Poem (98 lines); probably written in the fall of 1918. First published in
“Electric Executioner, The.”
Short story (8,050 words); ghostwritten for Adolphe de Castro, in July 1929. First published in
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The unnamed narrator is asked by the president of his company to track down a man named Feldon who has disappeared with some papers in Mexico. Boarding a train, the man later finds he is alone in a car with one other occupant, who seems to be a dangerous maniac. This person apparently has devised a hoodlike instrument for performing executions and wishes the narrator to be the first experimental victim. Realizing he cannot overwhelm the man by force, the narrator seeks to delay the experiment until the train reaches the next station, Mexico City. He first asks to be allowed to write a letter disposing of his effects; then he asserts that he has newspaper friends in Sacramento who would be interested in publicizing the invention; and finally he says that he would like to make a sketch of the thing in operation—why doesn’t the man put it on his own head so that it can be drawn? The madman does so; but then the narrator, having earlier perceived that the lunatic has a taste for Aztec mythology, pretends to be possessed by religious fervor and begins shouting Aztec and other names at random as a further stalling tactic. The madman begins shouting also, and in the process his device pulls taut over his neck and executes him; the narrator faints. When revived, the narrator finds the madman no longer in the car, although a crowd of people is there; he is informed no one was ever in the car. Later Feldon is discovered dead in a remote cave—with certain objects unquestionably belonging to the narrator in his pockets.
The story is a radically revised version of a tale called “The Automatic Executioner,” published in de Castro’s collection,
Eliot,———.
The auditor to whom the events of “Pickman’s Model” are addressed.
Eliot, Matt.
In “The Shadow over Innsmouth,” the first mate on one of Capt. Obed Marsh’s ships. While in the South Seas, he hears reports of an island where the inhabitants can procure all the fish they want and also seem to have unlimited quantities of gold. He later realizes that this bounty is the result of the natives’ mating with loathsome sea-creatures, and he urges Obed to have nothing to do with the place. He later disappears from Innsmouth.
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Elton, Basil.
In “The White Ship,” the keeper of the North Point lighthouse, who tells of his adventures aboard the White Ship.
Elwood, Frank.
In “The Dreams in the Witch House,” a student at Miskatonic University and friend of Walter Gilman who attempts to help control Gilman’s sleepwalking and determine the source of Gilman’s strange dreams. He witnesses Gilman’s horrible death at the hands of Brown Jenkin.
Eshbach, Lloyd Arthur (b. 1910).