"The only joy in the world is to begin...." Cesare Pavese

"The only joy in the world is to begin...." Cesare Pavese

Thursday, February 27, 2025

On “The Thing From Outside” (1923) by George Allan England

"The Thing From Outside" (1923) by George Allan England braids together several familiar story elements.

There is the empty Canadian forest, against which five individuals confront an unknown entity.
✓"The Wendigo" by Blackwood

There is the invisible entity itself, only an enemy perhaps because of its undecidable character.
✓"The Damned Thing" by Ambrose Bierce

England does an outstanding job depicting human collapse before the unknown. In the paragraphs below, a desperate and articulate argument jump-cuts sharply in time, as characters and their circumstances (and the reader) are wrong-footed by a well-executed narrative slingshot.

     "But," added the Professor, "I can't imagine a Thing callously destroying human beings. And yet—"
He stopped short, with surging memories of his dead wife. "What was it," Jandron asked, "that destroyed all those people in Valladolid, Spain, that time so many of 'em died in a few minutes after having been touched by an invisible Something that left a slight red mark on each? The newspapers were full of it."
     "Piffle!" yawned Marr.
     "I tell you," insisted Jandron, "there are forms of life as superior to us as we are to ants. We can't see 'em. No ant ever saw a man. And did any ant ever form the least conception of a man? These Things have left thousands of traces, all over the world. If I had my reference-books—"
     "Tell that to the marines!"
     "Charles Fort, the greatest authority in the world on unexplained phenomena," persisted Jandron, "gives innumerable cases of happenings that science can't explain, in his Book of the Damned. He claims this earth was once a No-Man's Land where all kinds of Things explored and colonized and fought for possession. And he says that now everybody's warned off, except the Owners. I happen to remember a few sentences of his: 'In the past, inhabitants of a host of worlds have dropped here, hopped here, wafted, sailed, flown, motored, walked here; have come singly, have come in enormous numbers; have visited for hunting, trading, mining. They have been unable to stay here, have made colonies here, have been lost here.' "
     "Poor fish, to believe that!" mocked the journalist, while the Professor blinked and rubbed his bulging forehead.
     "I do believe it!" insisted Jandron. "The world is covered with relics of dead civilizations, that have mysteriously vanished, leaving nothing but their temples and monuments."
     "Rubbish!"
     "How about Easter Island? How about all the gigantic works there and in a thousand other places—Peru, Yucatan and so on—which certainly no primitive race ever built?"
     "That's thousands of years ago," said Marr, "and I'm sleepy. For heaven's sake, can it!"
     "Oh, all right. But how explain things, then!"
     "What the devil could one of those Things want of our brains?" suddenly put in the Professor. "After all, what?"
     "Well, what do we want of lower forms of life? Sometimes food. Again, some product or other. Or just information. Maybe It is just experimenting with us, the way we poke an ant-hill. There's always this to remember, that the human brain-tissue is the most highly organized form of matter in this world."
     "Yes," admitted the Professor, "but what—?"
     "It might want brain-tissue for food, for experimental purposes, for lubricant—how do I know?"
     Jandron fancied he was still explaining things; but all at once he found himself waking up in one of the bunks. He felt terribly cold, stiff, sore. A sift of snow lay here and there on the camp floor, where it had fallen through holes in the roof….

From: Strange Ports of Call (1948) edited by August Derleth 




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