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The White Ship (story)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1919 short story by H. P. Lovecraft
For the twelfth century vessel, seeWhite Ship.

"The White Ship"
Short story byH.P. Lovecraft
The White Ship
Text available atWikisource
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHorror
Publication
Published inThe United Amateur
Media typePrint
Publication dateNovember 1919

"The White Ship" is ahorrorshort story by American writerH. P. Lovecraft. It was first published inThe United Amateur (Volume 19) #2, November 1919, and later appeared in the March 1927 issue ofWeird Tales.[1][2]

Plot

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Basil Elton, a lighthouse keeper, engages in a peculiar fantasy in which a bearded man in robes is piloting a mystical white ship which appears when the moon is full. Elton walks across the water on a bridge of moonbeams, joins the bearded man on the ship, and together they explore a mystical chain of islands unlike anything that can be found on Earth.

They travel past Zar, a green land where "dwell all the dreams and thoughts of beauty that come to men once and then are forgotten", then the majestic city of Thalarion, "City of a Thousand Wonders", where frightful demons dwell. They pass Akariel, the huge carven gate of Thalarion, and continue their voyage. Elton is informed that those who enter both places have never returned. During the voyage, they seem to be following an azure celestial bird. They also pass Xura, the "Land of Pleasures Unattained", which seems pleasant from a distance but reeks of plague upon getting nearer. They finally settle in Sona-Nyl, the "Land of Fancy", where Elton spends a period of time which he describes as "many aeons", living in what seems to be aperfect society. During his time in Sona-Nyl, he learns of Cathuria, the "Land of Hope". Though no man truly knows where Cathuria is or what lies there, Elton is thrilled with the idea, fantasizing about it wildly, and urges the bearded man to take him there, which the man reluctantly agrees to do. They follow the celestial bird westward. After a perilous journey to where the crew believes Cathuria to be, the ship instead finds itself at the edge of the world, and plummets to its doom.

Elton awakens to find himself on the wet rocks next to his lighthouse, mere moments after he first departed on the white ship – and just in time to witness a catastrophic shipwreck caused by the light having gone out for the first time. He is further shaken by his later finding a dead azure bird and a spar of pure white. He never sees the white ship again.

Connections

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The surface plot is modeled onLord Dunsany's 1910 story "Idle Days on the Yann".[3]

Unlike many of Lovecraft's other tales, "The White Ship" does not directly tie into the popularizedCthulhu Mythos. However, the story cannot be entirely excluded from mythos continuity either, since it makes reference to preternatural, godlike beings. The tone and temperament of "The White Ship" speaks largely of theDream Cycle literary structure that Lovecraft utilized in other stories such asThe Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath (1926) and "The Cats of Ulthar" (1920).

Reception

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Henry S. Whitehead, in a letter toThe Eyrie, the letters page forWeird Tales, in May 1927, laudedThe White Ship.[4]

Adaptations

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References

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  1. ^Joshi, S.T.; Schultz, David E. (2004).An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. Hippocampus Press. pp. 299–300.ISBN 978-0974878911.
  2. ^"900 years since the White Ship disaster".blogs.bl.uk. RetrievedJune 20, 2023.
  3. ^Joshi, S. T. (2013)."Lovecraft's 'Dunsanian Studies'". In Joshi, S. T. (ed.).Critical Essays on Lord Dunsany. Lanham; Toronto; Plymouth: The Scarwcrow Press. p. 247.ISBN 978-0-8108-9234-7.
  4. ^S. T. Joshi & Marc A. Michaud,H.P. Lovecraft in "The Eyrie".West Warwick : Necronomicon Press, 1979. (p.22)
  5. ^Alec Stevens (a), Gary Groth (ed). Anything Goes!, no. 4, pp. 8–15 (May 1987). The Comics Journal, Inc..

External links

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