The Color Out Of Space, The Dreams In The Witch House
The Color Out Of Space, The Dreams In The Witch HouseThe Dreams in the Witch HouseThe Colour Out of SpaceCopyright
The Color Out Of Space, The Dreams In The Witch House
H. P. Lovecraft
The Dreams in the Witch House
Whether the dreams brought on the fever or the fever brought
on the dreams Walter Gilman did not know. Behind everything
crouched the brooding, festering horror of the ancient town, and of
the moldy, unhallowed garret gable where he wrote and studied and
wrestled with figures and formulae when he was not tossing on the
meager iron bed. His ears were growing sensitive to a preternatural
and intolerable degree, and he had long ago stopped the cheap
mantel clock whose ticking had come to seem like a thunder of
artillery. At night the subtle stirring of the black city outside,
the sinister scurrying of rats in the wormy partitions, and the
creaking of hidden timbers in the centuried house, were enough to
give him a sense of strident pandemonium. The darkness always
teemed with unexplained sound—and yet he sometimes shook with fear
lest the noises he heard should subside and allow him to hear
certain other fainter noises which he suspected were lurking behind
them.He was in the changeless, legend–haunted city of Arkham, with
its clustering gambrel roofs that sway and sag over attics where
witches hid from the King's men in the dark, olden years of the
Province. Nor was any spot in that city more steeped in macabre
memory than the gable room which harbored him —for it was this
house and this room which had likewise harbored old Keziah Mason,
whose flight from Salem Jail at the last no one was ever able to
explain. That was in 1692—the jailer had gone mad and babbled of a
small white–fanged furry thing which scuttled out of Keziah's cell,
and not even Cotton Mather could explain the curves and angles
smeared on the grey stone walls with some red, sticky
fluid.Possibly Gilman ought not to have studied so hard.
Non–Euclidean calculus and quantum physics are enough to stretch
any brain, and when one mixes them with folklore, and tries to
trace a strange background of multi–dimensional reality behind the
ghoulish hints of the Gothic tales and the wild whispers of the
chimney–corner, one can hardly expect to be wholly free from mental
tension. Gilman came from Haverhill, but it was only after he had
entered college in Arkham that he began to connect his mathematics
with the fantastic legends of elder magic. Something in the air of
the hoary town worked obscurely on his imagination. The professors
at Miskatonic had urged him to slacken up, and had voluntarily cut
down his course at several points. Moreover, they had stopped him
from consulting the dubious old books on forbidden secrets that
were kept under lock and key in a vault at the university library.
But all these precautions came late in the day, so that Gilman had
some terrible hints from the dreaded Necronomicon of Abdul
Alhazred, the fragmentary Book of Eibon, and the suppressed Von
unaussprechlichen Kulten of von Junzt to correlate with his
abstract formulae on the properties of space and the linkage of
dimensions known and unknown.He knew his room was in the old Witch–House—that, indeed, was
why he had taken it. There was much in the Essex County records
about Keziah Mason's trial, and what she had admitted under
pressure to the Court of Oyer and Terminer had fascinated Gilman
beyond all reason. She had told Judge Hathorne of lines and curves
that could be made to point out directions leading through the
walls of space to other spaces beyond, and had implied that such
lines and curves were frequently used at certain midnight meetings
in the dark valley of the white stone beyond Meadow Hill and on the
unpeopled island in the river. She had spoken also of the Black
Man, of her oath, and of her new secret name of Nahab. Then she had
drawn those devices on the walls of her cell and
vanished.Gilman believed strange things about Keziah, and had felt a
queer thrill on learning that her dwelling was still standing after
more than two hundred and thirty–five years. When he heard the
hushed Arkham whispers about Keziah's persistent presence in the
old house and the narrow streets, about the irregular human
tooth–marks left on certain sleepers in that and other houses,
about the childish cries heard near May–Eve, and Hallowmass, about
the stench often noted in the old house's attic just after those
dreaded seasons, and about the small, furry, sharp–toothed thing
which haunted the mouldering structure and the town and nuzzled
people curiously in the black hours before dawn, he resolved to
live in the place at any cost. A room was easy to secure, for the
house was unpopular, hard to rent, and long given over to cheap
lodgings. Gilman could not have told what he expected to find
there, but he knew he wanted to be in the building where some
circumstance had more or less suddenly given a mediocre old woman
of the Seventeenth Century an insight into mathematical depths
perhaps beyond the utmost modern delvings of Planck, Heisenberg,
Einstein, and de Sitter.He studied the timber and plaster walls for traces of cryptic
designs at every accessible spot where the paper had peeled, and
within a week managed to get the eastern attic room where Keziah
was held to have practiced her spells. It had been vacant from the
first—for no one had ever been willing to stay there long—but the
Polish landlord had grown wary about renting it. Yet nothing
whatever happened to Gilman till about the time of the fever. No
ghostly Keziah flitted through the sombre halls and chambers, no
small furry thing crept into his dismal eyrie to nuzzle him, and no
record of the witch's incantations rewarded his constant search.
Sometimes he would take walks through shadowy tangles of unpaved
musty–smelling lanes where eldritch brown houses of unknown age
leaned and tottered and leered mockingly through narrow,
small–paned windows. Here he knew strange things had happened once,
and there was a faint suggestion behind the surface that everything
of that monstrous past might not—at least in the darkest,
narrowest, and most intricately crooked alleys—have utterly
perished. He also rowed out twice to the ill–regarded island in the
river, and made a sketch of the singular angles described by the
moss–grown rows of grey standing stones whose origin was so obscure
and immemorial.Gilman's room was of good size but queerly irregular shape;
the north wall slating perceptibly inward from the outer to the
inner end, while the low ceiling slanted gently downward in the
same direction. Aside from an obvious rat–hole and the signs of
other stopped–up ones, there was no access— nor any appearance of a
former avenue of access—to the space which must have existed
between the slanting wall and the straight outer wall on the
house's north side, though a view from the exterior showed where a
window had been boarded up at a very remote date. The loft above
the ceiling—which must have had a slanting floor—was likewise
inaccessible. When Gilman climbed up a ladder to the cobwebbed
level loft above the rest of the attic he found vestiges of a
bygone aperture tightly and heavily covered with ancient planking
and secured by the stout wooden pegs common in Colonial carpentry.
No amount of persuasion, however, could induce the stolid landlord
to let him investigate either of these two closed
spaces.As time wore along, his absorption in the irregular wall and
ceiling of his room increased; for he began to read into the odd
angles a mathematical significance which seemed to offer vague
clues regarding their purpose. Old Keziah, he reflected, might have
had excellent reasons for living in a room with peculiar angles;
for was it not through certain angles that she claimed to have gone
outside the boundaries of the world of space we know? His interest
gradually veered away from the unplumbed voids beyond the slanting
surfaces, since it now appeared that the purpose of those surfaces
concerned the side he was on.The touch of brain–fever and the dreams began early in
February. For some time, apparently, the curious angles of Gilman's
room had been having a strange, almost hypnotic effect on him; and
as the bleak winter advanced he had found himself staring more and
more intently at the corner where the down– slanting ceiling met
the inward–slanting wall. About this period his inability to
concentrate on his formal studies worried him considerably, his
apprehensions about the mid–year examinations being very acute. But
the exaggerated sense of bearing was scarcely less annoying. Life
had become an insistent and almost unendurable cacophony, and there
was that constant, terrifying impression of other sounds—perhaps
from regions beyond life —trembling on the very brink of
audibility. So far as concrete noises went, the rats in the ancient
partitions were the worst. Sometimes their scratching seemed not
only furtive but deliberate. When it came from beyond the slanting
north wall it was mixed with a sort of dry rattling; and when it
came from the century–closed loft above the slanting ceiling Gilman
always braced himself as if expecting some horror which only bided
its time before descending to engulf him utterly.The dreams were wholly beyond the pale of sanity, and Gilman
fell that they must be a result, jointly, of his studies in
mathematics and in folklore. He had been thinking too much about
the vague regions which his formulae told him must lie beyond the
three dimensions we know, and about the possibility that old Keziah
Mason—guided by some influence past all conjecture —had actually
found the gate to those regions. The yellowed country records
containing her testimony and that of her accusers were so damnably
suggestive of things beyond human experience—and the descriptions
of the darting little furry object which served as her familiar
were so painfully realistic despite their incredible
details.That object—no larger than a good–sized rat and quaintly
called by the townspeople "Brown Jenkin"—seemed to have been the
fruit of a remarkable case of sympathetic herd–delusion, for in
1692 no less than eleven persons had testified to glimpsing it.
There were recent rumors, too, with a baffling and disconcerting
amount of agreement. Witnesses said it had long hair and the shape
of a rat, but that its sharp–toothed, bearded face was evilly human
while its paws were like tiny human hands. It took messages betwixt
old Keziah and the devil, and was nursed on the witch's blood,
which it sucked like a vampire. Its voice was a kind of loathsome
titter, and it could speak all languages. Of all the bizarre
monstrosities in Gilman's dreams, nothing filled him with greater
panic and nausea than this blasphemous and diminutive hybrid, whose
image flitted across his vision in a form a thousandfold more
hateful than anything his waking mind had deduced from the ancient
records and the modern whispers.Gilman's dreams consisted largely in plunges through
limitless abysses of inexplicably colored twilight and bafflingly
disordered sound; abysses whose material and gravitational
properties, and whose relation to his own entity, he could not even
begin to explain. He did not walk or climb, fly or swim, crawl or
wriggle; yet always experienced a mode of motion partly voluntary
and partly involuntary. Of his own condition he could not well
judge, for sight of his arms, legs, and torso seemed always cut off
by some odd disarrangement of perspective; but he felt that his
physical organization and faculties were somehow marvelously
transmuted and obliquely projected—though not without a certain
grotesque relationship to his normal proportions and
properties.The abysses were by no means vacant, being crowded with
indescribably angled masses of alien–hued substance, some of which
appeared to be organic while others seemed inorganic. A few of the
organic objects tended to awake vague memories in the back of his
mind, though he could form no conscious idea of what they mockingly
resembled or suggested. In the later dreams he began to distinguish
separate categories into which the organic objects appeared to be
divided, and which seemed to involve in each case a radically
different species of conduct–pattern and basic motivation. Of these
categories one seemed to him to include objects slightly less
illogical and irrelevant in their motions than the members of the
other categories.All the objects—organic and inorganic alike—were totally
beyond description or even comprehension. Gilman sometimes compared
the inorganic matter to prisms, labyrinths, clusters of cubes and
planes, and Cyclopean buildings; and the organic things struck him
variously as groups of bubbles, octopi, centipedes, living Hindu
idols, and intricate arabesques roused into a kind of ophidian
animation. Everything he saw was unspeakably menacing and horrible;
and whenever one of the organic entities appeared by its motions to
be noticing him, he felt a stark, hideous fright which generally
jolted him awake. Of how the organic entities moved, he could tell
no more than of how he moved himself. In time he observed a further
mystery—the tendency of certain entities to appear suddenly out of
empty space, or to disappear totally with equal suddenness. The
shrieking, roaring confusion of sound which permeated the abysses
was past all analysis as to pitch, timbre or rhythm; but seemed to
be synchronous with vague visual changes in all the indefinite
objects, organic and inorganic alike. Gilman had a constant sense
of dread that it might rise to some unbearable degree of intensity
during one or another of its obscure, relentlessly inevitable
fluctuations.But it was not in these vortices of complete alienage that he
saw Brown Jenkin. That shocking little horror was reserved for
certain lighter, sharper dreams which assailed him just before he
dropped into the fullest depths of sleep. He would be lying in the
dark fighting to keep awake when a faint lambent glow would seem to
shimmer around the centuried room, showing in a violet mist the
convergence of angled planes which had seized his brain so
insidiously. The horror would appear to pop out of the rat–hole in
the corner and patter toward him over the sagging, wide–planked
floor with evil expectancy in its tiny, bearded human face; but
mercifully, this dream always melted away before the object got
close enough to nuzzle him. It had hellishly long, sharp, canine
teeth; Gilman tried to stop up the rat–hole every day, but each
night the real tenants of the partitions would gnaw away the
obstruction, whatever it might be. Once he had the landlord nail a
tin over it, but the next night the rats gnawed a fresh hole, in
making which they pushed or dragged out into the room a curious
little fragment of bone.Gilman did not report his fever to the doctor, for he knew he
could not pass the examinations if ordered to the college infirmary
when every moment was needed for cramming. As it was, he failed in
Calculus D and Advanced General Psychology, though not without hope
of making up lost ground before the end of the term.