by H.P. Lovecraft
originally published The Philiosopher, Dec. 1920
The story begins with the narrator describing the night sky as
observed over long sleepless nights from his window, in particular that
of the Pole Star, Polaris,
which he describes as "winking hideously like an insane watching eye
which strives to convey some strange message, yet recalls nothing save
that it once had a message to convey". He then describes the night of the aurora over his house in the swamp
and how on this night he first dreamt of a city of marble lying on a
plateau between two peaks, with Polaris ever watching in the night sky.
The narrator describes after a while observing motion within the houses
and seeing men beginning to populate the streets, conversing to each
other in language that he had never heard before but still, strangely,
understood. However, before he could learn any more of this city, he
awoke.
Many times, he would again dream of the city and the men who dwelt
within. After a while, the narrator tired of merely existing as an
incorporeal observer and began to desire to establish his place within
the city, simultaneously beginning to question his conceptualization of
what constituted reality and thus whether this was just a dream or
whether it was real. Then, one night, while listening to discourses of those who populate
the city, the narrator obtains a physical form: not as a stranger, but
as an inhabitant of the city, which he now knew as Olathoƫ, lying on the
plateau of Sarkis in the land of Lomar, which was besieged by an enemy known as the Inutos. While the other men within the city engage in combat with Inutos, the
narrator is sent to a watchtower to signal if the Inutos gain access to
the city itself. Within the tower, he notices Polaris in the sky and
senses it as a malign presence, hearing a rhyme which appears to be
spoken by the star:
Uncertain as to its meaning, he drifts off to sleep, thus failing in
his duty to guard Olathoƫ. Upon awakening, the narrator finds himself
back in the house by the swamp, but the narrator now is convinced that
this life is not real but a dream from which he cannot awaken.
(above stolen from Wikipedia)
This is one of HPL's earliest surviving stories, and falls into his "Dunsanian" stories - except that it predates his discovery of Lord Dunsany (most figure the main influence is Poe's more dreamlike stories). It is the first mention of several cities, places and beings in the Dreamlands, and includes the first reference to the Pnakotic Manuscripts. It's a slightly evocative tale, but nothing special. Like many of his Dream stories, there's a strong air of melancholy and loss about it.
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