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place. Clarendon lapses into depression and rarely stirs from his home. With Surama, he continues experiments of various sorts in his own laboratory, but Georgina is horrified when she overhears a conversation between the two men that suggests their intention to use human patients for their experiments. She asks Dalton’s help in a situation that seems to be growing increasingly tense, especially after she overhears further bizarre conversations that cause her to fall in a faint. Clarendon revives her, and in the process contemplates using her in some nameless experiment. But before he can do so, Dalton arrives and demands an explanation. Clarendon collapses, injecting himself with the serum he was planning to give his sister. He then confesses the truth: he was not even on the track of an antitoxin for black fever but was under the spell of Surama, an evil Atlantean mage who has developed a disease that “isn’t of this earth” to overwhelm mankind. Clarendon urges Dalton to burn the clinic and everything in it, including Surama. Presently Dalton sees the clinic going up in flames: apparently Clarendon had set the fire himself, destroying Surama before he himself succumbed to his self-inflicted disease.
The story is a radical revision of a tale entitled “A Sacrifice to Science” in de Castro’s book,
Lawton, Captain George E.
In “The Mound,” a pioneer who had come to the Oklahoma Territory in 1889 and in 1916 investigates the mound region; he comes back a week later with his feet neatly cut off at the ankles and strangely
Lazare, Edward (1904–1991)
Brief associate of HPL. The two first met in Cleveland in August 1922, when Lazare was a member of Hart Crane’s literary circle. They met again in September 1924, at Samuel Loveman’s apartment in
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Columbia Heights; at that time HPL thought that Lazare would become a “fitting accession to our select circle of The Boys [i.e., the Kalem Club]” (HPL to Lillian D.Clark, September 29–30, 1924; ms., JHL), but Lazare dropped out shortly thereafter. He later became the editor of
Leavitt, Robert.
In “Herbert West—Reanimator,” a traveling salesman from St. Louis whom Herbert West kills in order to test a revivifying solution he has invented.
Leeds, Arthur (1882–1952?).