"A covenant is ratified over
corpses, otherwise it has no validity."---Hebrews 9:17.
(Schonfield's Authentic New Testament)
In a story already brimming with gruesome
details, one particularly nauseating note stands out in H. P. Lovecraft's
"The Hound". Grave robbers break open a coffin and discover a remarkable
amulet Inside.
It was the oddly conventionalized figure
of a crouching winged hound, or sphinx with a semi-canine face, and was
exquisitely carved in antique Oriental fashion from a small piece of green
jade. . . . [W]e recognized it as the thing hinted of in the forbidden Necronomicon
of the mad Arab Abdul Alhazred; the ghastly soul-symbol of the corpse-eating
cult of inaccessible Leng, in Central Asia. All too well did we trace the
sinister lineaments described by the old Arab daemonologlst; lineaments, he
wrote, drawn from the souls of those who vexed and gnawed at the dead. (p. 155)
The goal of the present article is to
determine, as far as possible, the nature and motives of this necrophagous cult.
In doing so, our method will be to correlate hints from elsewhere in Lovecraft's
fiction with actual cultural / religious parallels which may have influenced
him.
Necrophagy in Lovecraft
The mention of "corpse-eating"
in "The Hound" is not unique in HPL's work. In fact, three different
kinds of necrophagy appear scattered here and there throughout the Lovecraft
canon. First, there is primitive cannibalism, like that still practiced today.
In "Polaris", he mentions the "hairy, long-armed, cannibal Gnophkehs",
who occur again in The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath. They are merely a
tribe of savage cave men. Second, Lovecraft uses the theme of humanoid but
dog-faced ghouls. These demonic carrion-feeders figure prominently in "Pickman's
Model" and Dream Quest. Both tales were written the same year.
Third, we find the notion of a depraved religious cult practicing necrophagy in
"The Rats in the Walls". Into which category does "the corpse-eating
cult of inaccessible Leng" fall?
It is fairly obvious that the Leng
necrophagites are not primitive cannibals. Such cannibalism is an accepted part
of the tribal societies in which it occurs. But the term "cult" as
used by Lovecraft in our text is intended to evoke the image of a secretive and
elitist group, withdrawn from any larger society.
Neither are the Leng cultists literal
ghouls. One might conceivably take the "semi-canine" aspect of the
amulet to denote this, seeing as how ghouls are described by HPL in similar
terms. But the amulet figure is not humanoid at all, and has wings besides.
Wings are absent from the descriptions of ghouls in "Pickman's Model"
and Dream Quest. Besides, these two stories were written in 1926, three
years after "The Hound". Thus there is no reason to think that Lovecraft
had literal ghouls in mind when he wrote "The Hound". What similarity there
is between the amulet and the later ghouls evidently stems from the general
imagery of a jackal as a carrion beast. In "The Hound" it is explicit
that the amulet-image represents the souls of "those who vexed and gnawed
at the dead", i.e., the souls of the "corpse-eating cult[ists]"
themselves.
This brings us to the third possible
category --- a decadent religious sect. We are fortunate to have a fairly
detailed model for comparison. The hereditary cultus of the de la Poer family in
"The Rats in the Walls" was necrophagous. Beneath Exham Priory lay a
huge cavern wherein the detestable rites had been performed for ages receding
past human memory. In Roman times, this nameless cult had assumed the cloak of
Cybele-worship. The religion of Cybele (the "Magna Mater") and her
dying-and-rising consort Attis was the first of the Oriental "Mystery
Religions" to be imported into Rome. Historically, the evidence for its
penetration as far as Britain is slender, though as Jessie Weston points out,
the presence of Mithraism there makes the idea of British Cybele-worship at
least plausible. So it is possible that the cult of the de la Poer family could
have come in contact with it.
If they had, they must have recognized
kindred spirits. Cybele-enthusiasts did not practice necrophagy, but their
frenzied worship did include voluntary self-mutilation, including castration.
Henceforth, human flesh formed "the diet of the antediluvian cult which the
priests of Cybele found and mingled with their own." (p. 50) The story
provides a single hint that the true object of the cult's veneration was not
Cybele, however, but rather "Nyarlathotep, the mad faceless god [who] howls
blindly in darkness to the piping of two amorphous idiot flute-players." (p. 51)
It seems most likely that Leng's cult was
basically of the same type as that of the de la Poers. After all, "The
Hound" was written only a year before "The Rats in the Walls", and
apparently furnished the prototype for the grisly sect in the latter. Such
conventicles, though literally quite human, could certainly be described as
"ghoulish", and it is probably this kind of sect that HPL envisioned in his
invented tome Cultes de Goules.
One key question remains unanswered. What
was the motive for Leng's necrophagy? Our answer may lie in an investigation of
the implied cultural background of "in-accesible Leng".
Where is Leng?
At one time or another, Leng occupied
three different sites in the imaginary geography of Lovecraft. Like the
proverbial housewife experimenting with new furniture, he could never quite
decide if he wanted it here, or, no, over there. His first mention of Leng is in
"The Hound" (1922), in the very passage we are considering. There it
is placed unambiguously in Central Asia, a vaguely defined area including parts
of Kazahkistan, Turkestan, Mongolia, and Tibet. It is characterized as
"inaccessible", presumably because of forbidding mountain ranges. Four
years later, in Dream Quest, Leng is uprooted and catapulted into the
parallel universe of "Dreamland". There it is described in more detail as
"a wind-swept table-land which seemed the very roof of a blasted and
tenantless world." (p. 351) So Leng turns out to be a plateau. It is beyond
"high and impassable peaks." (p. 339) Even without the location in
Central Asia (understandable given the supra-mundane setting of Dream Quest),
it is hard not to recognize Leng as a fictional counterpart of legend-haunted
Tibet.
This impression is confirmed when we read
on a bit further:
There, all alone in the hush and the
dusk and the cold, rose the uncouth atones of a squat windowless building,
around which a circle of crude monoliths stood. [This was] the remote and
prehistoric monastery wherein dwells unaccompanied the High-Priest not to be
described, which wears a yellow silken mask over its face and prays to the . .
. crawling chaos Nyarlathotep. (Dream Quest, p. 351)
Also, note the parallel passage in
"Fungi from Yuggoth" (Stanza XXVII, "The Elder Pharos")
where the same silken-veiled figure communes with Nyarlathotep ("talking to
Chaos"). There, he dwells In a stone tower or lighthouse, not a low
structure as described in Dream Quest, but the image is the same. This
extraordinary hermit corresponds, of course, to the High Lama of Lhasa in Tibet.
Leng is transported once more in At the Mountains of Madness (1931). This
time "the fabled nightmare plateau of Leng" (p. 66) comes to rest in
Antarctica. Lovecraft tips his hat to his earlier references to Leng;
"Mythologists have placed Leng in Central Asia; but the racial memory of
man --- or of his predecessors --- is long, and it may be that certain tales
have come down from lands and mountains and temples of horror earlier than Asia
and earlier than any human world we know. . . ." (p. 27) The important thing to
note here is that the Tibetan association [missing text] reinforced. The point
is that mysteries, originating elsewhere, have come to be associated with the
Central Asian plateau. Among them are the "whispered hill legends" of
creatures "remembered in the Himalayas as the . . . abominable Snow Men."
(p. 63)
No veiled "High Priest" appears
in the Antarctican Leng, but it is very interesting to note that in "The
Elder Pharos" sonnet, the figure is called "the last Elder One", a
term reminiscent of the interstellar "Old Ones" who inhabited Leng in At
the Mountains of Madness. And, like them, the "yellow-robed
blasphemy" is depicted in Dream Quest as an extraterrestrial, kin to
the grayish-white "moon-beasts" (p. 353). Finally, Leng in both
Dreamland and the South Pole preserves corridor murals portraying epochs of
prehuman history. In both cases, these artifacts were preserved by "the
cold and dryness of hideous Leng". (Dream Quest, p, 351) As for the robed
mystagogue him- or itself, the final piece of evidence is supplied by Lovecraft
in a letter to Robert Bloch in 1935. There the character is referred to as the
"Lama of Leng". Not only is the actual Tibetan title used, but the Lama is
said to represent the "Tcho-Tcho", an Asian tribe invented by August
Derleth and Mark Schorer and located on the "Plateau of Sung", obviously
the same as Leng.
As for the name itself, "Leng"
could be derived from the city of Lenger, located in a mountainous region of
present-day Soviet Central Asia. A better guess might be the Lingku district of
Lhasa, or similar Tibetan place names. At any rate, we may take it as
established that Leng was a fictionalization of Tibet, a plateau shrouded in
legends scarce- [missing text] by Lovecraft himself. Do any of those legends
provide a clue as to why Leng's cultists would practice the bizarre perversion
of necrophagy?
Religious Necrophagy in Asia
Four rather remarkable stories must claim
our attention, since they involve, in one way or another, the eating of human
flesh in a religious context. The first two are apocryphal tales concerning the
life of Guru Nanak, the founder of the Sikh religion. Nanak lived in the Punjab
region of India, which would qualify for inclusion under the rather vague rubric
"Central Asia". In the first story, Nanak is visiting Sivanabh, the king of
Ceylon. When asked what he would like for dinner, the Guru requests human flesh,
particularly that of any twelve-year old prince. The king's own son
"happens" to be twelve years old. The boy's throat is cut, and the
body is stewed and set on the table. Nanak tells the parents to close their
eyes, speak the name of God, and then dig in. They do. When they finally open
their eyes, Nanak has vanished. Not surprisingly, the king goes insane. A year
later, he meets the Guru again and is converted. (McLeod, p. 48)
This disgusting story is certainly unusual
material to find in a hagiography! We may suspect that it has been corrupted in
oral transmission, and that it was originally similar in intent to our second
tale of Guru Nanak. In it, he devises a test of his disciples' loyalty. As they
walk along, Nanak makes coins appear in the road, first copper, then silver,
finally gold. At each stage, more and more disciples gather the coins and
depart. When only two Sikhs are left, they and the Guru come upon a funeral
pyre.
Over the corpse there was a sheet and
from it issued a foul smell. The Guru asked if there was anyone prepared to
eat the corpse and at this one of the remaining Sikhs fled, leaving only
Lahina to obey the command. Lahina asked which end he should begin to eat and
was instructed to start at the feet. Raising the sheet he found Guru Nanak
lying there.
Lahina's faith had been proved genuine. He
would do anything his master commanded. The story is parallel to that of
Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son Isaac at God's command (Genesis,
chapter 22). In both cases (as perhaps also in the original form of the first
Nanak story above), neither knight of faith had to go through with the
blood-chilling duty. However, it is interesting to note how the second Nanak
tale ends. A friend of Nanak, who has observed Lahina's trial, exclaims "He
who is born from a part (ang) of you will be your Guru," and Lahina
was henceforth known as "Angad". (p. 50) In light of our fourth story
below, this conclusion may take on new significance.
Our third episode concerns the Venerable Pindola, a Buddhist monk. Buddhist mendicants are, as Jesus commanded his
wandering disciples, "to eat whatever is set before you" (Luke 10:8).
It is related of Pindola that in complete obedience to this rule, he did not
flinch at eating a leper's thumb which fell into the monk's begging bowl as the
leper placed food in it (Conze, p. 62). We may wonder if this story was
originally understood as a mere object-lesson for mendicants. The story would
seem to illustrate in striking fashion the Mahayana Buddhist ideal of unified
vision, whereby one penetrates the apparent diversity of things, seeing instead
their true unity in Nirvana. In such an enlightened state, one would no longer
pay heed to illusory distinctions such as "pleasant vs. unpleasant",
'attractive vs. repulsive", etc. Even so here; a piece of fruit, a leprous thumb
--- it is all the same.
The final story also stems from a Buddhist
matrix, this time that of Tibetan Buddhism. The doctrine of Gotama has taken its
most eccentric forms in Tibet. By the time the Buddhist gospel penetrated the
Himalayan peaks, it had already become mixed with Tantric mysticism, which
involved drugs and sex. Once it reached Tibet, this already volatile formula
absorbed elements of the shamanistic Bern religion native to the region. Out of
this strange syncretism arose a surprisingly cogent rationale for occult magic:
if, as Buddhism teaches, all visible reality is maya (= a stage illusion
or "magic trick"), why should not someone sufficiently skilled be able
consciously to manipulate those illusions? As Alexandra David-Neel recounts in Magic
and Mystery in Tibet, this belief led to the famous stories of the Tibetan
adepts' ability to materialize gods and demons, and to project phantom
duplicates of themselves.
It was in this charged atmosphere of
marvels real or imagined that Madame David-Neel encountered the thaumaturge
Chogs Tsang. She relates a story of this abbot in order to illustrate the
"dark side of Tibetan occultism" (p. 131). One evening Chogs Tsang
summons one of the monks, ordering him to prepare two horses. At length, they
arrive at a river bank, where they dismount. "Though the sky is completely
dark, a spot on the water is 'lighted by sun rays' and in that illuminated place
a corpse is floating up-stream, moving against the current." When it reaches the
two men, Chogs Tsang commands his assistant, "Take your knife, cut a piece
of the flesh and eat it. I have a friend in India who sends me a meal every year
at this date." He himself begins to dine, but the horrified monk merely pretends
to do so, hiding a slice of flesh in his robe. Back at the monastery, the lama
rebukes the young monk. "I wished you to share the favour and the most
excellent fruits of this mystic meal, but you are not worthy of it." The monk
duly repents and reaches for the concealed chunk of flesh, only to find it has
disappeared. This macabre tale reflects the beliefs of the monks of the
Dzogschen sect, according to which:
There exist . . . certain human beings
who have attained such a high degree of spiritual perfection, that the
original material substance of their bodies has become transmuted into a more
subtle one which possesses special qualities. . . . A morsel of their
transformed flesh, when eaten, will produce a special kind of ecstasy and
bestow knowledge and supernormal powers upon the person partaking of it. (pp.
132-134)
[Who knows but that the conclusion to our
second Nanak tale does not bear this significance; is it by literally eating
"a part of you" (i.e., of Guru Nanak) that one will become the next
guru?]
It is quite possible that this belief is
associated with the so-called "left-handed" Tantra, which professes to
provide a "short path" to enlightenment through indulgence in various
traditionally taboo activities, both sexual and dietary. The ideals that these
practices, like the Zen Koan, enable the monk to breach the conventional
dualistic structures of perception, and so come to see all as One.
And here is the key to the practice of
Leng's cult. Like the Tibetan Dzogschen sect, they rltually consumed the corpses
of deceased adepts, perhaps of their own Lamas, in order to gain occult powers,
and to realize the undivided Unity of all things. If so, then we know what their
name for that primal Oneness was --- the undifferentiated "Chaos"
worshipped by the Lama of Leng (and by the cult of Exham Priory) as
"Nyarlathotep".
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Conze, Edward. Buddhism; Its Essence
and Development. New York: Harper & Row, Publishers,
1975.
Cumont, Franz. Oriental Religions in
Roman Paganism. New York: Dover Publications, 1956.
Davtd-Neel, Alexandra. Magic and
Mystery in Tibet. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1973.
McLeod, W. H. Guru Nanak and the Sikh
Religion. Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1978.
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WAS LOVECRAFT PENTECOSTAL ?
"lä!
Shub Niggurath! The Goat With a Thousand Young! God! I wonder if there isn't
some truth in some of this? What is this my emotions are telling me about
Cthulhu? Ya-R'lyeh! Ya-R'lyeh-Cthulhu fhg'thagn . . . . . n'ggah . . . . . ggll
. . . . . Iä! lä!"
Lovecraft,
in a letter
to F. B. Long,
November 22, 1930 |
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