The Call of Kathulos: Kull, Skull and “Call”

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I’m Deuce Richardson and I’ll be your blogger for this evening. I’m a native south-east Kansan and grew up working on my parents’ farm/ranch, the fourth generation of Richardsons to do so. At the age of nine I discovered Robert E. Howard and haven’t been right in the head since. Subsequent to graduating high school, I attended Kansas State and then Pittsburg State University. After that, it was time to get to work. In early 2005, I leapt into the twenty-first century by purchasing my own computer. That eventually led me to becoming a member on the Official Robert E. Howard Forum. Membership there landed me in various places like Cross Plains, Texas and then, surprisingly, here. Enough about me. On with the show.

Ever since a certain “Mr. O’Neail” wrote in to Weird Tales wondering, there has always been a question hovering, bat-winged, over Robert E. Howard’s novella, “Skull-Face”: Was REH’s “Kathulos” (and the tale thereof) influenced, somehow, by Lovecraft’s “The Call of Cthulhu”?

Howard had this to say in a letter to HPL (ca. August 1930):

A writer in the Eyrie, a Mr. O’Neail, I believe, wondered if I did not use some myth regarding this Cthulhu in “Skull Face”. The name Kathulos might suggest that, but in reality, I merely manufactured the name at random, not being aware at the time of any legendary character named Cthulhu — if indeed there is.

That’s that, I guess, but… all indicators point to Robert E. Howard reading “Call of Cthulhu” before he ever started composing “Skull-Face.” In a letter to Weird Tales, Howard demonstrates he’d already savored the darksome pleasures of “CoC” (published in the February 1928 issue of Weird Tales): “Mr. Lovecraft’s story, ‘The Call of Cthulhu’ is indeed a masterpiece, which I am sure will live as one of the highest achievements of literature.” (ca. April 1928)

Cthulhu

Rusty Burke and Patrice Louinet both date the writing of “Skull-Face” to the latter half (if not the last quarter) of 1928. In my opinion, there are two other Howard yarns written in 1928 that demonstrate the Lovecraftian influence of “The Call of Cthulhu” upon REH. Those two tales are “The Cat and the Skull” (aka, “Delcardes’ Cat”) and “The Screaming Skull of Silence.” The two Kull yarns, along with “Skull-Face,” make up a kind of “Skull/Kathulos/Kuthulos” triad of tales, each one becoming a bit more Lovecraftian than the last.

We know from Patrice Louinet that the fragment known as “The River Stagus Fragment” (Kull: Exile of Atlantis, pp. 67-86) was written “in the first months of 1928.” Apparently, after putting that fragment aside, REH (according to Louinet) “immediately began work on” the yarn that would become ‘The Cat and the Skull’.” Going by Louinet’s chronology, the time period would seem to have been after REH had read “The Call of Cthulhu.” “The Cat and the Skull” features the nearly-skeletal slave, Kuthulos (originally “Kathulos”, according to Louinet), who seems to have been the intended villain of the story until, late in the game, Howard thought of Thulsa Doom, a near physical twin of Kuthulos. It seems hard to believe that Howard would hit day-doomupon a name like “Kuthulos” right before the Weird Tales issue containing “The Call of Cthulhu” hit the stands. “The Cat and the Skull”, as a story, seems to have few “Lovecraftian” elements. The portion of the yarn set beneath the waters of the Forbidden Lake has moments which recall some of HPL’s “Dunsanian” Dreamlands tales (though one could credit the influence of A. Merritt just as easily), and that’s about it. Then again, this tale appears to have been written in the first days/weeks immediately after REH read “The Call of Cthulhu.” Louinet contends that, in his opinion, Howard conflated Kuthulos’ name and Thulsa Doom to create Kathulos of Atlantis.

“The Screaming Skull of Silence” turns the Lovecraftian/”CoC” track up a notch. Like the sailors of the Emma in “The Call of Cthulhu”, Kull and his entourage find themselves out in the middle of nowhere, faced with a castellated tomb which encrypts a cosmic monster which is not dead, but dreaming for aeons. The slave, Kuthulos, acting as the expert on all things eldritch, cautions the Atlantean king of Valusia. “Kull, consider! If you burst that seal, you may loose upon the world a monster whose might and frenzy no man can stay!” Just as R’lyeh was found to be of “greenish stone”, Kull and his men find a gong and mallet “apparently of jade” before the Skull of Silence. Kuthulos then reads the inscription upon the door: “That which was may be again,” he intoned, “then beware, all sons of men!” An accurate-enough recapitulation of the Alhazredian couplet (first published in “Call of Cthulhu”):”That is not dead which can eternal lie, And with strange aeons even death may die.”

Kull, like Donovan of the Emma, opens the door to the huge crypt. Just as the “tenebrousness” of Cthulhu’s tomb “burst forth like smoke from its aeon-long imprisonment”, Kull “felt the air throb about him as something came billowing from that foul chamber in great unseen waves.” As the “tentacles” of Silence seek to enfold the world, the Universe, Kull fights back. Just as the doughty Johansen, in “The Call of Cthulhu,” wreaked a deathly wound upon the Lord of R’lyeh, the Atlantean makes Silence scream. In both cases, a cosmic menace is dealt a crippling (perhaps mortal) blow. Neither tale assures the reader of final victory over the ancient threat.

As 1928 waned into winter, Robert E. Howard was not yet done with the themes and tropes he found so powerful in “The Call of Cthulhu.” He would rework them yet again in “Skull-Face.” I’ll take a look at that in “The Call of Kathulos: Secret Oceans and Black Seas of Infinity.”

*Art by James Ryman and Gene Day