From the age of three onward—while his father was slowly deteriorating both physically and mentally in Butler Hospital—the young Howard Phillips Lovecraft was encountering one intellectual and imaginative stimulus after the other: first the colonial antiquities of Providence, then Grimm’s
CHAPTER THREE
Black Woods and Unfathomed Caves (1898–1902)
Lovecraft dates his first work of prose fiction to 1897,1 and elsewhere identifies it as ‘The Noble Eavesdropper’, about which all we know is that it concerned ‘a boy who overheard some horrible conclave of subterranean beings in a cave’.2 As the work does not survive, it would be idle to point to any literary sources for it; but the influence of the
I never heard
Here are some of the components (unfathomed caves, deep, low, moaning sounds) of the imagery of ‘The Noble Eavesdropper’. But Lovecraft admits that this is the only tale he wrote prior to his reading of Poe.
Poe was, by the turn of the century, slowly gaining a place of eminence in American literature, although he still had to face posthumous attacks by Henry James and others. His championing by Baudelaire, Mallarmé, and other European writers had slowly impelled reconsideration of his work by English and American critics.
I do not know which edition of Poe was read by the eight-yearold Lovecraft; it must have been some school edition. It is, in fact, a little difficult to discern any clear-cut Poe influence in the first several of Lovecraft’s surviving juvenile stories—‘The Little Glass Bottle’, ‘The Secret Cave; or, John Lees Adventure’, ‘The Mystery of the Grave-yard; or, A Dead Man’s Revenge’, and ‘The Mysterious Ship’. None of these early stories is dated, with the exception of ‘The Mysterious Ship’ (clearly dated to 1902), but they must have been written during the period 1898–1902, perhaps more toward the earlier than the later end of that spectrum. Perhaps the only tale of genuine interest is ‘The Mystery of the Grave-yard’—which contains not only a subtitle (‘or, “A Dead Man’s Revenge”) but a sub-subtitle (‘A Detective story’). This is the longest of Lovecraft’s juvenile stories, and at the end of the autograph manuscript he has noted (obviously at a much later date): ‘Evidently written in late 1898 or early 1899’. The fact that it is labelled a detective story should not lead us to think it is influenced by Poe’s ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’ or any of his other detective stories, although no doubt Lovecraft read them. Even the most cursory glance at this wild, histrionic, and rather engaging story should allow us to point to its predominant source: the dime novel.
The first dime novel was published in 1860, when the firm later known as Beadle & Adams reprinted, in a 128-page paper-covered volume 6 by 4 inches in dimensions, a novel by Ann Sophia Winterbotham Stephens. The fact that it was a reprint was critical, for it allowed the firm to claim that here was a ‘dollar book for a dime’.4 Beadle & Adams was the leading publisher of dime novels until it folded in 1898, having been driven out of business by the bold and innovative publishing practices of Street & Smith, which entered the dime novel market in 1889.