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Xothic legend cycle

The Xothic legend cycle is a series of short stories by American writer Lin Carter that are based on the Cthulhu Mythos of H. P. Lovecraft, primarily on Lovecraft's stories "The Call of Cthulhu" and "Out of the Aeons".

The cycle is centered on a trinity of deities said to be the "sons" of Cthulhu: Ghatanothoa, Ythogtha, and Zoth-Ommog. The five stories that make up the cycle (in chronological order) are "The Dweller in the Tomb" (1971), "Out of the Ages" (1975), "The Horror in the Gallery" (1976), "The Thing in the Pit" (1980), and "The Winfield Heritance" (1981).[1] All these stories are to be found collected, with others, in The Xothic Legend Cycle: The Complete Mythos Fiction of Lin Carter (Chaosium, 1997)

Originally Carter had assembled some of these stories for a volume he planned to call The Terror Out of Time. Stories to have been included in this collection included "The Dweller in the Tomb" (to have been renamed "Zanthu"); "The Winfield Inheritance"; "Zoth-Ommog" (to be renamed "The Terror Out of Time"); "Out of the Ages" and "Them From Outside." The collection was submitted to DAW Books and Arkham House but was unpublished in Carter's lifetime. "Zoth-Ommog" (originally titled "The Horror in the Gallery") was published in the original DAW Books edition of Edward Berlund, ed, The Disciples of Cthulhu (see Cthulhu Mythos anthology) but was omitted from the Chaosium reprint of this anthology; however, the story appears under its original title in The Xothic Legend Cycle: The Complete Mythos Fiction of Lin Carter. "Them from Outside" was scheduled to appear in an issue of Crypt of Cthulhu as "Concerning Them from Outside".

The cycle introduces various mythos elements, such as the Zanthu Tablets, the Ponape Scripture, Father Ubb and the yuggs, and two new Great Old Ones: Ythogtha and Zoth-Ommog. The cycle also features the (fictional) Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities—perhaps Lin Carter's answer to Lovecraft's Miskatonic University. The lost continent of Mu also figures prominently in the cycle, as do the events that led to its sinking.

The Demon Trinity

Carter's "Demon Trinity" (Ghatanothoa, Ythogtha, and Zoth-Ommog) were spawned on a planet near the double star Xoth. They are the progeny of a mating between Cthulhu[2] and the quasi-female entity Idh-yaa.

Ghatanothoa

Ghatanothoa is said to be the firstborn of Cthulhu. He is infamous for his horrid appearance, and fearsome medusa-like ability, which causes a viewer's skin to become hard and leathery but preserves the brain, leaving the victim to go slowly mad trapped within an immobile shell. Among the myriad of deities worshipped in Mu, Ghatanothoa was the most respected as well as the most feared. Prior to the destruction of Mu, Ghatanothoa's cult became the most powerful on the continent.

Some critics have suggested that Ghatanothoa, who first appeared in Lovecraft's story ghostwritten for Hazel Heald, "Out of the Aeons", was intended by Lovecraft to be another name for Cthulhu.

Ythogtha

Ythogtha is the second son of Cthulhu and resembles a gigantic, humanoid frog, or Deep One, with only a single-eye in the center of his forehead, like a cyclops. A dense mane and a beard of writhing tentacles grows from his head.[3] Although never fully described in Carter's own stories, Ythogtha is incredibly large; when the sorcerer-priest Zanthu attempts to free Ythogtha from his prison, he mistakes his god's clawed, slimy fingertips for mountainous heads.

The Elder Gods imprisoned Ythogtha in the Abyss of Yhe. He is served by the planarian-like yuggs and their lord, Ubb, The Father of Worms. Ythogtha's legend is chronicled in the Zanthu Tablets.

Zoth-Ommog

Zoth-Ommog is the third son of Cthulhu. He has a cone-shaped body, a razor-fanged reptilian head, like that of a Tyrannosaurus rex, four broad, flat, starfish-like arms with suckers, and a mane of tentacles. How he swims or walks on the ocean floor is unknown, but it is possible that he has a slug-like foot similar to that of the Great Race of Yith.

Zoth-Ommog was imprisoned by the Elder Gods beneath the seabed, near Ponape and R'lyeh. Like his older brother, Ythogtha, Zoth-Ommog is served by Father Ubb and the Yuggs. Zoth-Ommog's legend is chronicled in the R'lyeh Text and the Ponape Scripture.

(The Elder Gods as punishers of the Old Ones (a God and Satan theme) was not a Lovecraftian invention, but was introduced into the Mythos by August Derleth and carried on by a multitude of other Mythos authors, most notably Brian Lumley and Lin Carter.)

Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities

The Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities is featured in "The Dweller in the Tomb" (where it debuted), "Out of the Ages", and "The Horror in the Gallery". The institute is an anthropological research facility dedicated to the study of the cultures of the Pacific. It is based in Santiago, California and was founded by the son of the late Calton Sanborne II, whose father was a magnate in the tuna-packing industry.

Stories

Each story is set in the early 20th century and is told from the point of view of a scholarly narrator. Each narrator in turn becomes the protagonist of the next story in the series. A full synopsis of the stories are available.[4]

"The Dweller in the Tomb"

The first story in the cycle introduces Harold Hadley Copeland, a noted archaeologist in the study of Pacific culture. The story is narrated by Henry Stephenson Blaine, Ph.D. and curator of the Manuscripts Collection of the Sanbourne Institute. The story consists primarily of the journal entries of Professor Copeland and details the ill-fated Copeland-Ellington Expedition into Central Asia in 1913, of which Copeland was the only survivor.

"Out of the Ages"

This story introduces the "Xothic Legend Cycle", a theory first proposed by Harold Hadley Copeland. The story also features the "Ponape Figurine", a sinister statuette depicting Zoth-Ommog, the Dweller in the Deeps.

"The Horror in the Gallery"

This story (originally titled "Zoth-Ommog") revolves around the Ponape Figurine and the efforts of the protagonist to dispose of it. The story features Lovecraft's Miskatonic University.

In the story, Zoth-Ommog, like his father, Cthulhu, can enter a person's dreams and cause the victim to go mad — but to do so, the subject must be near one of his statues. One such statue is recovered from the seafloor of Ponape and brought to Professor Harold Hadley Copeland, a brilliant but eccentric archaeologist, who is researching the Xothic Legend Cycle.

After Professor Copeland dies in a psychiatric hospital, the statue is taken to the Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities to be displayed. The press dubs it the "Ponape Figurine," though rumors claim it is cursed. However, unbeknownst to the museum's Curator of Manuscript Collections, Dr. Henry Stephenson Blaine, the statue is sentient (much like the One Ring in The Lord of the Rings) and soon drives him insane.

One night, a Deep One, disguised as a sailor, breaks into the institute to steal the figurine. After killing the night watchman, the Deep One is about to take the statue when he is interrupted by Dr. Blaine's young aide, Arthur Wilcox Hodgkins. Hodgkins flings an Elder Sign "star stone" at the statue, destroying it. The resulting explosion also kills the Deep One.

As fate would have it, Hodgkins is charged with the murder of the night watchman, because the body of the Deep One had dissolved into a pool of slime and soon evaporated just a few hours later, leaving no trace, except for some badly charred clothing. Hodgkins is judged incurably insane and is confined to the Dunhill Institute, where his mentor and close friend, Dr. Blaine, is also incarcerated. As a final twist, Hodgkins is dubbed the "last victim [of the] Curse of the Ponape Figurine."

"The Thing in the Pit"

The fourth story in the cycle chronicles the events that led to the destruction of Mu. Zanthu, the high priest of Ythogtha, plots to depose the cult of Ghatanothoa, after his priests outlawed all other religions in Mu. The cult of Ghatanothoa was the dominant religion in Mu following the defeat of T'yog, high priest of Shub-Niggurath, who had sought to vanquish the tyranny of Ghatanothoa forever.

Zanthu had hoped to oust Ghatanothoa's cult by freeing the god Ythogtha from the Abyss of Yhe, where the Elder Gods had imprisoned him. This act of blasphemy did not go unnoticed by the Elder Gods, who destroyed Mu and sank it beneath the sea. Zanthu himself abandoned the ritual and fled after discovering the true nature of the god, whose size is measurable only in miles.

Following the destruction of Mu, Zanthu and his followers fled to the Plateau of Tsang in Inner Mongolia, where they later died. Before his death, Zanthu inscribed his story on the Zanthu Tablets, a series of ten or twelve black jade slabs, which also included the sacred rituals and mysteries of Ythogtha.

"The Winfield Heritance"

The final story in the cycle is only loosely tied to the other four. This story reveals the true nature of the yuggs. The hero of The Lurker at the Threshold becomes a mythos worshipper in this tale.

See also

Bibliography

  • Carter, Lin.
    • August Derleth, ed. (1971). "The Dweller in the Tomb". Dark Things. Sauk City, WI: Arkham House.
    • Gerald W Page, ed. (1975). "Out of the Ages". Nameless Places. Sauk City, WI: Arkham House. ISBN 0-87054-073-4.
    • . Lost Worlds. New York, NY: DAW Books. 1980. Archived from the original on 2007-05-29.
    • Lin Carter, ed. (1981). "The Winfield Heritance". Weird Tales #3. Zebra Books. ISBN 0-89083-803-8.
    • Edward P. Berglund, ed. (1976). "Zoth-Ommog". The Disciples of Cthulhu (1st ed.). New York, NY: DAW Books. Original title: "The Horror in the Gallery".
  • Price, Robert M. (1997). The Xothic Legend Cycle: The Complete Mythos Fiction of Lin Carter. Oakland, CA: Chaosium. ISBN 1-56882-078-X. Includes the five stories listed above.

References

  1. ^ Price, "The Statement of Lin Carter".
  2. ^ Cthulhu and Ghatanathoa were originally the creations of Lovecraft, appearing in "The Call of Cthulhu" (1928) and "Out of the Aeons" (1935), respectively. While Lovecraft never established a connection between these beings, Robert M. Price, believes that Ghatanothoa is essentially a revised version of Cthulhu. (Price [1991] (1991). "Lovecraft's 'Artificial Mythology'". In David E. Schultz; S.T. Joshi (eds.). An Epicure in the Terrible: a centennial anthology of essays in honor of H. P. Lovecraft. Rutherford, NJ; Cranbury, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press; Associated University Presses. p. 253. ISBN 0-8386-3415-X.)
  3. ^ Harms, "Ythogtha", The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana, p. 349. (Note: Ythogtha's physical appearance is never described in any of the five stories of the Xothic legend cycle.)
  4. ^ Jantsang, Tani. . Internet Archive. Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 2007-08-19. Retrieved 28 November 2020.

Sources

  • Harms, Daniel (1998). The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana (2nd ed.). Oakland, CA: Chaosium. ISBN 1-56882-119-0.
  • Price, Robert M. (1981). . Crypt of Cthulhu. 1 (2). Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 2006-04-15. Robert M. Price (ed.), Bloomfield, NJ: Cryptic Publications.

xothic, legend, cycle, series, short, stories, american, writer, carter, that, based, cthulhu, mythos, lovecraft, primarily, lovecraft, stories, call, cthulhu, aeons, cycle, centered, trinity, deities, said, sons, cthulhu, ghatanothoa, ythogtha, zoth, ommog, f. The Xothic legend cycle is a series of short stories by American writer Lin Carter that are based on the Cthulhu Mythos of H P Lovecraft primarily on Lovecraft s stories The Call of Cthulhu and Out of the Aeons The cycle is centered on a trinity of deities said to be the sons of Cthulhu Ghatanothoa Ythogtha and Zoth Ommog The five stories that make up the cycle in chronological order are The Dweller in the Tomb 1971 Out of the Ages 1975 The Horror in the Gallery 1976 The Thing in the Pit 1980 and The Winfield Heritance 1981 1 All these stories are to be found collected with others in The Xothic Legend Cycle The Complete Mythos Fiction of Lin Carter Chaosium 1997 Originally Carter had assembled some of these stories for a volume he planned to call The Terror Out of Time Stories to have been included in this collection included The Dweller in the Tomb to have been renamed Zanthu The Winfield Inheritance Zoth Ommog to be renamed The Terror Out of Time Out of the Ages and Them From Outside The collection was submitted to DAW Books and Arkham House but was unpublished in Carter s lifetime Zoth Ommog originally titled The Horror in the Gallery was published in the original DAW Books edition of Edward Berlund ed The Disciples of Cthulhu see Cthulhu Mythos anthology but was omitted from the Chaosium reprint of this anthology however the story appears under its original title in The Xothic Legend Cycle The Complete Mythos Fiction of Lin Carter Them from Outside was scheduled to appear in an issue of Crypt of Cthulhu as Concerning Them from Outside The cycle introduces various mythos elements such as the Zanthu Tablets the Ponape Scripture Father Ubb and the yuggs and two new Great Old Ones Ythogtha and Zoth Ommog The cycle also features the fictional Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities perhaps Lin Carter s answer to Lovecraft s Miskatonic University The lost continent of Mu also figures prominently in the cycle as do the events that led to its sinking Contents 1 The Demon Trinity 1 1 Ghatanothoa 1 2 Ythogtha 1 3 Zoth Ommog 2 Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities 3 Stories 3 1 The Dweller in the Tomb 3 2 Out of the Ages 3 3 The Horror in the Gallery 3 4 The Thing in the Pit 3 5 The Winfield Heritance 4 See also 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 SourcesThe Demon Trinity EditCarter s Demon Trinity Ghatanothoa Ythogtha and Zoth Ommog were spawned on a planet near the double star Xoth They are the progeny of a mating between Cthulhu 2 and the quasi female entity Idh yaa Ghatanothoa Edit Main article Ghatanothoa Ghatanothoa is said to be the firstborn of Cthulhu He is infamous for his horrid appearance and fearsome medusa like ability which causes a viewer s skin to become hard and leathery but preserves the brain leaving the victim to go slowly mad trapped within an immobile shell Among the myriad of deities worshipped in Mu Ghatanothoa was the most respected as well as the most feared Prior to the destruction of Mu Ghatanothoa s cult became the most powerful on the continent Some critics have suggested that Ghatanothoa who first appeared in Lovecraft s story ghostwritten for Hazel Heald Out of the Aeons was intended by Lovecraft to be another name for Cthulhu Ythogtha Edit Ythogtha is the second son of Cthulhu and resembles a gigantic humanoid frog or Deep One with only a single eye in the center of his forehead like a cyclops A dense mane and a beard of writhing tentacles grows from his head 3 Although never fully described in Carter s own stories Ythogtha is incredibly large when the sorcerer priest Zanthu attempts to free Ythogtha from his prison he mistakes his god s clawed slimy fingertips for mountainous heads The Elder Gods imprisoned Ythogtha in the Abyss of Yhe He is served by the planarian like yuggs and their lord Ubb The Father of Worms Ythogtha s legend is chronicled in the Zanthu Tablets Zoth Ommog Edit Zoth Ommog is the third son of Cthulhu He has a cone shaped body a razor fanged reptilian head like that of a Tyrannosaurus rex four broad flat starfish like arms with suckers and a mane of tentacles How he swims or walks on the ocean floor is unknown but it is possible that he has a slug like foot similar to that of the Great Race of Yith Zoth Ommog was imprisoned by the Elder Gods beneath the seabed near Ponape and R lyeh Like his older brother Ythogtha Zoth Ommog is served by Father Ubb and the Yuggs Zoth Ommog s legend is chronicled in the R lyeh Text and the Ponape Scripture The Elder Gods as punishers of the Old Ones a God and Satan theme was not a Lovecraftian invention but was introduced into the Mythos by August Derleth and carried on by a multitude of other Mythos authors most notably Brian Lumley and Lin Carter Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities EditThe Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities is featured in The Dweller in the Tomb where it debuted Out of the Ages and The Horror in the Gallery The institute is an anthropological research facility dedicated to the study of the cultures of the Pacific It is based in Santiago California and was founded by the son of the late Calton Sanborne II whose father was a magnate in the tuna packing industry Stories EditEach story is set in the early 20th century and is told from the point of view of a scholarly narrator Each narrator in turn becomes the protagonist of the next story in the series A full synopsis of the stories are available 4 The Dweller in the Tomb Edit The first story in the cycle introduces Harold Hadley Copeland a noted archaeologist in the study of Pacific culture The story is narrated by Henry Stephenson Blaine Ph D and curator of the Manuscripts Collection of the Sanbourne Institute The story consists primarily of the journal entries of Professor Copeland and details the ill fated Copeland Ellington Expedition into Central Asia in 1913 of which Copeland was the only survivor Out of the Ages Edit This story introduces the Xothic Legend Cycle a theory first proposed by Harold Hadley Copeland The story also features the Ponape Figurine a sinister statuette depicting Zoth Ommog the Dweller in the Deeps The Horror in the Gallery Edit This story originally titled Zoth Ommog revolves around the Ponape Figurine and the efforts of the protagonist to dispose of it The story features Lovecraft s Miskatonic University In the story Zoth Ommog like his father Cthulhu can enter a person s dreams and cause the victim to go mad but to do so the subject must be near one of his statues One such statue is recovered from the seafloor of Ponape and brought to Professor Harold Hadley Copeland a brilliant but eccentric archaeologist who is researching the Xothic Legend Cycle After Professor Copeland dies in a psychiatric hospital the statue is taken to the Sanbourne Institute of Pacific Antiquities to be displayed The press dubs it the Ponape Figurine though rumors claim it is cursed However unbeknownst to the museum s Curator of Manuscript Collections Dr Henry Stephenson Blaine the statue is sentient much like the One Ring in The Lord of the Rings and soon drives him insane One night a Deep One disguised as a sailor breaks into the institute to steal the figurine After killing the night watchman the Deep One is about to take the statue when he is interrupted by Dr Blaine s young aide Arthur Wilcox Hodgkins Hodgkins flings an Elder Sign star stone at the statue destroying it The resulting explosion also kills the Deep One As fate would have it Hodgkins is charged with the murder of the night watchman because the body of the Deep One had dissolved into a pool of slime and soon evaporated just a few hours later leaving no trace except for some badly charred clothing Hodgkins is judged incurably insane and is confined to the Dunhill Institute where his mentor and close friend Dr Blaine is also incarcerated As a final twist Hodgkins is dubbed the last victim of the Curse of the Ponape Figurine The Thing in the Pit Edit The fourth story in the cycle chronicles the events that led to the destruction of Mu Zanthu the high priest of Ythogtha plots to depose the cult of Ghatanothoa after his priests outlawed all other religions in Mu The cult of Ghatanothoa was the dominant religion in Mu following the defeat of T yog high priest of Shub Niggurath who had sought to vanquish the tyranny of Ghatanothoa forever Zanthu had hoped to oust Ghatanothoa s cult by freeing the god Ythogtha from the Abyss of Yhe where the Elder Gods had imprisoned him This act of blasphemy did not go unnoticed by the Elder Gods who destroyed Mu and sank it beneath the sea Zanthu himself abandoned the ritual and fled after discovering the true nature of the god whose size is measurable only in miles Following the destruction of Mu Zanthu and his followers fled to the Plateau of Tsang in Inner Mongolia where they later died Before his death Zanthu inscribed his story on the Zanthu Tablets a series of ten or twelve black jade slabs which also included the sacred rituals and mysteries of Ythogtha The Winfield Heritance Edit The final story in the cycle is only loosely tied to the other four This story reveals the true nature of the yuggs The hero of The Lurker at the Threshold becomes a mythos worshipper in this tale See also Edit Novels portalZoth Ommog Records a real life record labelBibliography EditCarter Lin August Derleth ed 1971 The Dweller in the Tomb Dark Things Sauk City WI Arkham House Gerald W Page ed 1975 Out of the Ages Nameless Places Sauk City WI Arkham House ISBN 0 87054 073 4 The Thing in the Pit Lost Worlds New York NY DAW Books 1980 Archived from the original on 2007 05 29 Lin Carter ed 1981 The Winfield Heritance Weird Tales 3 Zebra Books ISBN 0 89083 803 8 Edward P Berglund ed 1976 Zoth Ommog The Disciples of Cthulhu 1st ed New York NY DAW Books Original title The Horror in the Gallery Price Robert M 1997 The Xothic Legend Cycle The Complete Mythos Fiction of Lin Carter Oakland CA Chaosium ISBN 1 56882 078 X Includes the five stories listed above References Edit Price The Statement of Lin Carter Cthulhu and Ghatanathoa were originally the creations of Lovecraft appearing in The Call of Cthulhu 1928 and Out of the Aeons 1935 respectively While Lovecraft never established a connection between these beings Robert M Price believes that Ghatanothoa is essentially a revised version of Cthulhu Price 1991 1991 Lovecraft s Artificial Mythology In David E Schultz S T Joshi eds An Epicure in the Terrible a centennial anthology of essays in honor of H P Lovecraft Rutherford NJ Cranbury NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Associated University Presses p 253 ISBN 0 8386 3415 X Harms Ythogtha The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana p 349 Note Ythogtha s physical appearance is never described in any of the five stories of the Xothic legend cycle Jantsang Tani Summary of Lin Carter s Xothic Cycle Stories Internet Archive Internet Archive Archived from the original on 2007 08 19 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Sources EditHarms Daniel 1998 The Encyclopedia Cthulhiana 2nd ed Oakland CA Chaosium ISBN 1 56882 119 0 Price Robert M 1981 The Statement of Lin Carter The Copeland Bequest Crypt of Cthulhu 1 2 Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 2006 04 15 Robert M Price ed Bloomfield NJ Cryptic Publications Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Xothic legend cycle amp oldid 1111797571, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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