Read Mysteries of the Worm Page 38


  For instance in “The Faceless God” (Weird Tales, May 1936) he goes all out. I could fill a paragraph with nothing else but the various new titles of Nyarlathotep which that story adds to the Mythos. In fact, I will: The Demon Messenger, the Secret One, Black Messenger of Karneter (the Egyptian hell), the Stalker among the Stars, Lord of the Desert, the Dark One, the Faceless God, the Dark Demon, God of the Desert. See what I mean?

  Bloch’s “failure” to develop any of his own invented gods beyond a mere mention or two may, after all, have been deliberate. He had this trick of tossing into his Mythos stories otherwise unexplained and never followed-up-on, fragments of lore. These fascinate a student of the Mythos such as I am—I wish to Karneter I knew what they mean! References to fragments of lore like the Feast of Ulder, the thirteenth covenant, the Moon of Yiggurath, the Soul Chant of Sebek, the Legend of the Elder Saboth, demon-haunted Nis, and the secret parable of Byagoona the Faceless One. I’d love to know what those things were supposed to mean . . .

  Table of Contents

  Back Cover

  More Titles from Chaosium

  Titlepage

  Copyright

  Dedication

  De Vermis Mysteriis: A Preface (Robert M. Price)

  MYSTERIES OF THE WORM

  The Secret in the Tomb

  The Suicide in the Study

  The Shambler from the Stars

  The Faceless God

  The Grinning Ghoul

  The Opener of the Way

  The Dark Demon

  The Brood of Bubastis

  The Mannikin

  The Creeper in the Crypt

  The Secret of Sebek

  Fane of the Black Pharaoh

  The Eyes of the Mummy

  The Sorcerer’s Jewel

  Black Bargain

  The Unspeakable Betrothal

  The Shadow from the Steeple

  Notebook Found in a Deserted House

  Terror in Cut-Throat Cove

  Philtre Tip

  After Word (Mr. Bloch)

  Demon-Dreaded Lore (Lin Carter)

 


 

  Robert Bloch, Mysteries of the Worm

 


 

 
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