Frases de H. P. Lovecraft
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Howard Phillips Lovecraft foi um escritor estadunidense que revolucionou o gênero de terror, atribuindo-lhe elementos fantásticos que são típicos dos gêneros de fantasia e ficção científica.

O princípio literário de Lovecraft era o que ele chamava de "Cosmicismo" ou "Terror Cósmico", que se resume à ideia de que a vida é incompreensível ao ser humano, e de que o universo é infinitamente hostil aos interesses do homem. Isto posto, as suas obras expressam uma profunda indiferença às crenças e atividades humanas. H.P Lovecraft originou o ciclo de histórias que posteriormente passaram a ser categorizadas no denominado Cthulhu Mythos e também desenvolveu o fictício grimório Necronomicon, supostamente vinculado ao astrônomo e ocultista britânico do século XVI, John Dee. Ao decorrer de suas criações, Lovecraft produziu um panteão de entidades extremamente anti-humanas com as quais, nas suas histórias, geralmente os seres humanos se podem comunicar através do Necronomicon.

Os seus trabalhos expressam uma atitude profundamente pessimista e cínica, muitas vezes desafiando os valores do Iluminismo, do Romantismo, do Cristianismo e do Humanismo . Os protagonistas de Lovecraft eram o oposto dos tradicionais gnose e misticismo por momentaneamente anteverem o horror da última realidade e do abismo.

Era assumidamente conservador e anglófilo , o que explica o porquê de ter sido habitual no seu estilo o emprego de arcaísmos e a utilização de vocabulário e ortografia marcadamente britânicos - fato que contribui para aumentar a atmosfera dos seus contos, pois muitos deles contêm referências a personagens que viveram antes da independência das Treze Colónias, bem como a estabelecimentos comerciais existentes entre os séculos XVII e XVIII.

Durante a sua vida, dispôs de um número relativamente pequeno de leitores, no entanto sua reputação verificou uma elevada gratificação com o passar das décadas, e ele, agora, é considerado um dos escritores de terror mais influentes do século XX. De acordo com Joyce Carol Oates, Lovecraft, como aconteceu com Edgar Allan Poe no século XIX, tem exercido "uma influência incalculável sobre sucessivas gerações de escritores de ficção de horror" , Stephen King chamou Lovecraft de "o maior praticante do século XX do conto de horror clássico." .

✵ 20. Agosto 1890 – 15. Março 1937   •   Outros nomes Говард Лавкрафт, اچ. پی. لاوکرفت
H. P. Lovecraft photo
H. P. Lovecraft: 212   citações 60   Curtidas

H. P. Lovecraft Frases famosas

“O quanto mais se afastava do mundo ao redor, mais exuberantes tornavam-se os sonhos;”

Os melhores contos de H.P. Lovecraft

“Não está morto o que eternamente jaz inanimado, e em estranhas realidades até a morte pode morrer.”

That is not dead which can eternal lie, And with strange aeons even death may die
esta citação de H. P. Lovecraft está no disco "" do Iron Maiden, escrita na lápide da sepultura de Eddie, como citado por João Paulo Andrade no artigo Envolvimento de bandas com ocultismo e satanismo http://whiplash.net/materias/curiosidades/000116-robertjohnson.html
Fonte: "The Call of Cthulhu", parte II; (veja wikisource)

Esta tradução está aguardando revisão. Está correcto?
Esta tradução está aguardando revisão. Está correcto?

H. P. Lovecraft: Frases em inglês

“I never take offence at any genuine effort to wrest the truth or deduce a rational set of values from the confused phenomena of the external world. It never occurs to me to look for personal factors in the age-long battle for truth. I assume that all hands are really trying to achieve the same main object—the discovery of sound facts and the rejection of fallacies—and it strikes me as only a minor matter that different strivers may happen to see a different perspective now and then. And in matters of mere preference, as distinguished from those involving the question of truth versus fallacy, I do not see any ground whatever for acrimonious feeling. Knowing the capriciousness and complexity of the various biological and psychological factors determining likes, dislikes, interests, indifferences, and so on, one can only be astonished that any two persons have even approximately similar tastes. To resent another's different likes and interests is the summit of illogical absurdity. It is very easy to distinguish a sincere, impersonal difference of opinion and tastes from the arbitrary, ill-motivated, and irrational belittlement which springs from a hostile desire to push another down and which constitutes real offensiveness. I have no tolerance for such real offensiveness—but I greatly enjoy debating questions of truth and value with persons as sincere and devoid of malice as I am. Such debate is really a highly valuable—almost indispensable—ingredient of life; because it enables us to test our own opinions and amend them if we find them in any way erroneous or unjustified.”

Letter to Robert E. Howard (7 November 1932), in Selected Letters 1932-1934 edited by August Derleth and Donald Wandrei, p. 102
Non-Fiction, Letters

“No one thinks or feels or appreciates or lives a mental-emotional-imaginative life at all, except in terms of the artificial reference-points supply'd him by the enveloping body of race-tradition and heritage into which he is born. We form an emotionally realisable picture of the external world, and an emotionally endurable set of illusions as to values and directions in existence, solely and exclusively through the arbitrary concepts and folkways bequeathed to us through our traditional culture-stream. Without this stream around us we are absolutely adrift in a meaningless and irrelevant chaos which has not the least capacity to give us any satisfaction apart from the trifling animal ones... Without our nationality—that is, our culture-grouping—we are merely wretched nuclei of agony and bewilderment in the midst of alien and directionless emptiness... We have an Aryan heritage, a Western-European heritage, a Teutonic-Celtic heritage, an Anglo-Saxon or English heritage, an Anglo-American heritage, and so on—but we can't detach one layer from another without serious loss—loss of a sense of significance and orientation in the world. America without England is absolutely meaningless to a civilised man of any generation yet grown to maturity. The breaking of the saving tie is leaving these colonies free to build up a repulsive new culture of money, speed, quantity, novelty, and industrial slavery, but that future culture is not ours, and has no meaning for us... Possibly the youngest generation already born and mentally active—boys of ten to fifteen—will tend to belong to it, as indeed a widespread shift in their tastes and instincts and loyalties would seem to indicate. But to say all this has anything to do with us is a joke! These boys are the Bedes and Almins of a new, encroaching, and apparently inferior culture. We are the Boëthii and Symmachi and Cassiodori of an older and perhaps dying culture. It is to our interest to keep our own culture alive as long as we can—and if possible to reserve and defend certain areas against the onslaughts of the enemy.”

Letter to James F. Morton (6 November 1930), in Selected Letters III, 1929-1931 edited by August Derleth and Donald Wandrei, p. 207
Non-Fiction, Letters, to James Ferdinand Morton, Jr.

“The only saving grace of the present is that it's too damned stupid to question the past very closely.”

H.P. Lovecraft livro Pickman's Model

"Pickman's Model " - written 1926; first published in Weird Tales, Vol. 10, No. 4 (October 1927)
Fiction

“The negro is fundamentally the biological inferior of all White and even Mongolian races, and the Northern people must occasionally be reminded of the danger which they incur in admitting him too freely to the privileges of society and government. …The Birth of a Nation, … is said to furnish a remarkable insight into the methods of the Ku-Klux-Klan, that noble but much maligned band of Southerners who saved half of our country from destruction at the close of the Civil War. The Conservative has not yet witnessed the picture in question, but he has seen both in literary and dramatic form The Clansman, that stirring, though crude and melodramatic story by Rev. Thomas Dixon, Jr., on which The Birth of a Nation is based, and has likewise made a close historical study of the Klu-Klux-Klan, finding as a result of his research nothing but Honour, Chivalry, and Patriotism in the activities of the Invisible Empire. The Klan merely did for the people what the law refused to do, removing the ballot from unfit hands and restoring to the victims of political vindictiveness their natural rights. The alleged lawbreaking of the Klan was committed only by irresponsible miscreants who, after the dissolution of the Order by its Grand Wizard, Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, used its weird masks and terrifying costumes to veil their unorganised villainies.
Race prejudice is a gift of Nature, intended to preserve in purity the various divisions of mankind which the ages have evolved.”

Response to observations made in In A Minor Key by Charles D. Isaacson, in The Conservative, Vol. I, No. 2, (1915), p. 4
Non-Fiction

“Mystery attracts mystery.”

H.P. Lovecraft livro Under the Pyramids

"Imprisoned with the Pharaohs" - Written February 1924, published May-June-July 1924 in Weird Tales
Fiction

“I really agree that Yog-Sothoth is a basically immature conception, & unfitted for really serious literature. The fact is, I have never approached serious literature yet. But I consider the use of actual folk-myths as even more childish than the use of new artificial myths, since in the former one is forced to retain many blatant peurilities & contradictions of experienced which could be subtilised or smoothed over if the supernaturalism were modelled to order for the given case. The only permanently artistic use of Yog-Sothothery, I think, is in symbolic or associative phantasy of the frankly poetic type; in which fixed dream-patterns of the natural organism are given an embodiment & crystallisation... But there is another phase of cosmic phantasy (which may or may not include frank Yog-Sothothery) whose foundations appear to me as better grounded than those of ordinary oneiroscopy; personal limitations regarding the sense of outsideness. I refer to the aesthetic crystallisation of that burning & inextinguishable feeling of mixed wonder & oppression which the sensitive imagination experiences upon scaling itself & its restrictions against the vast & provocative abyss of the unknown. This has always been the chief emotion in my psychology; & whilst it obviously figures less in the psychology of the majority, it is clearly a well-defined & permanent factor from which very few sensitive persons are wholly free.... Reason as we may, we cannot destroy a normal perception of the highly limited & fragmentary nature of our visible world of perception & experience as scaled against the outside abyss of unthinkable galaxies & unplumbed dimensions—an abyss wherein our solar system is the merest dot... The time has come when the normal revolt against time, space, & matter must assume a form not overtly incompatible with what is known of reality—when it must be gratified by images forming supplements rather than contradictions of the visible & measurable universe. And what, if not a form of non-supernatural cosmic art, is to pacify this sense of revolt—as well as gratify the cognate sense of curiosity?”

Letter to Frank Belknap Long (27 February 1931), in Selected Letters III, 1929-1931 edited by August Derleth and Donald Wandrei, p. 293
Non-Fiction, Letters, to Frank Belknap Long

“All my stories, unconnected as they may be, are based on the fundamental lore or legend that this world was inhabited at one time by another race who, in practising black magic, lost their foothold and were expelled, yet live on outside ever ready to take possession of this earth again.”

Attributed to Lovecraft by Harold Farnese, who corresponded with Lovecraft briefly, later presented by August Derleth as a direct quote; but as discussed on this page http://www.hplovecraft.com/life/myths.aspx#blackmagic, Farnese's letters to Derleth suggested he tended to paraphrase things Lovecraft had written to him, going by memory rather than referring to letters he had on hand. More details in "The Origin of Lovecraft’s 'Black Magic' Quote" by David E. Schultz, *Crypt of Cthulhu*, issue 48.
Disputed

“We must stop thinking primarily in terms of “money” and “business””

both artificial things—and begin to think increasingly in terms of the actual resources and products on which “money” and “business” are based. In terms of these, of the human beings to whom they are to be distributed, and of the cognate human values which make the accidents of life and consciousness worth enduring.

"Some Repetitions on the Times", (1933). Reprinted in Miscellaneous Writings, edited by S.T. Joshi. Arkham House, 1995.
Non-Fiction

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