- In the Vault
"In the Vault" is a short story by American
horror fiction writerH. P. Lovecraft , written on September 18, 1925 and first published in the November 1925 issue of the amateur press journal "Tryout ".Inspiration
"In the Vault" was based on a suggestion made in August 1925 by Charles W. Smith, editor of the amateur journal "Tryout", which Lovecraft recorded in a letter: "an undertaker imprisoned in a village vault where he was removing winter coffins for spring burial, & his escape by enlarging a transom reached by the piling up of the coffins". [H. P. Lovecraft, "Selected Letters" Vol. 2, p. 26; cited in Joshi and Schultz, p. 125.] Lovecraft accordingly dedicated the story to Smith.
Reaction
The story was rejected by "
Weird Tales " in November 1925; according to Lovecraft, editorFarnsworth Wright feared that "its extreme gruesomeness would not pass the Indiana censorship", [H. P. Lovecraft, letter to Lillian D. Clark, December 2, 1925; cited in Joshi and Schultz, p. 125.] a reference to the controversy of C. M. Eddy's "The Loved Dead".After being published in "Tryout", the story was submitted in August 1926 to "Ghost Stories", a "very crude" pulp magazine that specialized in "true" tales of the supernatural, which also rejected it.
August Derleth urged Lovecraft to resubmit the story to "Weird Tales" in 1931, which finally published it in its April 1932 edition. [Joshi and Schultz, p. 125.]"
An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia " calls "In the Vault" "a commonplace tale of supernatural vengeance" in which "HPL attempts unsuccessfully to write in a more homespun, colloquial vein." [Joshi and Schultz, p. 125.]ynopsis
George Birch, undertaker for the New England town of Peck Valley, finds himself trapped in the vault where coffins are stored during winter for burial in the spring. When Birch piles up coffins in order to climb out through the vault's window, his feet break through the lid of the top coffin, injuring his ankles and forcing him to crawl out of and away from the vault.
Later, a Dr. Davis investigates the vault, and finds that the top coffin was one of inferior workmanship that Birch used as a repository for Asaph Sawyer, a vindictive townsperson whom Birch had disliked, even though the coffin had originally been built for the much shorter Matthew Fenner. Davis finds that Birch had cut off Sawyer's feet to fit the body in the coffin--and that the wounds in Birch's ankles are teeth marks.
References
S. T. Joshi and David E. Schultz, "An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia".
Notes
External links
* [http://www.hplovecraft.com/writings/fiction/iv.asp "H. P. Lovecraft's 'In the Vault'"] , The H. P. Lovecraft Archive; publication history
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