β
The world is indeed comic, but the joke is on mankind.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Supernatural Horror in Literature)
β
Pleasure to me is wonderβthe unexplored, the unexpected, the thing that is hidden and the changeless thing that lurks behind superficial mutability.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Almost nobody dances sober, unless they happen to be insane.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
From even the greatest of horrors irony is seldom absent.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Tales of H.P. Lovecraft)
β
That is not dead which can eternal lie,
And with strange aeons even death may die.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Nameless City)
β
I couldn't live a week without a private library - indeed, I'd part with all my furniture and squat and sleep on the floor before I'd let go of the 1500 or so books I possess.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
It is good to be a cynic β it is better to be a contented cat β and it is best not to exist at all.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Collected Essays 5: Philosophy, Autobiography and Miscellany)
β
I know always that I am an outsider; a stranger in this century and among those who are still men.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Outsider)
β
Never Explain Anything
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I have seen the dark universe yawning
Where the black planets roll without aim,
Where they roll in their horror unheeded,
Without knowledge, or lustre, or name.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Nemesis)
β
To be bitter is to attribute intent and personality to the formless, infinite, unchanging and unchangeable void. We drift on a chartless, resistless sea. Let us sing when we can, and forget the rest..
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
If I am mad, it is mercy! May the gods pity the man who in his callousness can remain sane to the hideous end!
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Temple)
β
Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.
In his house at R'lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu)
β
Those who love life do not read. Nor do they go to the movies, actually. No matter what might be said, access to the artistic universe is more or less entirely the preserve of those who are a little fed up with the world.
β
β
Michel Houellebecq (H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life)
β
I never ask a man what his business is, for it never interests me. What I ask him about are his thoughts and dreams.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents... 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 light into the peace and safety of a new Dark Age.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Creative minds are uneven, and the best of fabrics have their dull spots.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
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.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu: With a Dedication by George Henry Weiss)
β
At night, when the objective world has slunk back into its cavern and left dreamers to their own, there come inspirations and capabilities impossible at any less magical and quiet hour. No one knows whether or not he is a writer unless he has tried writing at night.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Ultimate horror often paralyses memory in a merciful way.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Rats in the Walls)
β
The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Religion is still useful among the herd - that it helps their orderly conduct as nothing else could. The crude human animal is in-eradicably superstitious, and there is every biological reason why they should be.
Take away his Christian god and saints, and he will worship something else...
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Pleasure to me is wonderβthe unexplored, the unexpected, the thing that is hidden and the changeless thing that lurks behind superficial mutability. To trace the remote in the immediate; the eternal in the ephemeral; the past in the present; the infinite in the finite; these are to me the springs of delight and beauty.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
For I have always been a seeker, a dreamer, and a ponderer on seeking and dreaming...
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Night Ocean et autres nouvelles)
β
Unhappy is he to whom the memories of childhood bring only fear and sadness.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
No new horror can be more terrible than the daily torture of the commonplace.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Necronomicon: The Best Weird Tales)
β
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.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Dunwich Horror and Others)
β
In his house at R'lyeh, dead Cthulu waits dreaming
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu and Other Weird Stories)
β
Searchers after horror haunt strange, far places.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
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 light into the peace and safety of a new dark age.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I felt myself on the edge of the world; peering over the rim into a fathomless chaos of eternal night.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
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.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Silver Key)
β
The appeal of the spectrally macabre is generally narrow because it demands from the reader a certain degree of imagination and a capacity for detachment from everyday life.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Contrary to what you may assume, I am not a pessimist but an indifferentist- that is, I don't make the mistake of thinking that the... cosmos... gives a damn one way or the other about the especial wants and ultimate welfare of mosquitoes, rats, lice, dogs, men, horses, pterodactyls, trees, fungi, dodos, or other forms of biological energy.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I like coffee exceedingly...
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
There are horrors beyond life's edge that we do not suspect, and once in a while man's evil prying calls them just within our range.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Thing on the Doorstep)
β
Through all this horror my cat stalked unperturbed. Once I saw him monstrously perched atop a mountain of bones, and wondered at the secrets that might lie behind his yellow eyes.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Rats in the Walls)
β
Bunch together a group of people deliberately chosen for strong religious feelings, and you have a practical guarantee of dark morbidities expressed in crime, perversion, and insanity.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Life is painful and disappointing. It is useless, therefore, to write new realistic novels. We generally know where we stand in relation to reality and donβt care to know any more.
β
β
Michel Houellebecq (H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life)
β
Blue, green, grey, white, or black; smooth, ruffled, or mountainous; that ocean is not silent.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I have harnessed the shadows that stride from world to world to sow death and madness.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (From Beyond)
β
The basis of all true cosmic horror is violation of the order of nature, and the profoundest violations are always the least concrete and describable.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Selected Letters III: 1929-1931)
β
The situation has a real Lovecraft feel to it. Though, you know, if you come over it'll be more of an Anne Rice situation. If you know what I mean."
"Who's-"
"Because you're gay.
β
β
David Wong (John Dies at the End (John Dies at the End, #1))
β
Only poetry or madness could do justice to the noises...
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I have looked upon all the universe has to hold of horror, and even the skies of spring and flowers of summer must ever afterward be poison to me.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu)
β
I expect nothing of man, and disown the race. The only folly is expecting what is never attained; man is most contemptible when compared with his own pretensions. It is better to laugh at man from outside the universe, than to weep for him within.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
All fledβall done, so lift me on the pyreβ
The Feast is over, and the lamps expire.
β
β
Robert E. Howard
β
Who knows the end? 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.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Complete Works of H.P. Lovecraft)
β
Throw a stick, and the servile dog wheezes and pants and stumbles to bring it to you. Do the same before a cat, and he will eye you with coolly polite and somewhat bored amusement. And just as inferior people prefer the inferior animal which scampers excitedly because someone else wants something, so do superior people respect the superior animal which lives its own life and knows that the puerile stick-throwings of alien bipeds are none of its business and beneath its notice. The dog barks and begs and tumbles to amuse you when you crack the whip. That pleases a meekness-loving peasant who relishes a stimulus to his self importance. The cat, on the other hand, charms you into playing for its benefit when it wishes to be amused; making you rush about the room with a paper on a string when it feels like exercise, but refusing all your attempts to make it play when it is not in the humour. That is personality and individuality and self-respect -- the calm mastery of a being whose life is its own and not yours -- and the superior person recognises and appreciates this because he too is a free soul whose position is assured, and whose only law is his own heritage and aesthetic sense.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
incurable lover of the grotesque
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I am so beastly tired of mankind and the world that nothing can interest me unless it contains a couple of murders on each page or deals with the horrors unnameable and unaccountable that leer down from the external universes.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Do not call up that which you cannot put down.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Case of Charles Dexter Ward)
β
That is not dead which can eternal lie,
And with strange aeons even death may die.
β
β
null
β
I could not help feeling that they were evil things -- mountains of madness whose farther slopes looked out over some accursed ultimate abyss.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (At the Mountains of Madness and Other Tales of Terror)
β
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.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
When the stars were right, They could plunge from world to world through the sky; but when the stars were wrong, They could not live.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu)
β
That is not dead which can eternal lie, And with strange aeons, even death may die. βH. P. Lovecraft
β
β
Stephen King (Revival)
β
No death, no doom, no anguish can arouse the surpassing despair which flows from a loss of identity.
- Through the Gates of the Silver Key
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath)
β
There are not many persons who know what wonders are opened to them in the stories and visions of their youth; for when as children we learn and dream, we think but half-formed thoughts, and when as men we try to remember, we are dulled and prosaic with the poison of life. But some of us awake in the night with strange phantasms of enchanted hills and gardens, of fountains that sing in the sun, of golden cliffs overhanging murmuring seas, of plains that stretch down to sleeping cities of bronze and stone, and of shadowy companies of heroes that ride caparisoned white horses along the edges of thick forests; and then we know that we have looked back through the ivory gates into that world of wonder which was ours before we were wise and unhappy.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
We all know that any emotional bias -- irrespective of truth or falsity -- can be implanted by suggestion in the emotions of the young, hence the inherited traditions of an orthodox community are absolutely without evidential value.... If religion were true, its followers would not try to bludgeon their young into an artificial conformity; but would merely insist on their unbending quest for truth, irrespective of artificial backgrounds or practical consequences. With such an honest and inflexible openness to evidence, they could not fail to receive any real truth which might be manifesting itself around them. The fact that religionists do not follow this honourable course, but cheat at their game by invoking juvenile quasi-hypnosis, is enough to destroy their pretensions in my eyes even if their absurdity were not manifest in every other direction.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Against Religion: The Atheist Writings of H.P. Lovecraft)
β
Let's say it once and for all: Poe and Lovecraft - not to mention a Bruno Schulz or a Franz Kafka - were what the world at large would consider extremely disturbed individuals. And most people who are that disturbed are not able to create works of fiction. These and other names I could mention are people who are just on the cusp of total psychological derangement. Sometimes they cross over and fall into the province of 'outsider artists.' That's where the future development of horror fiction lies - in the next person who is almost too emotionally and psychologically damaged to live in the world but not too damaged to produce fiction.
β
β
Thomas Ligotti
β
The most merciful thing in the world... is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Something was creeping and creeping and waiting to be seen and felt and heard.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Sometimes I believe that this less material life is our truer life, and that our vain presence on the terraqueous globe is itself the secondary or merely virtual phenomenon.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Wise men have interpreted dreams, and the gods have laughed.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Hypnos)
β
The end is near. I hear a noise at the door, as of some immense slippery body lumbering against it. It shall not find me. God, that hand! The window! The window!
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Dagon et autres nouvelles de terreur)
β
That's because only a real artist knows the actual anatomy of the terrible or the physiology of fear - the exact sort of lines and proportions that connect up with latent instincts or hereditary memories of fright, and the proper colour contrasts and lighting effects to stir the dormant sense of strangeness.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Pickman's Model)
β
Memory sometimes makes merciful deletions.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Case of Charles Dexter Ward)
β
The sea had jeeringly kept his finite body up, but drowned the infinite of his soul. Not drowned entirely, though. Rather carried down alive to wondrous depths, where strange shapes of the unwarped primal world glided to and fro before his passive eyes; and the miser-merman, Wisdom, revealed his hoarded heaps; and among the joyous, heartless, ever-juvenile eternities, Pip saw the multitudinous, God-omnipresent, coral insects, that out of the firmament of waters heaved the colossal orbs. He saw Godβs foot upon the treadle of the loom, and spoke it; and therefore his shipmates called him mad. So manβs insanity is heavenβs sense; and wandering from all mortal reason, man comes at last to that celestial thought, which, to reason, is absurd and frantic; and weal or woe, feels then uncompromised, indifferent as his God.
β
β
Herman Melville (Moby-Dick or, The Whale)
β
I am a student of life, and don't want to miss any experience. There's poetry in this sort of thing, you know--or perhaps you don't know, but it's all the same.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Old Bugs)
β
I have seen beyond the bounds of infinity and drawn down daemons from the stars. . . . I have harnessed the shadows that stride from world to world to sow death and madness. . . .
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
It was from the artists and poets that the pertinent answers came, and I know that panic would have broken loose had they been able to compare notes.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
It is true that I have sent six bullets through the head of my best friend, and yet I hope to show by this statement that I am not his murderer.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
There are black zones of shadow close to our daily paths, and now and then some evil soul breaks a passage through. When that happens, the man who knows must strike before reckoning the consequences.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Thing on the Doorstep)
β
But stories are like people, Atticus. Loving them doesnβt make them perfect. You try to cherish their virtues and overlook their flaws. The flaws are still there, though. "
"But you donβt get mad. Not like Pop does."
"No, thatβs true, I donβt get mad. Not at stories. They do disappoint me sometimes." He looked at the shelves. "Sometimes, they stab me in the heart.
β
β
Matt Ruff (Lovecraft Country (Lovecraft Country, #1))
β
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.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu)
β
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. He knows where the Old Ones broke through of old, and where They shall break through again. He knows where They have trod earth's fields, and where They still tread them, and why no one can behold Them as They tread.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
A serious adult story must be true to something in life. Since marvel tales cannot be true to the events of life, they must shift their emphasis towards something to which they can be true; namely, certain wistful or restless moods of the human spirit, wherein it seeks to weave gossamer ladders of escape from the galling tyranny of time, space, and natural law.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Thatβs the horror, the most awful thing: to have a child the world wants to destroy and know that youβre helpless to help him. Nothing worse than that. Nothing worse.
β
β
Matt Ruff (Lovecraft Country)
β
As for the Republicans -- how can one regard seriously a frightened, greedy, nostalgic huddle of tradesmen and lucky idlers who shut their eyes to history and science, steel their emotions against decent human sympathy, cling to sordid and provincial ideals exalting sheer acquisitiveness and condoning artificial hardship for the non-materially-shrewd, dwell smugly and sentimentally in a distorted dream-cosmos of outmoded phrases and principles and attitudes based on the bygone agricultural-handicraft world, and revel in (consciously or unconsciously) mendacious assumptions (such as the notion that real liberty is synonymous with the single detail of unrestricted economic license or that a rational planning of resource-distribution would contravene some vague and mystical 'American heritage'...) utterly contrary to fact and without the slightest foundation in human experience? Intellectually, the Republican idea deserves the tolerance and respect one gives to the dead.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I am, indeed, an absolute materialist so far as actual belief goes; with not a shred of credence in any form of supernaturalismβreligion, spiritualism, transcendentalism, metempsychosis, or immortality.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
All I say is that I think it is damned unlikely that anything like a central cosmic will, a spirit world, or an eternal survival of personality exist. They are the most preposterous and unjustified of all the guesses which can be made about the universe, and I am not enough of a hair-splitter to pretend that I don't regard them as arrant and negligible moonshine. In theory I am an agnostic, but pending the appearance of radical evidence I must be classed, practically and provisionally, as an atheist.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
IΓ€! IΓ€! Cthulhu fhtagn!
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
It was just a colour out of spaceβa frightful messenger from unformed realms of infinity beyond all Nature as we know it; from realms whose mere existence stuns the brain and numbs us with the black extra-cosmic gulfs it throws open before our frenzied eyes.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Colour Out of Space and others)
β
In relating the circumstances which have led to my confinement within this refuge for the demented, I am aware that my present position will create a natural doubt of the authenticity of my narrative.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
But stories are like people, Atticus. Loving them doesn't make them perfect. You try to cherish their virtues and overlook their flaws. The flaws are still there, though. But you don't get mad.
β
β
Matt Ruff (Lovecraft Country (Lovecraft Country, #1))
β
It is absolutely necessary, for the peace and safety of mankind, that some of earth's dark, dead corners and unplumbed depths be left alone; lest sleeping abnormalities wake to resurgent life, and blasphemously surviving nightmares squirm and splash out of their black lairs to newer and wider conquests.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (At the Mountains of Madness and Other Tales of Terror)
β
With five feeble senses we pretend to comprehend the boundlessly complex cosmos, yet other beings with wider, stronger, or different range of senses might not only see very differently the things we see, but might see and study whole worlds of matter, energy, and life which lie close at hand yet can never be detected with the senses we have.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (From Beyond / The Haunter of the Dark)
β
I could not help feeling that they were evil things-- mountains of madness whose farther slopes looked out over some accursed ultimate abyss. That seething , half-luminous cloud-background held ineffable suggestions of a vague, ethereal beyondness far more than terrestrially spatial; and gave appalling reminders of the utter remoteness, separateness, desolation, and aeon-long death of this untrodden and unfathomed austral world.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (At the Mountains of Madness)
β
The one test of the really weird (story) is simply this--whether or not there be excited in the reader a profound sense of dread, and of contact with unknown spheres and powers; a subtle attitude of awed listening, as if for the beating of black wings or the scratching of outside shapes and entities on the known universe's utmost rim.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (Supernatural Horror in Literature)
β
Now all my tales are based on the fundemental premise that common human laws and interests and emotions have no validity or significance in the vast cosmos-at-large.... To achieve the essence of real externality, whether of time or space or dimension, one must forget that such things as organic life, good and evil, love and hate, and all such local attributes of a negligible and temporary race called mankind, have any existence at all.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
Few beings have ever been so impregnated, pierced to the core, by the conviction of the absolute futility of human aspiration. The universe is nothing but a furtive arrangement of elementary particles. A figure in transition toward chaos. That is what will finally prevail. The human race will disappear. Other races in turn will appear and disappear. The skies will be glacial and empty, traversed by the feeble light of half-dead stars. These too will disappear. Everything will disappear. And human actions are as free and as stripped of meaning as the unfettered movements of the elementary particles. Good, evil, morality, sentiments? Pure βVictorian fictions.β All that exists is egotism. Cold, intact, and radiant.
β
β
Michel Houellebecq (H.P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life)
β
An isolated person requires correspondence as a means of seeing his ideas as others see them, and thus guarding against the dogmatisms and extravagances of solitary and uncorrected speculation. No man can learn to reason and appraise from a mere perusal of the writing of others. If he live not in the world, where he can observe the public at first hand and be directed toward solid reality by the force of conversation and spoken debate, then he must sharpen his discrimination and regulate his perceptive balance by an equivalent exchange of ideas in epistolary form.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
For although nepenthe has calmed me, I know always that I am an outsider; a stranger in this century and among those who are still men. This I have known ever since I stretched out my fingers to the abomination within that great gilded frame; stretched out my fingers and touched a cold and unyielding surface of polished glass.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Outsider)
β
Any magazine-cover hack can splash paint around wildly and call it a nightmare, or a witches sabbath or a portrait of the devil; but only a great painter can make such a thing really scare or ring true. That's because only a real artist knows the anatomy of the terrible, or the physiology of fear.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
I have dwelt ever in realms apart from the visible world; spending my youth and adolescence in ancient and little-known books, and in roaming the fields and groves of the region near my ancestral home. I do not think that what I read in these books or saw in these fields and groves was exactly what other boys read and saw there; but of this I must say little, since detailed speech would but confirm those cruel slanders upon my intellect which I sometimes overhear from the whispers of the stealthy attendants around me.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
The Thing cannot be described - there is no language for such abysms of shrieking and immemorial lunacy, such eldritch contradictions of all matter, force, and cosmic order. A mountain walked or stumbled.
If I say that my somewhat extravagant imagination yielded simultaneous pictures of an octopus, a dragon, and a human caricature, I shall not be unfaithful to the spirit of the thing. A pulpy, tentacled head surmounted a grotesque and scaly body with rudimentary wings; but it was the general outline of the whole which made it most shockingly frightful.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft (The Call of Cthulhu)
β
There came to that room wild streams of violet midnight glittering with dust of gold, vortices of dust and fire, swirling out of the ultimate spaces and heavy perfumes from beyond the worlds. Opiate oceans poured there, litten by suns that the eye may never behold and having in their whirlpools strange dolphins and sea-nymphs of unrememberable depths. Noiseless infinity eddied around the dreamer and wafted him away without touching the body that leaned stiffly from the lonely window; and for days not counted in men's calandars the tides of far spheres that bore him gently to join the course of other cycles that tenderly left him sleeping on a green sunrise shore, a green shore fragrant with lotus blossums and starred by red camalates...
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft
β
What do we know,β he had said, βof the world and the universe about us? Our means of receiving impressions are absurdly few, and our notions of surrounding objects infinitely narrow. We see things only as we are constructed to see them, and can gain no idea of their absolute nature. With five feeble senses we pretend to comprehend the boundlessly complex cosmos, yet other beings with a wider, stronger, or different range of senses might not only see very differently the things we see, but might see and study whole worlds of matter, energy, and life which lie close at hand yet can never be detected with the senses we have. I have always believed that such strange, inaccessible worlds exist at our very elbows, and now I believe I have found a way to break down the barriers.
β
β
H.P. Lovecraft