See S.G.Lubbock, A Memoir of Montague Rhodes James(1939); Jack Sullivan, Elegant Nightmares: The English Ghost Story from LeFanu to Blackwood(1978); Richard William Pfaff, Montague Rhodes James(1980); Michael Cox, M.R.James: An Informal Portrait(1983); Richard Ward, “In Search of the Dread Ancestor: M.R.James’ ‘Count Magnus’ and Lovecraft’s The Case of Charles Dexter Ward,” LS No. 36 (Spring 1997): 14–17.
Jermyn, Arthur.
In “Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family,” a poet and scholar who sets fire to himself after examining a boxed object from Africa. The entire Jermyn line is marked by a strange history. In the eighteenth century, Sir Wade Jermyn, Arthur’s great-great-great-grandfather, explored the Congo, bringing back with him a mysterious wife. Sir Philip Jermyn, Wade’s son and Arthur’s great-great-grandfather, though a baronet, joins the navy as a common sailor and disappears one night as his ship lay off the coast of the Congo. Sir Robert Jermyn, Arthur’s greatgrandfather, kills his entire family except for a two-year old grandson, when he learns certain information about his past. Philip’s second son, Nevil, marries a commoner and sires a son, Sir Alfred Jermyn, who is Arthur’s father. He joins the Barnum & Bailey circus (never explicitly named, but alluded to as “The Greatest Show on Earth”) but is killed by a gorilla with whom he was conducting a boxing match.
Johansen, Gustav.
In “The Call of Cthulhu,” the Norwegian second mate of the schooner Emma. He is the sole survivor of the ship’s crew and is rescued, on board the Alert,which his crew had boarded after their own vessel was sunk in a melee with that ship’s crew. Thurston, the narrator, learns of his experience in a chance newspaper article, and when Thurston seeks him in Oslo, he finds that, like Prof. Angell, he has died under mysterious circumstances. Johansen’s diary describes his crew’s encounter with Cthulhu.
Johnson, Dr. Richard H. (d. 1933).
In “Out of the Æons,” the curator of the Cabot Museum of Archaeology in Boston. The story is a manuscript prepared by
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him before his mysterious death by heart failure. It is he who obtains the strange living mummy for the museum.
Jones, Algernon Reginald.
In “Sweet Ermengarde,” a “city chap” who seeks to seduce Ermengarde Stubbs but is rejected. Jones, Dr.
In “The Last Test,” the jealous assistant of Dr. Alfred Clarendon at San Quentin Penitentiary, who contrives to have Clarendon removed from his post and himself appointed in his place. Jones, Stephen.
In “The Horror in the Museum,” the doubting friend of George Rogers, who spends a night in Rogers’s Museum. When he glimpses a monstrous creature there, he flees; upon returning a week later, he finds that Rogers has been destroyed by the creature.
Juvenile Works: Fiction.
Aside from HPL’s surviving juvenile fiction—“The Little Glass Bottle,” “The Secret Cave,” “The Mystery of the Grave-yard,” “The Mysterious Ship,” “The Beast in the Cave,” and “The Alchemist” (see entries on these tales)—we know of several other nonextant tales written prior to 1908.
HPL’s first work of fiction was “The Noble Eavesdropper” (1897), which concerned “a boy who overheard some horrible conclave of subterranean beings in a cave” (HPL to J.Vernon Shea, July 19– 31, 1931; ms., JHL). It may have been inspired by the Arabian Nights,with its frequent citation of caves. Other stories written prior to 1902 were “The Haunted House” and “John, the Detective.” The latter presumably focused on HPL’s dime-novel detective, King John (featured in “The Mystery of the Grave-yard”). HPL also cites a tale called “The Secret of the Grave,” but this may be the same as “The Mystery of the Graveyard.” In 1905 he wrote a tale called “Gone—but Whither?” Late in life he discovered the composition book containing the title of the story and remarked: “I’ll bet it was a hellraiser! The title expresses the fate of the tale itself ( SL5.140).
HPL also notes writing “several yarns” about Antarctica around 1899, inspired by W.Clark Russell’s The Frozen Pirate(1887). HPL was also devoted to Jules Verne, noting that “many of my tales showed the literary influence of the immortal Jules”; he goes on to describe one of them: “I wrote one story about that side of the moon which is forever turned way from us—using, for fictional purposes, the Hansen theory that air and water still exist there as the result of an abnormal centre of gravity in the moon. I hardly need add that the theory is really exploded—I was even aware of that fact at the time—but I desired to compose a ‘thriller’” ( SL1.19).
HPL also claimed to have written detective stories “very often, the works of A.Conan Doyle being my model so far as plot was concerned.” In describing one he writes: “One long-destroyed tale was of twin brothers—one murders the other, but conceals the body, and tries to live the life of both— appearing in one place as himself, and elsewhere as his victim. (Resemblance had been remarkable.) He meets sudden death (lightning) when posing as the dead man—is identified by a scar, and the secret is finally revealed in his diary. This, I think,
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antedates my 11th year” ( SL1.20). As late as September 1934, he still contemplated developing a story along similar lines ( SL5.33–34).
HPL’s fascination with ancient Rome led to the writing of at least one tale: “The idea of a Roman settlement in America is something which occurred to me years ago—in fact, I began a story with that theme (only it was about Central America & not U.S.) in 1906 or 1907, tho’ I never fmish’d it” (HPL to Lillian D. Clark, November 14–19, 1925; ms., JHL).
Of “The Picture” (1907) HPL remarks: “I had a man in a Paris garret paint a mysterious canvas embodying the quintessential essence of all horror. He is found clawed & mangled one morning before his easel. The picture is destroyed, as in a titanic struggle—but in one corner of the frame a bit of canvas remains …& on it the coroner finds to his horror the painted counterpart of the sort of claw which evidently killed the artist” ( Letters to Robert Bloch[Necronomicon Press, 1993], p. 15). The story seems to anticipate “Pickman’s Model” (1926).
Juvenile Works: Poetry.
HPL’s earliest surviving work is a poem: “The Poem of Ulysses: Written for Young People.” The extant manuscript is labeled a “second edition” and dated to November 8, 1897; the first edition presumably dates prior to August 20, 1897, since HPL states that the work was initially written at the age of six (“A Confession of Unfaith” [1922]). It is a retelling of the basic plot of the Odysseyin 88 lines, based upon HPL’s readings in Bulfinch’s Age of Fable,Pope’s translation of the Odyssey,and a work that HPL refers to as “Harpers Half Hour Series” (presumably a paraphrase of the Odysseyfor juveniles). The meter is derived from HPL’s early favorite, Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner. It was first published in Juvenilia: 1897–1905(1984).