"The Haunter of the Dark" is a
horror story in
the
Cthulhu Mythos genre. It was
written by
H. P. Lovecraft
in November
1935, and published
in the December
1936 edition of
Weird Tales (Vol. 28, No. 5, p.
538–53). It is a sequel to "The Shambler from the Stars", by
Robert Bloch, and Bloch wrote a third
story in the sequence, "The Shadow from the Steeple", in
1950.
Inspiration
Lovecraft wrote this tale as a sequel and reply to "
The Shambler from the Stars"
(
1935) by
Robert Bloch, in which Bloch kills the
Lovecraft-inspired character. Lovecraft returned the favor in this
tale, killing off
Robert Harrison
Blake (aka Robert Bloch). Bloch later wrote a third story, "The
Shadow from the Steeple" (
1950),
to create a trilogy.
In Blake's final notes, he refers to "Roderick Usher", an allusion
to
Edgar Allan Poe's "
The Fall of the House of
Usher", which Lovecraft described in "
Supernatural Horror in
Literature" as featuring "an abnormally linked trinity of
entities...a brother, his twin sister, and their incredibly ancient
house all sharing a single soul and meeting one common dissolution
at the same moment."
An H. P. Lovecraft
Encyclopedia suggests that this interpretation is the key to
understanding the ending of "The Haunter of the Dark": "[W]e are to
believe that the entity in the church--the Haunter of the Dark,
described as an avatar of
Nyarlathotep--has possessed Blake's mind but,
at the moment of doing so, is struck by lightning and killed, and
Blake dies as well."
Plot summary
The story
takes place in Providence, Rhode Island
and revolves around the Church of Starry
Wisdom. The cult uses an ancient artifact known as the
Shining Trapezohedron to summon a terrible being from the depths of
time and space.
The
Shining Trapezohedron was discovered in Egyptian ruins, in a box of
alien construction, by Professor Enoch
Bowen before he returned to Providence, Rhode Island
in 1844. Members of the Church of Starry
Wisdom in Providence would awaken the Haunter of the Dark, an
avatar of
Nyarlathotep, by gazing into
the glowing crystal. Summoned from the black gulfs of chaos, this
being could show other worlds, other galaxies, and the secrets of
arcane and paradoxical knowledge; but he demanded monstrous
sacrifices, hinted at by disfigured skeletons that were later found
in the church. The Haunter of the Dark was banished by light and
could not cross a lighted area.
The Shining Trapezohedron is a window on all space and time.
Described as a "crazily angled stone", it is unlikely to be a true
trapezohedron because of the
Old Ones' penchant for bizarre
non-
Euclidean angles. It was
created on dark
Yuggoth and brought to Earth
by the Old Ones, where it was placed in its box aeons before the
first human beings appeared. After the passing of the Old Ones,
during the final stages of the lower
Triassic period, the trapezohedron was
salvaged from the ruins of their cyclopean cities by the
serpent people of
Valusia.
Eventually, after the bloody extermination of
the serpent people at the hands of the advancing pre-human hordes
of Lomar, the device found its way into the possession of the
primitive men of Lemuria, Atlantis and in later cycles the Pharaoh Nephren Ka of
Egypt
until at last it was unearthed and brought to New
England.
After the
death of Robert Blake, who
came to grief after discovering the Shining Trapezohedron and
deciphering texts about it from ancient evil cults, the artifact
was removed from the black windowless steeple where it was found by
a Dr. Dexter and thrown into the deepest channel of Narragansett
Bay
. It was expected to remain there, under the
eternal light of the stars, forever; yet, Robert Bloch's sequel,
The Shadow from the Steeple, proved that Nyarlathotep had
cheated Dexter, forcing him to peer into the stone and actually
throw the stone into the bay, where the eternal darkness of the
depths gave the Haunter the power to remain perpetually free; it
used this power to merge with Dr. Dexter and make him one of the
world's leading nuclear scientists-in charge of atomic
investigation for warfare.
Characters
Robert Blake
Robert Harrison
Blake is a fictional horror writer who first appears,
unnamed, in Robert Bloch's 1935 story "The Shambler from the
Stars". In Lovecraft's sequel, "The Haunter of the Dark", Blake
dies while investigating the
Starry Wisdom
cult of Enoch Bowen. Lovecraft modeled Blake on Bloch, but also
gave him characteristics that evoke
Clark Ashton Smith and Lovecraft
himself.
Blake's death is the starting point for another sequel by Bloch,
"The Shadow from the Steeple" (1950). Blake's fiction is referred
to in
Ramsey Campbell's “The
Franklyn Paragraphs” (1973) and
Philip José Farmer's “The Freshman”
(1979).
Enoch Bowen
In
Lovecraft's "The Haunter of the Dark", Enoch Bowen
is a renowned occultist and archaeologist who lived in Providence,
Rhode Island
. In 1843, Bowen earned some measure of fame
when he found the tomb of the unknown
pharaoh Nephren-Ka. A
year later, Bowen mysteriously ceased his archaeological dig and
returned to Providence where he founded the
Church of Starry Wisdom. He dies
circa 1865. He also appears in "
The Shadow from the Steeple",
Robert Bloch's sequel to "The Haunter
of the Dark".
Ambrose Dexter
In "The
Haunter of the Dark", he is referred to only as "superstitious
Doctor Dexter", who threw the Shining
Trapezohedron into "the deepest channel of Narragansett
Bay
" after the death of Robert Blake.
In "The Shadow From the Steeple", Bloch's sequel, the darkness of
the bay's bottom gives
Nyarlathotep the
power to possess Dr. Dexter (who is given the first name of
Ambrose). The possessed Dr. Dexter takes a position on a
nuclear physics team developing advanced
nuclear weapons.
Connections with other tales
- The Shining Trapezohedron is mentioned as having being
fashioned on Yuggoth, an outpost of the
Mi-Go mentioned in "The Whisperer in Darkness".
- "It (i.e. The Shining Trapezohedron) was treasured and placed
in its curious box by the crinoid
things of Antarctica", suggesting a connection with the Elder Things from At the Mountains of
Madness.
- The serpent-men of Valusia also held
possession of the Shining Trapezohedron at one point, connecting it
to the Kull tales of Robert E. Howard.
- The "catacombs of Nephren-Ka" are mentioned as the haunt of
ghouls in "The
Outsider", and Nephren-Ka is mentioned as the Pharaoh who built
a temple with a lightless crypt to the Shining Trapezohedron "did
that which caused his name to be stricken from all monuments and
records".
- The events of this story are alluded to in The Illuminatus! Trilogy, where they are
depicted as actually happening near where Lovecraft lives with the
author being inspired by the actual events.
Adaptations
John Coulthart illustrated the story, which was published in 1988
and reprinted in
H. P. Lovecraft's The
Haunter of the Dark.
Robert Cappelletto adapted the story for his 2009 feature film
Pickman's Muse.
References
- Lovecraft, Howard P. "The Haunter of the Dark" (1936) in
The Dunwich Horror and Others, S. T. Joshi (ed.), Sauk
City, WI: Arkham House, 1984. ISBN 0-87054-037-8. Definitive
version.
- With explanatory footnotes.
Footnotes