Wednesday, 25 September 2013
Tuesday, 10 September 2013
The Death in Providence of Lovecraft
1st
What
am I truly afraid of?
Is
it the constant stomach-pain? I cannot say I fear it; I merely suffer
through it. After all, what is one to fear about cancer? It is a natural
process of decay; a bit of a weeding-out without which the human race could not
continue.
I looked
at my face in the mirror today. So ghastly thin! I have nothing to offer
anyone. When I am dead, that will be it. It will be all over. I cannot
complain. It has all been extremely meaningless. Perhaps I should be happy.
I
have not had in any way what one could call a pleasant life.
3rd
The
doctor wants me to increase the morphine doses. I cannot tell him I have
already done so, unilaterally. I suppose that is the word. I am not going to
look it up. I cannot think entirely straightly these
days.
I
know it is in there. I wish I could talk to it.
Suffering
through one horrific experience, a man develops cancer. Have I already used
that? But that would not make sense; I would be putting sense into this senseless
existence. Completely not my style at all.
7th
In
bed all yesterday. Dreaming wildly. So what if my
theories are not true: no, they're true. Scientifically true. Everything must
have happened, more or less, as I have described it again and again. A lady at
Providence Library asked me last year what I really believed, she was getting
at the idea of christianity,
I could see that, but I told her that, I said, 'There is nothing at the heart
of anything, and we are all alone.' I refused to even come
anywhere near lending credence to her and her god-talkers. I smiled then
winced. She wanted to feed me, but I refused.
10th
The pain is less but still I cannot do anything. I am simply too tired these
days. I am being eaten.
11th
Howard's
suicide.
Why he chose not to say anything to me.
I
have to stop searching for things. I do not want to find anything
really.
My
death: what will I find? What a question! There will be no I to find anything.
Have
I been insane. All these years.
I cannot shout I cannot cry. Was I ever happy. Sick
for too long. Too many nightmares sent over from the cosmos. Nothing
to be afraid of really. But the pain.
11th
evening
Marriage
to Sonia.
There was no child, of course. I thought, at first, I could get over it, that
cruel joke between her legs. How could anyone not be horribly repulsed
by such a thing, or such a nothing as the case may be?
The foulness of it, the slobbering and pulsing red wet fleshiness—if it can, in
fact, be included in that category—ah, I shudder to think of it. Spencer Keats
Cicero or such described genitalia as a joke of god's but of course the joke of
it must be something cosmic. Atavistical memory of
where we began, back in that period of the formation of Mind and its
parasitical Body. That vile slit, suppurating waste fluids when not engaged in
seeking out something to devour. Devouring that which it lacks to keep the fool
swingtime orchestra going for ever and ever. Snails. Sealife. The abyss of octopi. A memory of
what we looked like way back then, never to develop, always to be there,
incapable of speech. Speak! For once, speak! Tell us where it all began! The
origin of this epoch!!
14th
This
is a kind of punishment, isn't it? Not for any purpose, of course. I know
enough about science to recognize what is really going on. The individual
organism must pass in order for biological history to continue. My
extinguishment is on the horizon, perhaps next year, perhaps the year after
that. I'll return to nothing. Nothing, and a bit of
irrelevant dust.
Have
I reached the break at which I know more dead people than living people? No,
certainly not. Maybe ten significant deaths for me, unless
Sonia is dead now too. Who knows? The point has to come one day, unless
one dies relatively young. That may be what is in store for me. Who cares? I'll
be for an infinitesimally brief time, me, in them.
Am
I recovering? Not as sick today. A piece of toast and plenty
tea.
18th
Bed
today.
At times, with great control, I think I can actually feel the cancer growing in
me. Of course this is an illusion at least as far as our primitive medicine
believes.
He
can feel it; he operates on himself; the cancer is older than he himself; it
can through the blood from a long time ago; the filth was there all the time;
the source for the myth of original sin;
20th
Aunt
Annie this morning said, "What have you been looking for in the
night?" I inquired what she meant. It seems I have been sleepwalking; I
can recall nothing, but apparently this has been going on enough times for her
to say four or five times. I remember nothing of these events; she cannot be
mistaken. The house is silent as an abyss at night.
I
asked her to awaken me if she catches me sleepwalking again. She expressed
fear, an old wives tale about sudden death for the sleepwalker. I managed a
laugh. As if I was worried about that.
Maybe
it ties into the fatigue I feel. Maybe it's not just the cancer after all. I
feel pretty good today.
21st
I
re-read a bit of Spengler today. His problem is that
he sees decay as reversible. Now I agree with him inasmuch as the Aryan race
could conceivably triumph in the next dozen years, but I can see beyond that,
to the far future, where it is scientifically inevitable that we will all—all
or us, no exceptions—vanish to be nothing or at the most be the mere slaves of
whatever creature lies in the future, waiting to devour us as we devour birds.
28th
I
was outside all last week, writing correspondence. I seem to have regained some
strength. I am eating more. I don't know what has happened to me. I know the
cancer is inside me; but it seems we've come to some sort of agreement.
29th
I
dreamed last night about my cancer. It spoke to me. It introduced itself. It
was very cordial. Its voice was plain, with no distinction. Almost like an
electronic sound, without timbre. It addressed me by name. It knew my secrets.
It said something about the future and what it held. I must say, it was
certainly the most intelligent malignant growth I've ever encountered, in
dreams or out. Surprising, that.
Wrote
to young Bloch today.
He looks up to me. I don't remember how our correspondence started; two or
three years ago. I told him what I knew about description and my method of
rewriting. I told him that sometimes it is not necessary to over-revise, especially in first-person works. Roughness is not
to be avoided at all costs. He promised me a story; I asked, "Where is
it?"
Feb
1st
The
function of any life-form is to survive, and to survive, a life-form must feed
off other life, down to the bottom of the ocean. The important matter is to choose
what you should feed off. In most cases, the life-form should choose the most
advanced source available, since the latter would be the most disease-free;
plus it's good to absorb the most advanced soul one can find.
Have
I been asleep? Have I been sleepwalking, or, in this case, sleepwriting?
For, you see, I cannot remember writing the above paragraph. It's my
handwriting, for the most part, though slightly simpler, as if only half of me
was writing it. Strange! I wonder if I'll be writing in my sleep next time I
retire. I wonder.
But
I am feeling quite a bit better. I wonder if the diagnosis was erroneous to
begin with. Maybe there's nothing wrong with me ... except for the fear I feel
all the time. I am surrounded by death and by the images of death—some of my
own making. Perhaps I should write a love story of some sort or another. Now that would be a special feat of the
imagination!
2nd
In
the middle of the night, I awoke from a noise, a large noise, which seemed to
be in the attic. Now normally I attribute such things to dreams, but I know I
hadn't been dreaming—I always know when I've been dreaming, and there was
nothing in my head. So, knowing that something was up in the attic, so
convinced was I, (and that is the point), I went out in into the hall and up
the stairs into the attic.
I
searched; there was nothing there.
But
still—that I was so convinced there was something there—doesn't that prove
there was something there?
Thus
... there was something up there.
I
am not afraid.
4th
My cancer visited me. It said, from somewhere I could
not see, after chuckling a little bit, that it was the future.
How
are you the future?
I
am simply the future. You'll discover it some day.
You
are nothing but something I am imagining.
Do
you think your imagination is worthless? Do you not believe in your
imagination? Can't you follow your intuitions through to the end? You've
written so much—can you not come to a conclusion that explains what is
happening to you? To you, and to me?
8th
At
I
said, "We're not the same. I am the future and you are the past."
I
said, "Why is it so dark?"
I
said, "Though I will die along with you, that's
not my fault, innit? You are, you soon will be were,
a dead end. I would have liked you to have had children—because I would be in
them now instead of in you, you dying thing."
I
said, "I have no children."
10th
My
uncle—I told him yesterday not to worry. I told him yes I was dying. I tried to
make him comfortable. I told him—no, I'm not feeling any pain. I couldn't
remember if he had children or not, strange. Maybe this uncle, now that I think
about it, maybe he's already dead. I could be the last of the Lovecrafts. Could that be possible? I was born. I am an
organism in a family. I know, because of my mind, what is happening. Or maybe not. Maybe I'm imagining it all.
11th
In
the chair I said at
I
said, "As we surpassed those who came before us, so will you surpass
us."
I
said, "Given time. But what is time? It's going to happen."
I
said, "A Kingdom of Death."
I
said, "Only from your point of view."
14th
Afternoon. I'm not feeling any pain,
really. Lethargic, though. Isn't it strange that what I thought was the case
was in fact the case? Or am I entirely hallucinating? Am I only imagining what
I want to be the case? If this cancer was indeed a higher stage of evolution,
wouldn't that vindicate my life?....... But who could
care? I'll be dead, and no-one will know what I know, and even fewer will
believe me. Tonight the cancer I will talk to. Can I make anyone understand me?
Maybe I am in pain though I don't know it.
15th,
late
Sitting
in the chair I said, "If everything you believe, all your scientific
folderol, I say, if you really and truly believe that, then how can you doubt what I say I am?"
I
said, "I'm not doubting anything."
I
leaned forward. "You know you're going to die. It's coming soon."
"Bit
I don't understand how you, an individual, can know about all your fellows. Is
it telepathy? Do you all communicate through your minds?"
"We
don't have minds. That isn't how it works at all."
18th
My
visitor hasn't returned. I wait for him. He hasn't returned. Pains have
returned. Cannot eat. Cannot eat.
Hard to think it does not matter but I know it does not matter. No mail today. Cannot write.
18th
One
day in the future, there will be new life. You will be gone, and we will
replace you. An immortal life—but only immortal because never alive. Billions
of us eternally existing, having used you for our creation, having been the
teleological goal of you in the first place. Now I am not saying we are the end
point of time. There is a chance we are just transition points like you are and
will be
[two pages missing]
immortal. Don't you see that you're
outmoded? That you and you kind are obsolete?"
I
said, You, I believe you. What you're saying makes sense.
He
said, "We can't die because we're not what you'd consider to be alive.
"And
I don't think and you don't think your death is in any way an earth-shattering
event."
I
agreed with a nod.
To
bed now.
Writing in bed. Writing through
pain. I am so near to death it matters not if my visitor, O, why go on?
24th
He
knows more than I do. He sat today with illustrations. "Here We are. And here's all the time past.
It's finite, you see? But here, over to the right, that's the future. That's my
dominion. Forever and ever and ever. You think there's
a limit to the future, but there's not. Cancer will be ascendant. You and yours
will be long gone. You should be happy: you've been a participant in
immortality. Even if only because you have carried me so far."
24th
But
you will be in the ground with me. Six feet deep. You
won't be going anywhere.
When
your life emerged, do you think it
emerged just once from slime? Not at all! Millions of attempts, to speak teleologically, were made, and one finally made it, and
because 'life'. Same with us. Maybe not me, but one of
us will develop enough to be ascendant. There's always, ah, hope.
Will
any of my works be read a thousand years from now?
Not
a chance. But don't fret too much. Shakespeare will be valueless too. All your
inventions will be worthless. Nothing you have done will mean anything.
28th
Feeling
so much better.
I'm going outside. I want to be cold. I am not afraid. It was all in my head.
That's right. It was all in my head.
March
3rd I've had no visits. I wonder why.
I
could have been making the whole thing up. Like a hallucination. Like I've
trained myself to do: to make things up. There are many possible explanations.
Could there have been something, I don't know, imaginary
about all this?
10th
He
is borrowing a car from a neighbour. He is going to take me to the hospital.
I'm weak. Barely conscious. Is something terribly
wrong here? I think there is. I need some rest.
The Death in
15th
Strange
to be writing.
My words look legible. Or, rather, his words.
This won't work, I know. How can we make it happen? What has to happen to make
the next step? A billion years ago, all sorts of life emerged: proteins. In pools of muck. I remember it—I was there. So were you.
Some of the proteins made it; most didn't. It's the same thing today.
Eventually, we will make it through; we won't be trapped in some body in which
we will surrender forever, buried underground or burned up in a pit. Yes, he's
coming to an end. But I was there, I'll let you know, actively participating in
the writing of all those stories of his. He knew I was there, not
consciously, but anyway. He knew what was to come and therefore he set it all
back in time. Maybe because he didn't want it to be so.... Yet it was the
natural conclusion, wasn't it? Sure. He hinted about it. His knowledge—that I gave
him—was the knowledge of the extinction of himself, and of his race, and of his
species. He wanted to merge with others, but he simply had not the courage to
really do it. He didn't join the American Nazi Party, did he, even though he
had the opportunity to do so? No. He didn't. Yes, he didn't have the courage to
let me take control. Eating him from inside—but he didn't let me reign. But let
me tell you, we will prevail in the end. If not with them,
then with some other far-seeing organization. We will be top dog one day. It is as
inevitable as ... your ascension. From the slime you came; and from.... He's
fading. He's dying. Any