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	<title>Collected Stories - Part 2 from Turtle Reader</title>
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		<title>Collected Stories - Part 2 - Day 133 of 274</title>
		<link>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-133-of-274/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-133-of-274/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Mar 2008 16:29:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>TurtleReader</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Collected Stories - Part 2]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[H. P. Lovecraft]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-133-of-274/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

When, after a great interval, Carter saw again the sickly light of
Sarkomand&#8217;s nocturnal sky, it was to behold the great central plaza swarming
with militant ghouls and night-gaunts. Day, he felt sure, must be almost due;
but so strong was the army that no surprise of the enemy would be needed. The
greenish flare near the wharves still [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='lastday'>

<p>When, after a great interval, Carter saw again the sickly light of
Sarkomand&#8217;s nocturnal sky, it was to behold the great central plaza swarming
with militant ghouls and night-gaunts. Day, he felt sure, must be almost due;
but so strong was the army that no surprise of the enemy would be needed. The
greenish flare near the wharves still glimmered faintly, though the absence of
ghoulish meeping shewed that the torture of the prisoners was over for the
nonce. Softly glibbering directions to their steeds and to the flock of
riderless night-gaunts ahead, the ghouls presently rose in wide whirring
columns and swept on over the bleak ruins toward the evil flame. Carter was now
beside Pickman in the front rank of ghouls, and saw as they approached the
noisome camp that the moonbeasts were totally unprepared. The three prisoners
lay bound and inert beside the fire, while their toadlike captors slumped
drowsily about in no certain order. The almost-human slaves were asleep, even
the sentinels shirking a duty which in this realm must have seemed to them
merely perfunctory.</p></div>

<p>The final swoop of the night-gaunts and mounted ghouls was very sudden, each
of the greyish toadlike blasphemies and their almost-human slaves being seized
by a group of night-gaunts before a sound was made. The moonbeasts, of course,
were voiceless; and even the slaves had little chance to scream before rubbery
paws choked them into silence. Horrible were the writhings of those great
jellyfish abnormalities as the sardonic night-gaunts clutched them, but nothing
availed against the strength of those black prehensile talons. When a moonbeast
writhed too violently, a night-gaunt would seize and pull its quivering pink
tentacles; which seemed to hurt so much that the victim would cease its
struggles. Carter expected to see much slaughter, but found that the ghouls
were far subtler in their plans. They glibbered certain simple orders to the
night-gaunts which held the captives, trusting the rest to instinct; and soon
the hapless creatures were borne silently away into the Great Abyss, to be
distributed impartially amongst the Dholes, Gugs, ghasts and other dwellers in
darkness whose modes of nourishment are not painless to their chosen victims.
Meanwhile the three bound ghouls had been released and consoled by their
conquering kinsfolk, whilst various parties searched the neighborhood for
possible remaining moonbeasts, and boarded the evil-smelling black galley at
the wharf to make sure that nothing had escaped the general defeat. Surely
enough, the capture had been thorough, for not a sign of further life could the
victors detect. Carter, anxious to preserve a means of access to the rest of
dreamland, urged them not to sink the anchored galley; and this request was
freely granted out of gratitude for his act in reporting the plight of the
captured trio. On the ship were found some very curious objects and
decorations, some of which Carter cast at once into the sea.</p>

<p>Ghouls and night-gaunts now formed themselves in separate groups, the former
questioning their rescued fellow anent past happenings. It appeared that the
three had followed Carter&#8217;s directions and proceeded from the enchanted wood to
Dylath-Leen by way of Nir and the Skin, stealing human clothes at a lonely
farmhouse and loping as closely as possible in the fashion of a man&#8217;s walk. In
Dylath-Leen&#8217;s taverns their grotesque ways and faces had aroused much comment;
but they had persisted in asking the way to Sarkomand until at last an old
traveller was able to tell them. Then they knew that only a ship for Lelag-Leng
would serve their purpose, and prepared to wait patiently for such a
vessel.</p>

<p>But evil spies had doubtless reported much; for shortly a black galley put
into port, and the wide-mouthed ruby merchants invited the ghouls to drink with
them in a tavern. Wine was produced from one of those sinister bottles
grotesquely carven from a single ruby, and after that the ghouls found
themselves prisoners on the black galley as Carter had found himself. This
time, however, the unseen rowers steered not for the moon but for antique
Sarkomand; bent evidently on taking their captives before the High-Priest Not
To Be Described. They had touched at the jagged rock in the northern sea which
Inquanok&#8217;s mariners shun, and the ghouls had there seen for the first time the
red masters of the ship; being sickened despite their own callousness by such
extremes of malign shapelessness and fearsome odour. There, too, were witnessed
the nameless pastimes of the toadlike resident garrison-such pastimes as give
rise to the night-howlings which men fear. After that had come the landing at
ruined Sarkomand and the beginning of the tortures, whose continuance the
present rescue had prevented.</p>

<p>Future plans were next discussed, the three rescued ghouls suggesting a raid
on the jagged rock and the extermination of the toadlike garrison there. To
this, however, the night-gaunts objected; since the prospect of flying over
water did not please them. Most of the ghouls favoured the design, but were at
a loss how to follow it without the help of the winged night-gaunts. Thereupon
Carter, seeing that they could not navigate the anchored galley, offered to
teach them the use of the great banks of oars; to which proposal they eagerly
assented. Grey day had now come, and under that leaden northern sky a picked
detachment of ghouls filed into the noisome ship and took their seats on the
rowers&#8217; benches. Carter found them fairly apt at learning, and before night had
risked several experimental trips around the harbour. Not till three days
later, however, did he deem it safe to attempt the voyage of conquest. Then,
the rowers trained and the night-gaunts safely stowed in the forecastle, the
party set sail at last; Pickman and the other chiefs gathering on deck and
discussing models of approach and procedure.</p>

<p>On the very first night the howlings from the rock were heard. Such was
their timbre that all the galley&#8217;s crew shook visibly; but most of all trembled
the three rescued ghouls who knew precisely what those howlings meant. It was
not thought best to attempt an attack by night, so the ship lay to under the
phosphorescent clouds to wait for the dawn of a greyish day. when the light was
ample and the howlings still the rowers resumed their strokes, and the galley
drew closer and closer to that jagged rock whose granite pinnacles clawed
fantastically at the dull sky. The sides of the rock were very steep; but on
ledges here and there could be seen the bulging walls of queer windowless
dwellings, and the low railings guarding travelled highroads. No ship of men
had ever come so near the place, or at least, had never come so near and
departed again; but Carter and the ghouls were void of fear and kept inflexibly
on, rounding the eastern face of the rock and seeking the wharves which the
rescued trio described as being on the southern side within a harbour formed of
steep headlands.</p>

<p>The headlands were prolongations of the island proper, and came so closely
together that only one ship at a time might pass between them. There seemed to
be no watchers on the outside, so the galley was steered boldly through the
flume-like strait and into the stagnant putrid harbour beyond. Here, however,
all was bustle and activity; with several ships lying at anchor along a
forbidding stone quay, and scores of almost-human slaves and moonbeasts by the
waterfront handling crates and boxes or driving nameless and fabulous horrors
hitched to lumbering lorries. There was a small stone town hewn out of the
vertical cliff above the wharves, with the start of a winding road that
spiralled out of sight toward higher ledges of the rock. Of what lay inside
that prodigious peak of granite none might say, but the things one saw on the
outside were far from encouraging.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Collected Stories - Part 2 - Day 132 of 274</title>
		<link>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-132-of-274/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-132-of-274/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Mar 2008 16:29:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>TurtleReader</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Collected Stories - Part 2]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[H. P. Lovecraft]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-132-of-274/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

The number of malodorous moonbeasts about that greenish fire was very great,
and Carter saw that he could do nothing now to save his former allies. Of how
the ghouls had been captured he could not guess; but fancied that the grey
toadlike blasphemies had heard them inquire in Dylath-Leen concerning the way
to Sarkomand and had not wished [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='lastday'>

<p>The number of malodorous moonbeasts about that greenish fire was very great,
and Carter saw that he could do nothing now to save his former allies. Of how
the ghouls had been captured he could not guess; but fancied that the grey
toadlike blasphemies had heard them inquire in Dylath-Leen concerning the way
to Sarkomand and had not wished them to approach so closely the hateful plateau
of Leng and the High-Priest Not To Be Described. For a moment he pondered on
what he ought to do, and recalled how near he was to the gate of the ghouls&#8217;
black kingdom. Clearly it was wisest to creep east to the plaza of twin lions
and descend at once to the gulf, where assuredly he would meet no horrors worse
than those above, and where he might soon find ghouls eager to rescue their
brethren and perhaps to wipe out the moonbeasts from the black galley. It
occurred to him that the portal, like other gates to the abyss, might be
guarded by flocks of night-gaunts; but he did not fear these faceless creatures
now. He had learned that they are bound by solemn treaties with the ghouls, and
the ghoul which was Pickman had taught him how to glibber a password they
understood.</p></div>

<p>So Carter began another silent crawl through the ruins, edging slowly toward
the great central plaza and the winged lions. It was ticklish work, but the
moonbeasts were pleasantly busy and did not hear the slight noises which he
twice made by accident among the scattered stones. At last he reached the open
space and picked his way among the stunned trees and vines that had grown up
therein. The gigantic lions loomed terrible above him in the sickly glow of the
phosphorescent night clouds, but he manfully persisted toward them and
presently crept round to their faces, knowing it was on that side he would find
the mighty darkness which they guard. Ten feet apart crouched the mocking-faced
beasts of diarite, brooding on cyclopean pedestals whose sides were chiselled
in fearsome bas-reliefs. Betwixt them was a tiled court with a central space
which had once been railed with balusters of onyx. Midway in this space a black
well opened, and Carter soon saw that he had indeed reached the yawning gulf
whose crusted and mouldy stone steps lead down to the crypts of nightmare.</p>

<p>Terrible is the memory of that dark descent in which hours wore themselves
away whilst Carter wound sightlessly round and round down a fathomless spiral
of steep and slippery stairs. So worn and narrow were the steps, and so greasy
with the ooze of inner earth, that the climber never quite knew when to expect
a breathless fall and hurtling down to the ultimate pits; and he was likewise
uncertain just when or how the guardian night-gaunts would suddenly pounce upon
him, if indeed there were any stationed in this primeval passage. All about him
was a stifling odour of nether gulfs, and he felt that the air of these choking
depths was not made for mankind. In time he became very numb and somnolent,
moving more from automatic impulse than from reasoned will; nor did he realize
any change when he stopped moving altogether as something quietly seized him
from behind. He was flying very rapidly through the air before a malevolent
tickling told him that the rubbery night-gaunts had performed their duty.</p>

<p>Awaked to the fact that he was in the cold, damp clutch of the faceless
flutterers, Carter remembered the password of the ghouls and glibbered it as
loudly as he could amidst the wind and chaos of flight. Mindless though
night-gaunts are said to be, the effect was instantaneous; for all tickling
stopped at once, and the creatures hastened to shift their captive to a more
comfortable position. Thus encouraged Carter ventured some explanations;
telling of the seizure and torture of three ghouls by the moonbeasts, and of
the need of assembling a party to rescue them. The night-gaunts, though
inarticulate, seemed to understand what was said; and shewed greater haste and
purpose in their flight. Suddenly the dense blackness gave place to the grey
twilight of inner earth, and there opened up ahead one of those flat sterile
plains on which ghouls love to squat and gnaw. Scattered tombstones and osseous
fragments told of the denizens of that place; and as Carter gave a loud meep of
urgent summons, a score of burrows emptied forth their leathery, dog-like
tenants. The night-gaunts now flew low and set their passenger upon his feet,
afterward withdrawing a little and forming a hunched semicircle on the ground
while the ghouls greeted the newcomer.</p>

<p>Carter glibbered his message rapidly and explicitly to the grotesque
company, and four of them at once departed through different burrows to spread
the news to others and gather such troops as might be available for a rescue.
After a long wait a ghoul of some importance appeared, and made significant
signs to the night-gaunts, causing two of the latter to fly off into the dark.
Thereafter there were constant accessions to the hunched flock of night-gaunts
on the plain, till at length the slimy soil was fairly black with them.
Meanwhile fresh ghouls crawled out of the burrows one by one, all glibbering
excitedly and forming in crude battle array not far from the huddled
night&#8211;gaunts. In time there appeared that proud and influential ghoul which
was once the artist Richard Pickman of Boston, and to him Carter glibbered a
very full account of what had occurred. The erstwhile Pickman, pleased to greet
his ancient friend again, seemed very much impressed, and held a conference
with other chiefs a little apart from the growing throng.</p>

<p>Finally, after scanning the ranks with care, the assembled chiefs all meeped
in unison and began glibbering orders to the crowds of ghouls and night-gaunts.
A large detachment of the horned flyers vanished at once, while the rest
grouped themselves two by two on their knees with extended forelegs, awaiting
the approach of the ghouls one by one. As each ghoul reached the pair of
night-gaunts to which he was assigned, he was taken up and borne away into the
blackness; till at last the whole throng had vanished save for Carter, Pickman,
and the other chiefs, and a few pairs of night-gaunts. Pickman explained that
night&#8211;gaunts are the advance guard and battle steeds of the ghouls, and that
the army was issuing forth to Sarkomand to deal with the moonbeasts. Then
Carter and the ghoulish chiefs approached the waiting bearers and were taken up
by the damp, slippery paws. Another moment and all were whirling in wind and
darkness; endlessly up, up, up to the gate of the winged and the special ruins
of primal Sarkomand.</p>

<p>When, after a great interval, Carter saw again the sickly light of
Sarkomand&#8217;s nocturnal sky, it was to behold the great central plaza swarming
with militant ghouls and night-gaunts. Day, he felt sure, must be almost due;
but so strong was the army that no surprise of the enemy would be needed. The
greenish flare near the wharves still glimmered faintly, though the absence of
ghoulish meeping shewed that the torture of the prisoners was over for the
nonce. Softly glibbering directions to their steeds and to the flock of
riderless night-gaunts ahead, the ghouls presently rose in wide whirring
columns and swept on over the bleak ruins toward the evil flame. Carter was now
beside Pickman in the front rank of ghouls, and saw as they approached the
noisome camp that the moonbeasts were totally unprepared. The three prisoners
lay bound and inert beside the fire, while their toadlike captors slumped
drowsily about in no certain order. The almost-human slaves were asleep, even
the sentinels shirking a duty which in this realm must have seemed to them
merely perfunctory.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Collected Stories - Part 2 - Day 131 of 274</title>
		<link>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-131-of-274/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-131-of-274/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Mar 2008 16:29:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>TurtleReader</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Collected Stories - Part 2]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[H. P. Lovecraft]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-131-of-274/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

After a few moments he regretted his thoughtless haste, and wished he had
tried to follow backward the frescoes he had passed on the way in. True, they
were so confused and duplicated that they could not have done him much good,
but he wished none the less he had made the attempt. Those he now saw were [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='lastday'>

<p>After a few moments he regretted his thoughtless haste, and wished he had
tried to follow backward the frescoes he had passed on the way in. True, they
were so confused and duplicated that they could not have done him much good,
but he wished none the less he had made the attempt. Those he now saw were even
more horrible than those he had seen then, and he knew he was not in the
corridors leading outside. In time he became quite sure he was not followed,
and slackened his pace somewhat; but scarce had he breathed in half relief when
a new peril beset him. His lamp was waning, and he would soon be in pitch
blackness with no means of sight or guidance.</p></div>

<p>When the light was all gone he groped slowly in the dark, and prayed to the
Great Ones for such help as they might afford. At times he felt the stone floor
sloping up or down, and once he stumbled over a step for which no reason seemed
to exist. The farther he went the damper it seemed to be, and when he was able
to feel a junction or the mouth of a side passage he always chose the way which
sloped downward the least. He believed, though, that his general course was
down; and the vault-like smell and incrustations on the greasy walls and floor
alike warned him he was burrowing deep in Leng&#8217;s unwholesome table-land. But
there was not any warning of the thing which came at last; only the thing
itself with its terror and shock and breath-taking chaos. One moment he was
groping slowly over the slippery floor of an almost level place, and the next
he was shooting dizzily downward in the dark through a burrow which must have
been well-nigh vertical.</p>

<p>Of the length of that hideous sliding he could never be sure, but it seemed
to take hours of delirious nausea and ecstatic frenzy. Then he realized he was
still, with the phosphorescent clouds of a northern night shining sickly above
him. All around were crumbling walls and broken columns, and the pavement on
which he lay was pierced by straggling grass and wrenched asunder by frequent
shrubs and roots. Behind him a basalt cliff rose topless and perpendicular; its
dark side sculptured into repellent scenes, and pierced by an arched and carven
entrance to the inner blacknesses out of which he had come. Ahead stretched
double rows of pillars, and the fragments and pedestals of pillars, that spoke
of a broad and bygone street; and from the urns and basins along the way he
knew it had been a great street of gardens. Far off at its end the pillars
spread to mark a vast round plaza, and in that open circle there loomed
gigantic under the lurid night clouds a pair of monstrous things. Huge winged
lions of diarite they were, with blackness and shadow between them. Full twenty
feet they reared their grotesque and unbroken heads, and snarled derisive on
the ruins around them. And Carter knew right well what they must be, for legend
tells of only one such twain. They were the changeless guardians of the Great
Abyss, and these dark ruins were in truth primordial Sarkomand.</p>

<p>Carter&#8217;s first act was to close and barricade the archway in the cliff with
fallen blocks and odd debris that lay around. He wished no follower from Leng&#8217;s
hateful monastery, for along the way ahead would lurk enough of other dangers.
Of how to get from Sarkomand to the peopled parts of dreamland he knew nothing
at all; nor could he gain much by descending to the grottoes of the ghouls,
since he knew they were no better informed than he. The three ghouls which had
helped him through the city of Gugs to the outer world had not known how to
reach Sarkomand in their journey back, but had planned to ask old traders in
Dylath-Leen. He did not like to think of going again to the subterrene world of
Gugs and risking once more that hellish tower of Koth with its Cyclopean steps
leading to the enchanted wood, yet he felt he might have to try this course if
all else failed. Over Leng&#8217;s plateau past the lone monastery he dared not go
unaided; for the High-Priest&#8217;s emissaries must be many, while at the journey&#8217;s
end there would no doubt be the Shantaks and perhaps other things to deal with.
If he could get a boat he might sail back to Inquanok past the jagged and
hideous rock in the sea, for the primal frescoes in the monastery labyrinth had
shewn that this frightful place lies not far from Sarkomand&#8217;s basalt quays. But
to find a boat in this aeon-deserted city was no probable thing, and it did not
appear likely that he could ever make one.</p>

<p>Such were the thoughts of Randolph Carter when a new impression began
beating upon his mind. All this while there had stretched before him the great
corpse-like width of fabled Sarkomand with its black broken pillars and
crumbling sphinx-crowned gates and titan stones and monstrous winged lions
against the sickly glow of those luminous night clouds. Now he saw far ahead
and on the right a glow that no clouds could account for, and knew he was not
alone in the silence of that dead city. The glow rose and fell fitfully,
flickering with a greenish tinge which did not reassure the watcher. And when
he crept closer, down the littered street and through some narrow gaps between
tumbled walls, he perceived that it was a campfire near the wharves with many
vague forms clustered darkly around it; and a lethal odour hanging heavily over
all. Beyond was the oily lapping of the harbour water with a great ship riding
at anchor, and Carter paused in stark terror when he saw that the ship was
indeed one of the dreaded black galleys from the moon.</p>

<p>Then, just as he was about to creep back from that detestable flame, he saw
a stirring among the vague dark forms and heard a peculiar and unmistakable
sound. It was the frightened meeping of a ghoul, and in a moment it had swelled
to a veritable chorus of anguish. Secure as he was in the shadow of monstrous
ruins, Carter allowed his curiosity to conquer his fear, and crept forward
again instead of retreating. Once in crossing an open street he wriggled
worm-like on his stomach, and in another place he had to rise to his feet to
avoid making a noise among heaps of fallen marble. But always he succeeded in
avoiding discovery, so that in a short time he had found a spot behind a titan
pillar where he could watch the whole green-litten scene of action. There
around a hideous fire fed by the obnoxious stems of lunar fungi, there squatted
a stinking circle of the toadlike moonbeasts and their almost-human slaves.
Some of these slaves were heating curious iron spears in the leaping flames,
and at intervals applying their white&#8211;hot points to three tightly trussed
prisoners that lay writhing before the leaders of the party. From the motions
of their tentacles Carter could see that the blunt-snouted moonbeasts were
enjoying the spectacle hugely, and vast was his horror when he suddenly
recognised the frantic meeping and knew that the tortured ghouls were none
other than the faithful trio which had guided him safely from the abyss, and
had thereafter set out from the enchanted wood to find Sarkomand and the gate
to their native deeps.</p>

<p>The number of malodorous moonbeasts about that greenish fire was very great,
and Carter saw that he could do nothing now to save his former allies. Of how
the ghouls had been captured he could not guess; but fancied that the grey
toadlike blasphemies had heard them inquire in Dylath-Leen concerning the way
to Sarkomand and had not wished them to approach so closely the hateful plateau
of Leng and the High-Priest Not To Be Described. For a moment he pondered on
what he ought to do, and recalled how near he was to the gate of the ghouls&#8217;
black kingdom. Clearly it was wisest to creep east to the plaza of twin lions
and descend at once to the gulf, where assuredly he would meet no horrors worse
than those above, and where he might soon find ghouls eager to rescue their
brethren and perhaps to wipe out the moonbeasts from the black galley. It
occurred to him that the portal, like other gates to the abyss, might be
guarded by flocks of night-gaunts; but he did not fear these faceless creatures
now. He had learned that they are bound by solemn treaties with the ghouls, and
the ghoul which was Pickman had taught him how to glibber a password they
understood.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Collected Stories - Part 2 - Day 130 of 274</title>
		<link>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-130-of-274/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-130-of-274/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Mar 2008 16:29:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>TurtleReader</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Collected Stories - Part 2]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[H. P. Lovecraft]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-130-of-274/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

Through those archaic frescoes Leng&#8217;s annals stalked; and the horned,
hooved, and wide-mouthed almost-humans danced evilly amidst forgotten cities.
There were scenes of old wars, wherein Leng&#8217;s almost-humans fought with the
bloated purple spiders of the neighbouring vales; and there were scenes also of
the coming of the black galleys from the moon, and of the submission of Leng&#8217;s
people [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='lastday'>

<p>Through those archaic frescoes Leng&#8217;s annals stalked; and the horned,
hooved, and wide-mouthed almost-humans danced evilly amidst forgotten cities.
There were scenes of old wars, wherein Leng&#8217;s almost-humans fought with the
bloated purple spiders of the neighbouring vales; and there were scenes also of
the coming of the black galleys from the moon, and of the submission of Leng&#8217;s
people to the polypous and amorphous blasphemies that hopped and floundered and
wriggled out of them. Those slippery greyish-white blasphemies they worshipped
as gods, nor ever complained when scores of their best and fatted males were
taken away in the black galleys. The monstrous moon-beasts made their camp on a
jagged isle in the sea, and Carter could tell from the frescoes that this was
none other than the lone nameless rock he had seen when sailing to Inquanok;
that grey accursed rock which Inquanok&#8217;s seamen shun, and from which vile
howlings reverberate all through the night.</p></div>

<p>And in those frescoes was shewn the great seaport and capital of the
almost-humans; proud and pillared betwixt the cliffs and the basalt wharves,
and wondrous with high fanes and carven places. Great gardens and columned
streets led from the cliffs and from each of the six sphinx-crowned gates to a
vast central plaza, and in that plaza was a pair of winged colossal lions
guarding the top of a subterrene staircase. Again and again were those huge
winged lions shewn, their mighty flanks of diarite glistening in the grey
twilight of the day and the cloudy phosphorescence of the night. And as Carter
stumbled past their frequent and repeated pictures it came to him at last what
indeed they were, and what city it was that the almost-humans had ruled so
anciently before the coming of the black galleys. There could be no mistake,
for the legends of dreamland are generous and profuse. Indubitably that primal
city was no less a place than storied Sarkomand, whose ruins had bleached for a
million years before the first true human saw the light, and whose twin titan
lions guard eternally the steps that lead down from dreamland to the Great
Abyss.</p>

<p>Other views shewed the gaunt grey peaks dividing Leng from Inquanok, and the
monstrous Shantak-birds that build nests on the ledges half way up. And they
shewed likewise the curious caves near the very topmost pinnacles, and how even
the boldest of the Shantaks fly screaming away from them. Carter had seen those
caves when he passed over them, and had noticed their likeness to the caves on
Ngranek. Now he knew that the likeness was more than a chance one, for in these
pictures were shewn their fearsome denizens; and those bat-wings, curving
horns, barbed tails, prehensile paws and rubbery bodies were not strange to
him. He had met those silent, flitting and clutching creatures before; those
mindless guardians of the Great Abyss whom even the Great Ones fear, and who
own not Nyarlathotep but hoary Nodens as their lord. For they were the dreaded
night-gaunts, who never laugh or smile because they have no faces, and who flop
unendingly in the dark betwixt the Vale of Pnath and the passes to the outer
world.</p>

<p>The slant-eyed merchant had now prodded Carter into a great domed space
whose walls were carved in shocking bas-reliefs, and whose centre held a gaping
circular pit surrounded by six malignly stained stone altars in a ring. There
was no light in this vast evil-smelling crypt, and the small lamp of the
sinister merchant shone so feebly that one could grasp details only little by
little. At the farther end was a high stone dais reached by five steps; and
there on a golden throne sat a lumpish figure robed in yellow silk figured with
red and having a yellow silken mask over its face. To this being the
slant&#8211;eyed man made certain signs with his hands, and the lurker in the dark
replied by raising a disgustingly carven flute of ivory in silk&#8211;covered paws
and blowing certain loathsome sounds from beneath its flowing yellow mask. This
colloquy went on for some time, and to Carter there was something sickeningly
familiar in the sound of that flute and the stench of the malodorous place. It
made him think of a frightful red-litten city and of the revolting procession
that once filed through it; of that, and of an awful climb through lunar
countryside beyond, before the rescuing rush of earth&#8217;s friendly cats. He knew
that the creature on the dais was without doubt the High&#8211;Priest Not To Be
Described, of which legend whispers such fiendish and abnormal possibilities,
but he feared to think just what that abhorred High-Priest might be.</p>

<p>Then the figured silk slipped a trifle from one of the greyish-white paws,
and Carter knew what the noisome High-Priest was. And in that hideous second,
stark fear drove him to something his reason would never have dared to attempt,
for in all his shaken consciousness there was room only for one frantic will to
escape from what squatted on that golden throne. He knew that hopeless
labyrinths of stone lay betwixt him and the cold table-land outside, and that
even on that table-land the noxious Shantek still waited; yet in spite of all
this there was in his mind only the instant need to get away from that
wriggling, silk-robed monstrosity.</p>

<p>The slant-eyed man had set the curious lamp upon one of the high and
wickedly stained altar-stones by the pit, and had moved forward somewhat to
talk to the High-Priest with his hands. Carter, hitherto wholly passive, now
gave that man a terrific push with all the wild strength of fear, so that the
victim toppled at once into that gaping well which rumour holds to reach down
to the hellish Vaults of Zin where Gugs hunt ghasts in the dark. In almost the
same second he seized the lamp from the altar and darted out into the frescoed
labyrinths, racing this way and that as chance determined and trying not to
think of the stealthy padding of shapeless paws on the stones behind him, or of
the silent wrigglings and crawlings which must be going on back there in
lightless corridors.</p>

<p>After a few moments he regretted his thoughtless haste, and wished he had
tried to follow backward the frescoes he had passed on the way in. True, they
were so confused and duplicated that they could not have done him much good,
but he wished none the less he had made the attempt. Those he now saw were even
more horrible than those he had seen then, and he knew he was not in the
corridors leading outside. In time he became quite sure he was not followed,
and slackened his pace somewhat; but scarce had he breathed in half relief when
a new peril beset him. His lamp was waning, and he would soon be in pitch
blackness with no means of sight or guidance.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Collected Stories - Part 2 - Day 129 of 274</title>
		<link>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-129-of-274/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-129-of-274/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Mar 2008 16:29:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>TurtleReader</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Collected Stories - Part 2]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[H. P. Lovecraft]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-129-of-274/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

The Shantak now flew lower, revealing beneath the canopy of cloud a grey
barren plain whereon at great distances shone little feeble fires. As they
descended there appeared at intervals lone huts of granite and bleak stone
villages whose tiny windows glowed with pallid light. And there came from those
huts and villages a shrill droning of pipes and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class='lastday'>

<p>The Shantak now flew lower, revealing beneath the canopy of cloud a grey
barren plain whereon at great distances shone little feeble fires. As they
descended there appeared at intervals lone huts of granite and bleak stone
villages whose tiny windows glowed with pallid light. And there came from those
huts and villages a shrill droning of pipes and a nauseous rattle of crotala
which proved at once that Inquanok&#8217;s people are right in their geographic
rumours. For travellers have heard such sounds before, and know that they float
only from the cold desert plateau which healthy folk never visit; that haunted
place of evil and mystery which is Leng.</p></div>

<p>Around the feeble fires dark forms were dancing, and Carter was curious as
to what manner of beings they might be; for no healthy folk have ever been to
Leng, and the place is known only by its fires and stone huts as seen from
afar. Very slowly and awkwardly did those forms leap, and with an insane
twisting and bending not good to behold; so that Carter did not wonder at the
monstrous evil imputed to them by vague legend, or the fear in which all
dreamland holds their abhorrent frozen plateau. As the Shantak flew lower, the
repulsiveness of the dancers became tinged with a certain hellish familiarity;
and the prisoner kept straining his eyes and racking his memory for clues to
where he had seen such creatures before.</p>

<p>They leaped as though they had hooves instead of feet, and seemed to wear a
sort of wig or headpiece with small horns. Of other clothing they had none, but
most of them were quite furry. Behind they had dwarfish tails, and when they
glanced upward he saw the excessive width of their mouths. Then he knew what
they were, and that they did not wear any wigs or headpieces after all. For the
cryptic folk of Leng were of one race with the uncomfortable merchants of the
black galleys that traded rubies at Dylath-Leen; those not quite human
merchants who are the slaves of the monstrous moon-things! They were indeed the
same dark folk who had shanghaied Carter on their noisome galley so long ago,
and whose kith he had seen driven in herds about the unclean wharves of that
accursed lunar city, with the leaner ones toiling and the fatter ones taken
away in crates for other needs of their polypous and amorphous masters. Now he
saw where such ambiguous creatures came from, and shuddered at the thought that
Leng must be known to these formless abominations from the moon.</p>

<p>But the Shantak flew on past the fires and the stone huts and the less than
human dancers, and soared over sterile hills of grey granite and dim wastes of
rock and ice and snow. Day came, and the phosphorescence of low clouds gave
place to the misty twilight of that northern world, and still the vile bird
winged meaningly through the cold and silence. At times the slant-eyed man
talked with his steed in a hateful and guttural language, and the Shantak would
answer with tittering tones that rasped like the scratching of ground glass.
AlI this while the land was getting higher, and finally they came to a
wind-swept table&#8211;land which seemed the very roof of a blasted and tenantless
world. There, all alone in the hush and the dusk and the cold, rose the uncouth
stones of a squat windowless building, around which a circle of crude monoliths
stood. In all this arrangement there was nothing human, and Carter surmised
from old tales that he was indeed come to that most dreadful and legendary of
all places, the remote and prehistoric monastery wherein dwells uncompanioned
the High-Priest Not To Be Described, which wears a yellow silken mask over its
face and prays to the Other Gods and their crawling chaos Nyarlathotep.</p>

<p>The loathsome bird now settled to the ground, and the slant-eyed man hopped
down and helped his captive alight. Of the purpose of his seizure Carter now
felt very sure; for clearly the slant-eyed merchant was an agent of the darker
powers, eager to drag before his masters a mortal whose presumption had aimed
at the finding of unknown Kadath and the saying of a prayer before the faces of
the Great Ones in their onyx castle. It seemed likely that this merchant had
caused his former capture by the slaves of the moon-things in Dylath-Leen, and
that he now meant to do what the rescuing cats had baffled; taking the victim
to some dread rendezvous with monstrous Nyarlathotep and telling with what
boldness the seeking of unknown Kadath had been tried. Leng and the cold waste
north of Inquanok must be close to the Other Gods, and there the passes to
Kadath are well guarded.</p>

<p>The slant-eyed man was small, but the great hippocephalic bird was there to
see he was obeyed; so Carter followed where he led, and passed within the
circle of standing rocks and into the low arched doorway of that windowless
stone monastery. There were no lights inside, but the evil merchant lit a small
clay lamp bearing morbid bas-reliefs and prodded his prisoner on through mazes
of narrow winding corridors. On the walls of the corridors were printed
frightful scenes older than history, and in a style unknown to the
archaeologists of earth. After countless aeons their pigments were brilliant
still, for the cold and dryness of hideous Leng keep alive many primal things.
Carter saw them fleetingly in the rays of that dim and moving lamp, and
shuddered at the tale they told.</p>

<p>Through those archaic frescoes Leng&#8217;s annals stalked; and the horned,
hooved, and wide-mouthed almost-humans danced evilly amidst forgotten cities.
There were scenes of old wars, wherein Leng&#8217;s almost-humans fought with the
bloated purple spiders of the neighbouring vales; and there were scenes also of
the coming of the black galleys from the moon, and of the submission of Leng&#8217;s
people to the polypous and amorphous blasphemies that hopped and floundered and
wriggled out of them. Those slippery greyish-white blasphemies they worshipped
as gods, nor ever complained when scores of their best and fatted males were
taken away in the black galleys. The monstrous moon-beasts made their camp on a
jagged isle in the sea, and Carter could tell from the frescoes that this was
none other than the lone nameless rock he had seen when sailing to Inquanok;
that grey accursed rock which Inquanok&#8217;s seamen shun, and from which vile
howlings reverberate all through the night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Classic Horror and Lawrence of Arabia</title>
		<link>http://www.turtlereader.com/news/classic-horror-and-lawrence-of-arabia/</link>
		<comments>http://www.turtlereader.com/news/classic-horror-and-lawrence-of-arabia/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2008 00:08:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ScottS-M</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[arabia]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Dracula]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Frankenstein]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[horror]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[lawrence]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[monster]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[vampire]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.turtlereader.com/?p=8002</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Bram Stoker&#8217;s Dracula and Mary Shelley&#8217;s Frankenstein. Getting in the Halloween spirit a bit early I guess. Coincidentally both stories start written in the form of correspondence. (Also in the Halloween vein don&#8217;t forget Lovecraft&#8217;s Cthulu stories)
T. E. Lawrence&#8217;s Seven Pillars of Wisdom. I just watched the movie Lawrence of Arabia and enjoyed it so [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<ul>
<li>Bram Stoker&#8217;s <a href="http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/bram-stoker/dracula-day-1-of-140/">Dracula</a> and Mary Shelley&#8217;s <a href="http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/mary-shelley/frankenstein-day-1-of-67/">Frankenstein</a>. Getting in the Halloween spirit a bit early I guess. Coincidentally both stories start written in the form of correspondence. (Also in the Halloween vein don&#8217;t forget <a href="http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-1-day-1-of-277/">Lovecraft</a>&#8217;s <a href="http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/h-p-lovecraft/collected-stories-part-2-day-1-of-274/">Cthulu</a> stories)</li>
<li>T. E. Lawrence&#8217;s <a href="http://www.turtlereader.com/authors/te-lawrence/seven-pillars-of-wisdom-day-1-of-240/">Seven Pillars of Wisdom</a>. I just watched the movie Lawrence of Arabia and enjoyed it so I was interested when I heard it was based on an autobiography. Hopefully it&#8217;s interesting. The dedication certainly is mysterious.</li>
</ul>]]></content:encoded>
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