Talking about H P Lovecraft last time reminded me of a pet gripe. I have quite a few of those, if we're being honest, but this one is about the proper way to pronounce Cthulhu. To begin with, here's HPL's take, as given to Duane Rimel in a letter dated 23 July 1934:
"The word is supposed to represent a fumbling human attempt to catch the phonetics of an absolutely non-human word. [...] The letters CTHULHU were merely what Prof. Angell hastily devised to represent (roughly and imperfectly, of course) the dream-name orally mouthed to him by the young artist Wilcox. The actual sound—as nearly as human organs could imitate it or human letters record it—may be taken as something like Khlul'-hloo, with the first syllable pronounced gutturally and very thickly. The u is about like that in full; and the first syllable is not unlike klul in sound, since the h represents the guttural thickness. The second syllable is not very well rendered—the l sound being unrepresented [in Angell's rendition of the word]. My rather careful devising of this name was a sort of protest against the silly and childish habit of most weird and science-fiction writers, of having utterly non-human entities use a nomenclature of thoroughly human character; as if alien-organed beings could possibly have languages based on human vocal organs. Actually, every name supposed to have been originated by non-humans should be painstakingly shaped in such a way as not to conform to the principles of human vocalism and language."
Clear? HPL gave a simpler account in a letter to Willis Conover dated 29 August 1936:
"Of course it is not a human name at all-having never been designed for enunciation by the vocal apparatus of Homo sapiens. The best approximation one can make is to grunt, bark, or cough the imperfectly-formed syllables Cluh-Luh with the tip of the tongue firmly affixed to the roof of the mouth. That is, if one is a human being. Directions for other entities are naturally different."
The confusion seems to have arisen because sloppy readers (and Wikipedia editors) have assumed Lovecraft was aiming for the suggestion of chthonian. Cthulhu is the very opposite of a chthonic entity, having come from the stars and been buried under the sea. If Lovecraft had meant the C to be pronounced as in the common but mistaken version "kuh-THUL-oo" he'd have written it Ch.
We can isolate the syllables as (Ct)(hul)(hu) rather than as the popular assumption of (C)(thul)(hu). It's more accurate to think of the sound that Prof Angell wrote as ct to be the consonant at the end of of a word like "act". Try isolating that, removing the a sound, and you have a sort of bitten-back consonant that could sound like a gulped k.
Now take the next element, rendered by Prof Angell as hul. With the gulped k followed by hul (vowel sound as in "full") and followed by hloo (mistakenly written by Angell as "hu") then we have something nearer to what Lovecraft imagined -- with the same proviso he applied, namely that our mouths and throats and the atmosphere we breathe are all wrong for making any such sound.
That said, Cthulhu cultists would have as much knowledge of the accurate pronunciation of their deity's name as any 1920s Christian or Muslim (etc) could have of the Big Bang. And Cthulhu probably knows and cares nothing for what its cultists think. So player-characters can pronounce it however they like, and argue it out with the big lug when it finally rises from the deep.

Although I'm as guilty as many of perpetrating the vanilla- pronunciation of that Ancient Abomination's true name, you are of course correct to flag this up, Dave. Perhaps we should re-name the RPG "The Guttural-Choaking-Howl of Cthulhu", 'call' being far too tame.
ReplyDeleteTagline: He's from Outer Space, not an aviary.
You've opened a can of worms (or tentacles) without knowing it, John, for I'm mounting a campaign to reclaim "vanilla". How has it ended up meaning the default/rubbish option? Next to ginger it's one of my favourite flavours!
DeleteHaha, I'm guilty as charged on that one as well! I would agree that vanilla does not deserve its reputation for blandness. I shall try to give both words their due reverence from now on - the icy scream of the former, and the ice cream of the latter ; )
ReplyDeleteI can't let a post about ice-cream go without commenting guys, especially given vanilla is one of my favourites as well. I think I have Screwballs from the early 80s to thank for that (the plastic triangulate with bubblegum, not the film). By the by, in an attempt to keep off the booze over the summer I became addicted to vanilla Mini-Milks.
ReplyDeleteMint is probably my other favourite. Even then I'm relatively vanilla as I don't like the chocolate bits (I get around that by biting them off Cornettos). And you wouldn't believe how difficult it is to get chocolate ice-cream without any bits. My son won't eat ice-cream otherwise but supermarkets don't stock it. Probably doesn't help when I ask the shop assistants for plain cho-KHULU'-HLOO-ate ice-cream given they run off screaming. Neapolitan might be an option next time.
I want to see the Ben & Jerry's range of Cthulhu Mythos flavours -- especially appropriate as HPL loved a big scoop of ice cream. I recently discovered Ottolenghi's ice cream (available in Waitrose) and that's as hard to say as Nyarlathotep.
DeleteI have good reasons to think that, just like "Al Hazred" comes from "all has read" (has read everything), "Cthulhu" must come from the French equivalent "qui a tout lu", and R'Lyeh from French "lire" = "to read". There seem to be other French etymologies among Lovecraft's Great Old Ones; read my paper here : https://www.academia.edu/109050492/Une_%C3%A9tymologie_du_nom_des_cr%C3%A9ations_de_H_P_Lovecraft
ReplyDeleteIt's a nice idea, Olivier, and especially plausible as HPL (a) liked word games and (b) came up with the name Abdul Alhazred when he was a precocious five-year-old eagerly reading every book he could lay his hands on. However, with such theories we must always be aware of the possibility of a Cruise of the Gods explanation.
DeleteAccording to S.T.Joshi, Lovecraft's most authorized biograph, whom I quote in my paper, this name might have been suggested to the young Lovecraft by his legal guardian, the family's lawyer (by the way, I have updated the format of my paper)
DeleteIf Joshi is correct then it suggests the Wiki entry is in error in saying HPL used Alhazred as his nickname at the age of 5, as his grandfather Whipple Van Buren Phillips didn't die until HPL was 14 years old and the family lawyer would only have taken over as his guardian then.
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