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The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath

The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath is a novella by American writer H. P. Lovecraft. Begun probably in the autumn of 1926, the draft was completed on January 22, 1927 and it remained unrevised and unpublished in his lifetime. It is both the longest of the stories that make up his Dream Cycle and the longest Lovecraft work to feature protagonist Randolph Carter. Along with his 1927 novel The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, it can be considered one of the significant achievements of that period of Lovecraft's writing. The Dream-Quest combines elements of horror and fantasy into an epic tale that illustrates the scope and wonder of humankind's ability to dream.

The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath
First page of H. P. Lovecraft's original manuscript to "The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath"
AuthorH. P. Lovecraft
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHorror, fantasy
PublisherArkham House
Publication date
1943
TextThe Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath at Wikisource

The story was published posthumously by Arkham House in 1943.[1] Currently, it is published by Ballantine Books in an anthology that also includes "The Silver Key" and "Through the Gates of the Silver Key". The definitive version, with corrected text by S. T. Joshi, is published by Arkham House in At the Mountains of Madness and Other Novels and by Penguin Classics in The Dreams in the Witch-House and Other Weird Stories.

Plot

In his dreams, Randolph Carter sees a majestic city, but is unable to approach it. After the third time the city appears in his dreams, he prays to the gods of dream to reveal the city's whereabouts, but then the city vanishes from his dreams altogether. Undaunted, Carter resolves to beseech the gods in person at Kadath, the mountain above which the gods of dream live. In dream, Carter consults priests in a temple that borders the Dreamlands. They tell Carter that nobody knows the location of Kadath, and warn him of great danger should he continue with his quest to reach the city and suggest that the gods purposefully stopped his visions.

Carter's knowledge of Dreamlands customs and languages makes his quest comparatively less risky than if done by an amateur, but he must consult entities with a dangerous reputation. The Zoogs, a race of predatory rodents, direct him to Ulthar to find the priest Atal. In the cat-laden city of Ulthar, Atal mentions a huge mountainside carving of the gods' features. Carter realizes the gods' mortal descendants will share those features and presumably be near Kadath. While seeking passage there, Carter is kidnapped by turbaned slavers, who take him to the moon and deliver him to horrible moon-beasts, the servants of malevolent god Nyarlathotep. The cats of Ulthar, Carter's allies, rescue him and return him to a port city.

After a long journey, Carter finds the carving, recognizing the visage of the gods in traders who dock at Celephaïs. Before he can act on his knowledge, faceless, winged creatures called nightgaunts capture him and leave him to die in the underworld. Friendly ghouls, including Carter's friend Richard Pickman, assist him in returning to the surface by sneaking through the terrible city of the man-eating Gugs. After assisting the cats in repelling a Zoog sneak attack, Carter buys passage to Celephaïs and learns from the sailors that the traders come from Inganok,[2] a cold and dark land devoid of cats.

Carter meets Celephaïs' king, his friend Kuranes, who became a permanent resident of the Dreamlands upon his death in the waking world. Longing for home, he has dreamed parts of his kingdom to resemble his native Cornwall. Kuranes knows the pitfalls of the Dreamlands well but fails to dissuade Carter from his quest. Under the pretense of wishing to work in its quarries, Carter boards a ship bound for Inganok. As they draw near, Carter spots a nameless island from which he hears strange howls. At a breathtaking summit near a quarry, Carter is captured by a merchant he had previously encountered. Monstrous birds fly them over the Plateau of Leng, a vast tableland populated by Pan-like horned humanoid beings.

Carter is brought to a monastery inhabited by the dreaded High Priest Not to Be Described. There, Carter learns that the Men of Leng are the slavers who captured him, and had worn turbans to conceal their horns. He also learns that the nightgaunts do not serve Nyarlathotep, as is commonly supposed, but Nodens, and that even Earth's gods fear them. Carter recoils in horror as he realizes the masked high-priest's true identity. Carter flees through maze-like corridors, wandering through the monastery in pitch-black darkness until he chances on the exit.

After rescuing several ghouls from Men of Leng, Carter and ghoul reinforcements attack a moon-beast outpost on the nameless rock. In a nearby city, Carter obtains the services of a flock of nightgaunts to transport himself and the ghouls to the gods' castle on Kadath. After a long flight, Carter arrives at Kadath but finds it empty. A great procession led by a pharaoh-like man arrives. The pharaoh reveals himself as Nyarlathotep and tells Carter that the city of his dreams is the childhood memories of his home city of Boston. The gods of earth have seen the city of Carter's dreams and made it their home, abandoning Kadath and their responsibilities.

Impressed with Carter's resolve, Nyarlathotep grants Carter passage to the city to recall the gods of earth, but Carter realizes too late that the mocking Nyarlathotep has tricked him, and he is being taken to the court of Azathoth at the center of the universe. At first believing he is doomed, Carter suddenly remembers that he is in a dream and wakes. Nyarlathotep broods over his defeat within the halls of Kadath, mocking in anger the "mild gods of earth" whom he has snatched back from the sunset city.

Characters

Lovecraft included elements and characters from previous stories, many of which had been influenced by Lord Dunsany, in Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, though they are not always depicted consistently.[3]

Inspiration

Like Lovecraft's novel fragment "Azathoth" (1922, published 1938), The Dream-Quest appears to have been influenced by Vathek, a 1786 novel by William Thomas Beckford that "is similarly an exotic fantasy written without chapter divisions".[9] Critics such as Will Murray and David E. Schultz, in fact, have suggested that The Dream-Quest is in effect a second attempt at completing the abandoned novel Azathoth.[10]

While the influence of the fantasies of Lord Dunsany on Lovecraft's Dream Cycle is often mentioned, Robert M. Price argues that a more direct model for The Dream-Quest is provided by the six Mars ("Barsoom") novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs that had been published by 1927. It's been noted, however, that there is little in common between John Carter, a classic action hero, outstanding warrior and rescuer of princesses, and Randolph Carter, a melancholy figure, quiet and contemplative, who never actually fights any of his enemies, is captured several times, and needs his friends to rescue him again and again.[11] Elsewhere, Price maintains that L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) was also a significant influence on The Dream-Quest, pointing out that in both books the main character chooses in the end to return "home" as the best place to be.

An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia cites Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Marble Faun and "The Great Stone Face" as influences.[12]

Reception

The Dream-Quest has evoked a broad range of reactions, "some HPL enthusiasts finding it almost unreadable and others... comparing it to the Alice books and the fantasies of George MacDonald."[13] Joanna Russ referred to The Dream-Quest as "charming... but alas, never rewritten or polished".[14]

Lovecraft himself declared that "it isn't much good; but forms useful practice for later and more authentic attempts in the novel form." He expressed concern while writing it that "Randolph Carter's adventures may have reached the point of palling on the reader; or that the very plethora of weird imagery may have destroyed the power of any one image to produce the desired impression of strangeness."[15]

In 1948, Arthur C. Clarke sent Lord Dunsany a copy of The Arkham Sampler containing part of The Dream-Quest. Dunsany responded: "I see Lovecraft borrowed my style, & I don't grudge it to him".[16]

References

  1. ^ Lovecraft, H. P., and Joshi, S. T. (editor): Dreams in the Witch House and Other Weird Stories, page 433. Penguin Classics, 2004.
  2. ^ Some versions of the text use "Inquanok", which came from August Derleth's misreading of Lovecraft's manuscript when he originally published the story. (Harms, "Inganok", The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana, p. 149).
  3. ^ a b Schweitzer, Darrell (2013). "Lovecraft's Debt to Lord Dunsany". Lovecraft and Influence: His Predecessors and Successors. Scarecrow Press. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-0-8108-9116-6.
  4. ^ Joshi, S. T.; Schultz, David E. (2001). An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 31. ISBN 0-313-31578-7.
  5. ^ Joshi, S. T.; Schultz, David E. (2001). An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 13. ISBN 0-313-31578-7.
  6. ^ Voss, Kate (2013-09-27). "The 10 scariest monsters from Lovecraft's Cthulu Mythos". Den of Geek. Retrieved 2020-02-09.
  7. ^ Leiber, Fritz (2001). Discovering H.P. Lovecraft. Wildside Press. p. 10. ISBN 1-58715-470-6.
  8. ^ Joshi, S. T. (1996). A Subtler Magick. Wildside Press. p. 115. ISBN 1880448610.
  9. ^ S.T. Joshi and David E. Schultz, An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia (New York: Hippocampus Press, 2001), p. 74.
  10. ^ Price, The Azathoth Cycle, p. vii.
  11. ^ S.T. Joshi and David E. Schultz, An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia (New York: Hippocampus Press, 2001), pp. 263-85.
  12. ^ Joshi and Schultz, p. 107.
  13. ^ Joshi and Schultz, p. 74.
  14. ^ Joanna Russ, "Lovecraft, H(oward) P(hilips), in Twentieth-Century Science-Fiction Writers by Curtis C. Smith. St. James Press, 1986, ISBN 0-912289-27-9 (pp. 461–3).
  15. ^ H. P. Lovecraft, Selected Letters Vol. 2, pp. 94-95; cited in Joshi and Schultz, p. 74.
  16. ^ Darrell Schweitzer, Review of Keith Allan Daniels, "Arthur C. Clarke & Lord Dunsany: A Correspondence by Keith Allen Daniels". Weird Tales, DNA Publications, Fall 1998 (p. 9).

Sources

  • Harms, Daniel (1998). The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana (2nd ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. ISBN 978-1-56882-119-1.
  • Lovecraft, Howard P. The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath (1926). In S. T. Joshi (ed.). At the Mountains of Madness and Other Novels (7th corrected printing). Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, 1985. ISBN 0-87054-038-6.
  • Schweitzer, Darrell, ed. (2001). Discovering H. P. Lovecraft. Holicong, PA: Wildside Press. ISBN 1-58715-470-6.

External links

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The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath is a novella by American writer H P Lovecraft Begun probably in the autumn of 1926 the draft was completed on January 22 1927 and it remained unrevised and unpublished in his lifetime It is both the longest of the stories that make up his Dream Cycle and the longest Lovecraft work to feature protagonist Randolph Carter Along with his 1927 novel The Case of Charles Dexter Ward it can be considered one of the significant achievements of that period of Lovecraft s writing The Dream Quest combines elements of horror and fantasy into an epic tale that illustrates the scope and wonder of humankind s ability to dream The Dream Quest of Unknown KadathFirst page of H P Lovecraft s original manuscript to The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath AuthorH P LovecraftCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreHorror fantasyPublisherArkham HousePublication date1943TextThe Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath at WikisourceThe story was published posthumously by Arkham House in 1943 1 Currently it is published by Ballantine Books in an anthology that also includes The Silver Key and Through the Gates of the Silver Key The definitive version with corrected text by S T Joshi is published by Arkham House in At the Mountains of Madness and Other Novels and by Penguin Classics in The Dreams in the Witch House and Other Weird Stories Contents 1 Plot 2 Characters 3 Inspiration 4 Reception 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksPlot EditIn his dreams Randolph Carter sees a majestic city but is unable to approach it After the third time the city appears in his dreams he prays to the gods of dream to reveal the city s whereabouts but then the city vanishes from his dreams altogether Undaunted Carter resolves to beseech the gods in person at Kadath the mountain above which the gods of dream live In dream Carter consults priests in a temple that borders the Dreamlands They tell Carter that nobody knows the location of Kadath and warn him of great danger should he continue with his quest to reach the city and suggest that the gods purposefully stopped his visions Carter s knowledge of Dreamlands customs and languages makes his quest comparatively less risky than if done by an amateur but he must consult entities with a dangerous reputation The Zoogs a race of predatory rodents direct him to Ulthar to find the priest Atal In the cat laden city of Ulthar Atal mentions a huge mountainside carving of the gods features Carter realizes the gods mortal descendants will share those features and presumably be near Kadath While seeking passage there Carter is kidnapped by turbaned slavers who take him to the moon and deliver him to horrible moon beasts the servants of malevolent god Nyarlathotep The cats of Ulthar Carter s allies rescue him and return him to a port city After a long journey Carter finds the carving recognizing the visage of the gods in traders who dock at Celephais Before he can act on his knowledge faceless winged creatures called nightgaunts capture him and leave him to die in the underworld Friendly ghouls including Carter s friend Richard Pickman assist him in returning to the surface by sneaking through the terrible city of the man eating Gugs After assisting the cats in repelling a Zoog sneak attack Carter buys passage to Celephais and learns from the sailors that the traders come from Inganok 2 a cold and dark land devoid of cats Carter meets Celephais king his friend Kuranes who became a permanent resident of the Dreamlands upon his death in the waking world Longing for home he has dreamed parts of his kingdom to resemble his native Cornwall Kuranes knows the pitfalls of the Dreamlands well but fails to dissuade Carter from his quest Under the pretense of wishing to work in its quarries Carter boards a ship bound for Inganok As they draw near Carter spots a nameless island from which he hears strange howls At a breathtaking summit near a quarry Carter is captured by a merchant he had previously encountered Monstrous birds fly them over the Plateau of Leng a vast tableland populated by Pan like horned humanoid beings Carter is brought to a monastery inhabited by the dreaded High Priest Not to Be Described There Carter learns that the Men of Leng are the slavers who captured him and had worn turbans to conceal their horns He also learns that the nightgaunts do not serve Nyarlathotep as is commonly supposed but Nodens and that even Earth s gods fear them Carter recoils in horror as he realizes the masked high priest s true identity Carter flees through maze like corridors wandering through the monastery in pitch black darkness until he chances on the exit After rescuing several ghouls from Men of Leng Carter and ghoul reinforcements attack a moon beast outpost on the nameless rock In a nearby city Carter obtains the services of a flock of nightgaunts to transport himself and the ghouls to the gods castle on Kadath After a long flight Carter arrives at Kadath but finds it empty A great procession led by a pharaoh like man arrives The pharaoh reveals himself as Nyarlathotep and tells Carter that the city of his dreams is the childhood memories of his home city of Boston The gods of earth have seen the city of Carter s dreams and made it their home abandoning Kadath and their responsibilities Impressed with Carter s resolve Nyarlathotep grants Carter passage to the city to recall the gods of earth but Carter realizes too late that the mocking Nyarlathotep has tricked him and he is being taken to the court of Azathoth at the center of the universe At first believing he is doomed Carter suddenly remembers that he is in a dream and wakes Nyarlathotep broods over his defeat within the halls of Kadath mocking in anger the mild gods of earth whom he has snatched back from the sunset city Characters EditLovecraft included elements and characters from previous stories many of which had been influenced by Lord Dunsany in Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath though they are not always depicted consistently 3 Randolph Carter has the ability to enter the Dreamlands an alternate dimension accessible through dreams He appears in several other Lovecraft stories The Statement of Randolph Carter The Unnamable The Silver Key and Through the Gates of the Silver Key He is modeled after the author himself and represents his philosophical views 4 Richard Upton Pickman appears as a ghoul The character first appeared in Pickman s Model 1927 in which he was still a living human artist 3 He is reported to have disappeared with his family s copy of the Necronomicon in 1926 in Lovecraft s short story History of the Necronomicon The priest Atal appears as a boy and youth in two earlier tales The Cats of Ulthar 1920 and The Other Gods 1933 respectively which fully describe places and events alluded to in The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath 5 Nyarlathotep the Crawling Chaos is frequently mentioned in Lovecraft s Cthulhu Mythos tales but his appearance here is the only time during which Nyarlathotep interacts meaningfully with any of Lovecraft s human characters Nyarlathotep also appears in the sonnet cycle Fungi from Yuggoth Nodens an Elder God is also described in The Strange High House in the Mist 6 Fritz Leiber wrote that the gods in Lovecraft s fiction are typically depicted as either malevolent or at best cruelly indifferent Nodens is an exception to this which Leiber says could be an attempt to explain why the more malevolent gods have not overrun humanity 7 Kuranes was introduced in the short story Celephais 1920 as a person who abandoned his earthly life in favor of the Dreamlands 8 Inspiration EditLike Lovecraft s novel fragment Azathoth 1922 published 1938 The Dream Quest appears to have been influenced by Vathek a 1786 novel by William Thomas Beckford that is similarly an exotic fantasy written without chapter divisions 9 Critics such as Will Murray and David E Schultz in fact have suggested that The Dream Quest is in effect a second attempt at completing the abandoned novel Azathoth 10 While the influence of the fantasies of Lord Dunsany on Lovecraft s Dream Cycle is often mentioned Robert M Price argues that a more direct model for The Dream Quest is provided by the six Mars Barsoom novels of Edgar Rice Burroughs that had been published by 1927 It s been noted however that there is little in common between John Carter a classic action hero outstanding warrior and rescuer of princesses and Randolph Carter a melancholy figure quiet and contemplative who never actually fights any of his enemies is captured several times and needs his friends to rescue him again and again 11 Elsewhere Price maintains that L Frank Baum s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz 1900 was also a significant influence on The Dream Quest pointing out that in both books the main character chooses in the end to return home as the best place to be An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia cites Nathaniel Hawthorne s The Marble Faun and The Great Stone Face as influences 12 Reception EditThe Dream Quest has evoked a broad range of reactions some HPL enthusiasts finding it almost unreadable and others comparing it to the Alice books and the fantasies of George MacDonald 13 Joanna Russ referred to The Dream Quest as charming but alas never rewritten or polished 14 Lovecraft himself declared that it isn t much good but forms useful practice for later and more authentic attempts in the novel form He expressed concern while writing it that Randolph Carter s adventures may have reached the point of palling on the reader or that the very plethora of weird imagery may have destroyed the power of any one image to produce the desired impression of strangeness 15 In 1948 Arthur C Clarke sent Lord Dunsany a copy of The Arkham Sampler containing part of The Dream Quest Dunsany responded I see Lovecraft borrowed my style amp I don t grudge it to him 16 References Edit Lovecraft H P and Joshi S T editor Dreams in the Witch House and Other Weird Stories page 433 Penguin Classics 2004 Some versions of the text use Inquanok which came from August Derleth s misreading of Lovecraft s manuscript when he originally published the story Harms Inganok The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana p 149 a b Schweitzer Darrell 2013 Lovecraft s Debt to Lord Dunsany Lovecraft and Influence His Predecessors and Successors Scarecrow Press pp 62 63 ISBN 978 0 8108 9116 6 Joshi S T Schultz David E 2001 An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing Group p 31 ISBN 0 313 31578 7 Joshi S T Schultz David E 2001 An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing Group p 13 ISBN 0 313 31578 7 Voss Kate 2013 09 27 The 10 scariest monsters from Lovecraft s Cthulu Mythos Den of Geek Retrieved 2020 02 09 Leiber Fritz 2001 Discovering H P Lovecraft Wildside Press p 10 ISBN 1 58715 470 6 Joshi S T 1996 A Subtler Magick Wildside Press p 115 ISBN 1880448610 S T Joshi and David E Schultz An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia New York Hippocampus Press 2001 p 74 Price The Azathoth Cycle p vii S T Joshi and David E Schultz An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia New York Hippocampus Press 2001 pp 263 85 Joshi and Schultz p 107 Joshi and Schultz p 74 Joanna Russ Lovecraft H oward P hilips in Twentieth Century Science Fiction Writers by Curtis C Smith St James Press 1986 ISBN 0 912289 27 9 pp 461 3 H P Lovecraft Selected Letters Vol 2 pp 94 95 cited in Joshi and Schultz p 74 Darrell Schweitzer Review of Keith Allan Daniels Arthur C Clarke amp Lord Dunsany A Correspondence by Keith Allen Daniels Weird Tales DNA Publications Fall 1998 p 9 Sources EditHarms Daniel 1998 The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana 2nd ed Oakland CA Chaosium ISBN 978 1 56882 119 1 Lovecraft Howard P The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath 1926 In S T Joshi ed At the Mountains of Madness and Other Novels 7th corrected printing Sauk City WI Arkham House 1985 ISBN 0 87054 038 6 Schweitzer Darrell ed 2001 Discovering H P Lovecraft Holicong PA Wildside Press ISBN 1 58715 470 6 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Somnis Quaeritur Ignota Cadath Latin Translation by Alexander Ricius The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath animated by Hellbender Media Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath amp oldid 1113355087 Plot, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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