in my whirling head,
And I could guess what nighted worlds of ill
Lurked in that volume I had coveted.
The way grew strange — the walls alike and madding —
And far behind me, unseen feet were padding.

 

III. The Key

 

I do not know what windings in the waste
Of those strange sea-lanes brought me home once more,
But on my porch I trembled, white with haste
To get inside and bolt the heavy door.
I had the book that told the hidden way
Across the void and through the space-hung screens
That hold the undimensioned worlds at bay,
And keep lost aeons to their own demesnes.

 

At last the key was mine to those vague visions
Of sunset spires and twilight woods that brood
Dim in the gulfs beyond this earth’s precisions,
Lurking as memories of infinitude.
The key was mine, but as I sat there mumbling,
The attic window shook with a faint fumbling.

 

IV. Recognition

 

The day had come again, when as a child
I saw — just once — that hollow of old oaks,
Grey with a ground-mist that enfolds and chokes
The slinking shapes which madness has defiled.
It was the same — an herbage rank and wild
Clings round an altar whose carved sign invokes
That Nameless One to whom a thousand smokes
Rose, aeons gone, from unclean towers up-piled.

 

I saw the body spread on that dank stone,
And knew those things which feasted were not men;
I knew this strange, grey world was not my own,
But Yuggoth, past the starry voids — and then
The body shrieked at me with a dead cry,
And all too late I knew that it was I!

 

V. Homecoming

 

The daemon said that he would take me home
To the pale, shadowy land I half recalled
As a high place of stair and terrace, walled
With marble balustrades that sky-winds comb,
While miles below a maze of dome on dome
And tower on tower beside a sea lies sprawled.
Once more, he told me, I would stand enthralled
On those old heights, and hear the far-off foam.

 

All this he promised, and through sunset’s gate
He swept me, past the lapping lakes of flame,
And red-gold thrones of gods without a name
Who shriek in fear at some impending fate.
Then a black gulf with sea-sounds in the night:
“Here was your home,” he mocked, “when you had sight!”

 

VI. The Lamp

 

We found the lamp inside those hollow cliffs
Whose chiseled sign no priest in Thebes could read,
And from whose caverns frightened hieroglyphs
Warned every creature of earth’s breed.
No more was there — just that one brazen bowl
With traces of a curious oil within;
Fretted with some obscurely patterned scroll,
And symbols hinting vaguely of strange sin.

 

Little the fears of forty centuries meant
To us as we bore off our slender spoil,
And when we scanned it in our darkened tent
We struck a match to test the ancient oil.
It blazed — great God! . . . But the vast shapes we saw
In that mad flash have seared our lives with awe.

 

VII. Zaman’s Hill

 

The great hill hung close over the old town,
A precipice against the main street’s end;
Green, tall, and wooded, looking darkly down
Upon the steeple at the highway bend.
Two hundred years the whispers had been heard
About what happened on the man-shunned slope —
Tales of an oddly mangled deer or bird,
Or of lost boys whose kin had ceased to hope.

 

One day the mail-man found no village there,
Nor were its folk or houses seen again;
People came out from Aylesbury to stare —
Yet they all told the mail-man it was plain
That he was mad for saying he had spied
The great hill’s gluttonous eyes, and jaws stretched wide.

 

VIII. The Port

 

Ten miles from Arkham I had struck the trail
That rides the cliff-edge over Boynton Beach,
And hoped that just at sunset I could reach
The crest that looks on Innsmouth in the vale.
Far out at sea was a retreating sail,
White as hard years of ancient winds could bleach,
But evil with some portent beyond speech,
So that I did not wave my hand or hail.

 

Sails out of lnnsmouth! echoing old renown
Of long-dead times. But now a too-swift night
Is closing in, and I have reached the height
Whence I so often scan the distant town.
The spires and roofs are there — but look! The gloom
Sinks on dark lanes, as lightless as the tomb!

 

IX. The Courtyard

 

It was the city I had known before;
The ancient, leprous town where mongrel throngs
Chant to strange gods, and beat unhallowed gongs
In crypts beneath foul alleys near the shore.
The rotting, fish-eyed houses leered at me
From where they leaned, drunk and half-animate,
As edging through the filth I passed the gate
To the black courtyard where the man would be.

 

The dark walls closed me in, and loud I cursed
That ever I had come to such a den,
When suddenly a score of windows burst
Into wild light, and swarmed with dancing men:
Mad, soundless revels of the dragging dead —
And not a corpse had either hands or head!

 

X. The Pigeon-Flyers

 

They took me slumming, where gaunt walls of brick
Bulge outward with a viscous stored-up evil,
And twisted faces, thronging foul and thick,
Wink messages to alien god and devil.
A million fires were blazing in the streets,
And from flat roofs a furtive few would fly
Bedraggled birds into the yawning sky
While hidden drums droned on with measured beats.

 

I knew those fires were brewing monstrous things,
And that those birds of space had been
Outside

I guessed to what dark planet’s crypts they plied,
And what they brought from Thog beneath their wings.
The others laughed — till struck too mute to speak
By what they glimpsed in one bird’s evil beak.

 

XI. The Well

 

Farmer Seth Atwood was past eighty when
He tried to sink that deep well by his door,
With only Eb to help him bore and bore.
We laughed, and hoped he’d soon be sane again.
And yet, instead, young Eb went crazy, too,
So that they shipped him to the county farm.
Seth bricked the well-mouth up as tight as glue —
Then hacked an artery in his gnarled left arm.

 

After the funeral we felt bound to get
Out to that well and rip the bricks away,
But all we saw were iron hand-holds set
Down a black hole deeper than we could say.
And yet we put the bricks back — for we found
The hole too deep for any line to sound.

 

XII. The Howler

 

They told me not to take the Briggs’ Hill path
That used to be the highroad through to Zoar,
For Goody Watkins, hanged in seventeen-four,
Had left a certain monstrous aftermath.
Yet when I disobeyed, and had in view
The vine-hung cottage by the great rock slope,
I could not think of elms or hempen rope,
But wondered why the house still seemed so new.

 

Stopping a while to watch the fading day,
I heard faint howls, as from a room upstairs,
When through the ivied panes one sunset ray
Struck in, and caught the howler unawares.
I glimpsed — and ran in frenzy from the place,
And from a four-pawed thing with human face.

 

XIII. Hesperia

 

The winter sunset, flaming beyond spires
And chimneys half-detached from this dull sphere,
Opens great gates to some forgotten year
Of elder splendours and divine desires.
Expectant wonders burn in those rich fires,
Adventure-fraught, and not untinged with fear;
A row of sphinxes where the way leads clear
Toward walls and turrets quivering to far lyres.

 

It is the land where beauty’s meaning flowers;
Where every unplaced memory has a source;
Where the great river Time begins its course
Down the vast void in starlit streams of hours.
Dreams bring us close — but ancient lore repeats
That human tread has never soiled these streets.

 

XIV. Star-Winds

 

It is a certain hour of twilight glooms,
Mostly in autumn, when the star-wind pours
Down hilltop streets, deserted out-of-doors,
But shewing early lamplight from snug rooms.
The dead leaves rush in strange, fantastic twists,
And chimney-smoke whirls round with alien grace,
Heeding geometries of outer space,
While Fomalhaut peers in through southward mists.

 

This is the hour when moonstruck poets know
What fungi sprout in Yuggoth, and what scents
And tints of flowers fill Nithon’s continents,
Such as in no poor earthly garden blow.
Yet for each dream these winds to us convey,
A dozen more of ours they sweep away!

 

XV. Antarktos

 

Deep in my dream the great bird whispered queerly
Of the black cone amid the polar waste;
Pushing above the ice-sheet lone and drearly,
By storm-crazed aeons battered and defaced.
Hither no living earth-shapes take their courses,
And only pale auroras and faint suns
Glow on that pitted rock, whose primal sources
Are guessed at dimly by the Elder Ones.

 

If men should glimpse it, they would merely wonder
What tricky mound of Nature’s build they spied;
But the bird told of vaster parts, that under
The mile-deep ice-shroud crouch and brood and bide.
God help the dreamer whose mad visions shew
Those dead eyes set in crystal gulfs below!

 

XVI. The Window

 

The house was old, with tangled wings outthrown,
Of which no one could ever half keep track,
And in a small room somewhat near the back
Was an odd window sealed with ancient stone.
There, in a dream-plagued childhood, quite alone
I used to go, where night reigned vague and black;
Parting the cobwebs with a curious lack
Of fear, and with a wonder each time grown.

 

One later day I brought the masons there
To find what view my dim forbears had shunned,
But as they pierced the stone, a rush of air
Burst from the alien voids that yawned beyond.
They fled — but I peered through and found unrolled
All the wild worlds of which my dreams had told.

 

XVII. A Memory

 

There were great steppes, and rocky table-lands
Stretching half-limitless in starlit night,
With alien campfires shedding feeble light
On beasts with tinkling bells, in shaggy bands.
Far to the south the plain sloped low and wide
To a dark zigzag line of wall that lay
Like a huge python of some primal day
Which endless time had chilled and petrified.

 

I shivered oddly in the cold, thin air,
And wondered where I was and how I came,
When a cloaked form against a campfire’s glare
Rose and approached, and called me by my name.
Staring at that dead face beneath the hood,
I ceased to hope — because I understood.

 

XVIII. The Gardens of Yin

 

Beyond that wall, whose ancient masonry
Reached almost to the sky in moss-thick towers,
There would be terraced gardens, rich with flowers,
And flutter of bird and butterfly and bee.
There would be walks, and bridges arching over
Warm lotos-pools reflecting temple eaves,
And cherry-trees with delicate boughs and leaves
Against a pink sky where the herons hover.

 

All would be there, for had not old dreams flung
Open the gate to that stone-lanterned maze
Where drowsy streams spin out their winding ways,
Trailed by green vines from bending branches hung?
I hurried — but when the wall rose, grim and great,
I found there was no longer any gate.

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