The Crawling Chaos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Crawling Chaos is a short story by H. P. Lovecraft and Winifred V. Jackson (aka Elizabeth Berkeley), first published April 1921 in the United Cooperative.

[edit] Synopsis

The story begins with the narrator describing the effects of opium and the fantastical vistas it can inspire. The narrator then tells of his sole experience with opium in which he was administered an overdose during the "year of the plague".

After a disembodied sensation of falling, the narrator finds himself within a strange beautiful room containing exotic furniture, where a sound of pounding from outside inspires an inexplicable sense of dread within the narrator. Determined to identify the origin of this sound, the narrator moves towards a window and observes a terrifying scene of fifty-foot waves and seething vortex thirty feet below where he is standing, consuming the shoreline at an incredible rate.

Sensing imminent danger, the narrator quickly exits the building. Fleeing the waves, the narrator travels inland. The narrator eventually arrives in a valley with tropical grass extending above his head and a great palm tree in the center. Driven by curiosity despite considerable fear, the narrator crawls on his hands and knees toward the great palm.

Soon after arriving at the tree, the narrator observes a child fall from its branches. The child then smiles and extends its hand towards the narrator but before he can respond, he hears the sound of ethereal singing within the upper air followed by the child saying in an otherworldly voice:

It is the end. They have come down through the gloaming from the stars. Now all is over, and beyond the Arinurian streams we shall dwell blissfully in Teloe.

As the child speaks, the narrator observes two youths, whom the narrator recognizes as the singers he had just heard, emerging from the leaves of the tree. They take the narrator by the hand and describe the worlds of "Teloe" and "Cytharion of the Seven Suns" which lie beyond the Milky Way.

As they speak, the narrator observes that he is floating in the upper atmosphere, with the palm tree far below, and now accompanied by an ever increasing number of singing, vine-crowned youths. As they ascend, the child tells the narrator that he must always look upward and never down at the earth below.

However, as they rise further listening to the youths singing, the narrator is disturbed by the return of the sound of the waves, and, forgetting what the child said, looks downward and observes a sight of global destruction, with cities being consumed by the great waves until there is nothing left. This is followed by the waters draining into the earth's core via an opening gulf, which causes the earth to explode.

[edit] External links

Wikisource has original text related to this article: