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The House on the Borderland: Endnotes

The House on the Borderland
Endnotes
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Imprint
  3. Foreword
  4. Dedication
  5. Author’s Introduction to the Manuscript
  6. The House on the Borderland
    1. I: The Finding of the Manuscript
    2. II: The Plain of Silence
    3. III: The House in the Arena
    4. IV: The Earth
    5. V: The Thing in the Pit
    6. VI: The Swine-Things
    7. VII: The Attack
    8. VIII: After the Attack
    9. IX: In the Cellars
    10. X: The Time of Waiting
    11. XI: The Searching of the Gardens
    12. XII: The Subterranean Pit
    13. XIII: The Trap in the Great Cellar
    14. XIV: The Sea of Sleep
      1. The Fragments
    15. XV: The Noise in the Night
    16. XVI: The Awakening
    17. XVII: The Slowing Rotation
    18. XVIII: The Green Star
    19. XIX: The End of the Solar System
    20. XX: The Celestial Globes
    21. XXI: The Dark Sun
    22. XXII: The Dark Nebula
    23. XXIII: Pepper
    24. XXIV: The Footsteps in the Garden
    25. XXV: The Thing from the Arena
    26. XXVI: The Luminous Speck
    27. XXVII: Conclusion
    28. Grief
  7. Endnotes
  8. Colophon
  9. Uncopyright

Endnotes

  1. An apparently unmeaning interpolation. I can find no previous reference in the MS to this matter. It becomes clearer, however, in the light of succeeding incidents. —Ed. ↩

  2. Here, the writing becomes undecipherable, owing to the damaged condition of this part of the MS. Below I print such fragments as are legible. —Ed. ↩

  3. The severest scrutiny has not enabled me to decipher more of the damaged portion of the MS. It commences to be legible again with the chapter entitled “The Noise in the Night.” —Ed. ↩

  4. The Recluse uses this as an illustration, evidently in the sense of the popular conception of a comet. —Ed. ↩

  5. Evidently referring to something set forth in the missing and mutilated pages. See “Fragments,” Chapter 14. —Ed. ↩

  6. No further mention is made of the moon. From what is said here, it is evident that our satellite had greatly increased its distance from the Earth. Possibly, at a later age it may even have broken loose from our attraction. I cannot but regret that no light is shed on this point. —Ed. ↩

  7. Conceivably, frozen air. —Ed. ↩

  8. See previous note. This would explain the snow (?) within the room. —Ed. ↩

  9. I am confounded that neither here, nor later on, does the Recluse make any further mention of the continued north and south movement (apparent, of course) of the sun from solstice to solstice. —Ed. ↩

  10. At this time the sound-carrying atmosphere must have been either incredibly attenuated, or⁠—more probably⁠—nonexistent. In the light of this, it cannot be supposed that these, or any other, noises would have been apparent to living ears⁠—to hearing, as we, in the material body, understand that sense. —Ed. ↩

  11. I can only suppose that the time of the Earth’s yearly journey had ceased to bear its present relative proportion to the period of the sun’s rotation. —Ed. ↩

  12. A careful reading of the MS suggests that, either the sun is traveling on an orbit of great eccentricity, or else that it was approaching the green star on a lessening orbit. And at this moment, I conceive it to be finally torn directly from its oblique course, by the gravitational pull of the immense star. —Ed. ↩

  13. It will be noticed here that the Earth was “slowly traversing the tremendous face of the dead sun.” No explanation is given of this, and we must conclude either that the speed of time had slowed, or else that the Earth was actually progressing on its orbit at a rate, slow, when measured by existing standards. A careful study of the MS however, leads me to conclude that the speed of time had been steadily decreasing for a very considerable period. —Ed. ↩

  14. See this note. ↩

  15. Without doubt, the flame-edged mass of the Dead Central Sun, seen from another dimension. —Ed. ↩

  16. From the unfinished word, it is possible, on the MS, to trace a faint line of ink, which suggests that the pen has trailed away over the paper; possibly, through fright and weakness. —Ed. ↩

  17. These stanzas I found, in pencil, upon a piece of foolscap gummed in behind the flyleaf of the MS. They have all the appearance of having been written at an earlier date than the Manuscript. —Ed. ↩

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