Vad händer i slutet av "Berg av galskap"?

13

Jag kan bara berätta från mitt minne, eftersom jag inte har boken här just nu.

In the end the two protagonists leave the ancient city in the airplane. The companion of the narrator looks back at the mountains behind the city one last time and screams "tekeli-li". What did he see? Why did he scream in the language of the elder ones? It is their language, right? And what was in that mountains?

Jag antar att Lovecraft aldrig berättat, men finns det tips i andra verk?

    
uppsättning Till B 12.09.2011 23:01

5 svar

14

Jo, som Lovecraft tyckte om att göra, det är inte uttryckligt uttryckt, men här är hur Wikipedia beskriver det:

As the two progress further into the city, they are ultimately drawn to a massive, ominous entrance which is the opening of a tunnel which they believe leads into the subterranean region described in the murals. Compulsively they are drawn in, finding further horrors: evidence of dead Elder Things caught in a brutal struggle and blind six-foot-tall penguins wandering around placidly. They are confronted with an immense, ululating horror in the form of a black, bubbling mass, which they identify as a Shoggoth. They escape with their lives using luck and diversion. On the plane high above the plateau, Danforth looks back and sees something that causes him to lose his sanity. He refuses to tell anyone (even Dyer) what he saw, though it is implied that it has something to do with what lies beyond the larger mountain range that even the Elder Things feared.

Professor Dyer concludes that the Elder Things and their civilization were destroyed by the Shoggoths they created and that this entity has sustained itself on the enormous penguins since eons past. He begs the planners of the next proposed Antarctic expedition to stay away from things that should not be loosed on this Earth.

Du kan läsa den gratis, btw, via WikiSource , liksom några andra platser, som jag tror att det är in i det offentliga området ..

Här är texten dock med vad som finns i berättelsen om vad han såg:

All that Danforth has ever hinted is that the final horror was a mirage. It was not, he declares, anything connected with the cubes and caves of those echoing, vaporous, wormily-honeycombed mountains of madness which we crossed; but a single fantastic, demoniac glimpse, among the churning zenith clouds, of what lay back of those other violet westward mountains which the Old Ones had shunned and feared. It is very probable that the thing was a sheer delusion born of the previous stresses we had passed through, and of the actual though unrecognized mirage of the dead transmontane city experienced near Lake's camp the day before; but it was so real to Danforth that he suffers from it still.

He has on rare occasions whispered disjointed and irresponsible things about "The black pit," "the carven rim," "the protoShoggoths," "the windowless solids with five dimensions," "the nameless cylinder," "the elder Pharos," "Yog-Sothoth," "the primal white jelly," "the color out of space," "the wings," "the eyes in darkness," "the moon-ladder," "the original, the eternal, the undying," and other bizarre conceptions; but when he is fully himself he repudiates all this and attributes it to his curious and macabre reading of earlier years.

    
svaret ges 12.09.2011 23:41
7
Tekeli-li gråter kommer från en av Poe: s verk: Berättelsen av Arthur Gordon Pym . Hans enda roman och en intressant läsning, teorierar boken att jorden är faktiskt ihålig, med portaler, så att säga, vid polerna. Narrativet var ett direkt inflytande på The Mountains of Madness .

    
svaret ges 18.11.2011 22:45
3

Den mest skrämmande delen av en skräckhistoria är vad du inte visar. Läsaren är tänkt att skjuta upp vad Danforth tyckte att han såg "bakom" (vilket betyder bakom eller bakom) bergen. Berättaren saknar det eftersom molnen skiftar, och det lägger bara till mysteriet, för Danforth kunde inte ha fått mer än en avlägsen, otydlig glimt. HPL ger eftertänksamt en lista över triggers.

    
svaret ges 28.06.2017 21:33
1
Personligen antog jag alltid att han såg en eller flera äldre saker som flyger mot planet. Det antyds att det fortfarande finns några äldste saker som lever (eller åtminstone i kryogenik) som kommer tillbaka och räddar sina döda. Skräcken kommer från att mannen inte är ensam och är bara en liten del i ett stort hemskt universum som så småningom kommer att äta honom. Det är därför Danforth blir galen.

    
svaret ges 13.09.2011 09:40
0

Vi vet att Dyer och Danforth stöter på de gamla människornas kroppar som dödas av en shoggoth och sedan bevittnar shoggoten själv och flyger staden efteråt. Sedan, efter att ha rymt staden och tagit av i sitt flygplan ser Danforth, eller tror han gör, något . Det verkar som att även Lovecraft själv inte var helt nöjd eller viss om detta någonting. I ett brev till August Derleth den 16 maj 1931 skrev han:

"Now as to the end of the thing -- of course I'm not satisfied myself, but I am very oddly unable whether more or less definiteness is needed. Remember Arthur Gordon Pym. In my tale the shoggoth provides a concrete & tangible climax -- & what I wished to add was merely a vague hint of further spiritual horrors -- as Poe hinted with his white birds screaming "Tekeli-li! Tekeli-li!" I wanted to leave the actuality of the glimpse very unsettled, so that it might easily pass off as an hallucination. Possibly I ought to have left it vaguer still -- & then again I had an idea that the thing ought to be developed at full length -- perhaps as a sequel to the present thing, or perhaps as an expansion of that thing to full book length .... with the Simon & Schuster request, received last January, in mind. What the thing was supposed to be, of course, was a region containing vestiges of some utterly primal cosmic force or process ruling or occupying the earth (among other planets) even before its solidification, & upheaved from the sea-bottom when the great Antarctic land mass arose. Lack of interest in the world beyond the inner mountains would account of its non-reconquest of the sphere. But then again, there may have been no such thing! Those Others may well have had their superstitions -- & of course Danforth was strangely read, nervously organised, & fresh from a terrific shock.... Anyhow, what I did set down was a sort of weak compromise betwist the two ways I vaguely & ineffectively thought it ought to be."

Skam att HPL aldrig skrev uppföljaren han hänvisar till i citatet ovan!

    
svaret ges 29.06.2017 14:37