The Tree on the Hill
"The Tree on the Hill" | |
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Short story by H.P. Lovecraft, Duane W. Rimel | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Horror |
Publication | |
Published in | Polaris |
Publication date | 1940 |
"The Tree on the Hill" is a short story written by horror author H. P. Lovecraft and his correspondent Duane W. Rimel. It was written in 1934 and published in 1940 in Polaris.
Plot
The story is written from a first-person perspective. It depicts the narrator exploring the outskirts of a city called Hampden and finding a special tree atop an unusual hill. From the hill, the man witnesses the Bitterroot Mountains, a seemingly impossible feat of geography. The tree makes him daydream about a temple or tomb in a land with three red suns. The temple was half-violet, half-blue. Some shadows attract the narrator inside, where he sees three flaming eyes watching him from the darkness. He awakens later in a different location, with his clothing torn and dirty.
With his camera, the narrator takes multiple pictures of the tree and shows them to his friend Theunis. Later, they examine each photograph and notice three shadows projected by the tree, indicating that there were three suns causing them, as seen in the narrator's dream.
Theunis tells a story about a shadow or dark force which was repelled by an Egyptian priest, Ka-Nefer, during the Year of the Black Goat. He used a peculiar amber gem to divert the dark entity. Afterwards, Theunis uses a camera obscura, and a similar gem in his possession, to examine the photos taken earlier. Suddenly, something in the photo renders him unconscious. Upon awakening, Theunis instructs the narrator to burn the pictures and lock up the gem. He does as instructed, but glances at a drawing in the photograph made by Theunis. The narrator recoils in horror at the sight of a clawed hand, with tendrils, reaching for a spot in the grass where he received his vision.
Connections
Theunis mentions that his story takes place during the Year of the Black Goat, probably a reference to Lovecraft's invented deity Shub-Niggurath. Theunis recurs in Rimel's story "The Jewels of Charlotte" (Unusual Stories, May-June 1935), which may also have been revised by Lovecraft.[1]
References
- ^ S. T. Joshi and David E. Schultz. An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001, p. 227
External links
- Works related to The Tree on the Hill at Wikisource
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- "The Beast in the Cave"
- "The Alchemist"
- "The Tomb"
- "Dagon"
- "A Reminiscence of Dr. Samuel Johnson"
- "Polaris"
- "Beyond the Wall of Sleep"
- "Memory"
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- "The Doom That Came to Sarnath"
- "The Statement of Randolph Carter"
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- "The Tree"
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- "From Beyond"
- "Nyarlathotep"
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- "The Silver Key"
- "The Strange High House in the Mist"
- "The Colour Out of Space"
- "The Descendant"
- "History of the Necronomicon"
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- "The Dreams in the Witch House"
- "The Thing on the Doorstep"
- "The Evil Clergyman"
- "The Book"
- "The Haunter of the Dark"
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- "Under the Pyramids"
- "The Curse of Yig"
- The Mound
- "Medusa's Coil"
- "The Horror in the Museum"
- "Through the Gates of the Silver Key"
- "Out of the Aeons"
- "The Tree on the Hill"
- "Till A' the Seas"
- "In the Walls of Eryx"
- The Cancer of Superstition
- "Supernatural Horror in Literature"
- To Quebec and the Stars
- Autobiography: Some Notes on a Nonentity
- H. P. Lovecraft: A Life
- H. P. Lovecraft: Against the World, Against Life
- An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia
- Lovecraft: A Biography
- Lovecraft: A Look Behind the Cthulhu Mythos
- Lovecraft studies
- Works influenced by the Cthulhu Mythos
- H. P. Lovecraft (band)
- H. P. Lovecraft Historical Society
- Adaptations
- Lovecraft (crater)
- Cthulhu Macula
- Aklo
- Dream Cycle
- Lovecraft: Fear of the Unknown (documentary)
- Sonia Greene (wife)
- The Thing in the Moonlight
- Category
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