Once there was a mad Arabian poet, he said, who wrote a Book of Death and an Unsettling Couplet and inspired him in the way that a car-wreck may inspire a tattooist’s gruesome designs.
O, the frightening things that ran through his mind! So unsettled was he, so disturbed. O, the way that they leered at his table they dined! So confused were his colleagues, so perturbed.
God, the things that came creeping in the early hours of dawn when the town was asleep and the moon was forlorn. How he tossed in his sleep – Was it sleep? was it real? There were Things he did see there were Things he did feel.
Lovecraft, Lovecraft – my quiet recluse – why are you so pale? Pray tell. What phantom-horror did you see in the night? Why are you so blue? Why do you shake? Are you ill, are you sad, are you broken in the mind?
But all of the doctors, the scientists, the friends, THEY COULD NOT REALISE the horror, the nightmares, the Things in the dark.
Escape through your head through the blood-and-ink stained alleyways within. Retire to your room with a pen and an electric light. Try as you might not all of your stories with their horror that some find unspeakable, others disturbing – THEY CANNOT EXPRESS that pure form of fear your mind feels at the idea of the mad Arab’s couplet.
*That is not dead which can eternal lie And with strange aeons, even death may die.