Thursday 29 November 2012

Congo Library




I’ve mentioned previously that the Congo is ripe for Mythos storytelling with a solid presence in the canon material. Quite apart from the story “Arthur Jermyn”, there are Congolese references in “Herbert West: Re-animator” and of course the excellent “The Picture in the House”. Add to this David Drake’s chilling “Than Curse the Darkness” (1980) and the Congo starts to look like Mythos-central. And that’s before we investigate the cryptozoological weirdness that’s been happening there since the 18th Century. Or the black magic.
(Of course the sheer cruelty and depravity that takes place in the Congo on a daily basis is fairly disheartening and can mitigate strongly against using the locale as a playground: sometimes the Real World can be just too depressing...)



The following are books and other published works which may be of interest to an adventuring party:
Relazione del Primo Viaggio Intorno Al Mondo (“Report on the First Voyage Around the World”)
“When I opened it to the title page my wonder grew even greater, for it proved to be nothing less rare than Pigafetta’s account of the Congo region, written from the notes of the sailor Lopex and printed at Frankfurt in 1598...”

HPL, “The Picture in the House”
Antonio Pigafetta’s work relating to his voyage of discovery with Magellan has been monstrously handled throughout its history. Not published in its entirety before or after the author’s death, it has been reproduced piecemeal – severely edited in any form – until the Nineteenth Century, whereupon the original was destroyed after being finally published in toto. Even then it is to be suspected that the entire work was not reproduced, but rather edited to the satisfaction of the publishers at that time, its more fantastic elements being consigned to the flames. Before this, excerpts of the work were published by many groups in the years since its composition, with emphases upon particular elements of the narrative: this thinking led to the infamous Regnum Congo for example, with its disturbing illustrations by the Brothers de Bry, printed in Latin in Frankfurt, 1598. Another such printing in Paris in 1784 was interrupted by Papal authority and the entire staff of the publishing house handed over to the Inquisition.
In and of itself, the work is secure in its claim as one of the first narratives of the opening up of the Pacific region and of the circumnavigation of the globe; the issues begin when Pigafetta starts to borrow heavily from his relationship with the sailor ‘Lopex’, of whom little is known but of whom much is suspected. Pigafetta claimed to have filled in the blanks of his knowledge about various locations from notes and oral information provided him by this infamous seafarer; if this is the case, then Lopex was privy to an excessive quantity of worldwide blasphemies, including cannibalism, demon-worship and infanticide. It is noteworthy that this individual is not included in the list of the survivors of Magellan’s voyage.


Ignoring the more historically (and socially) acceptable copies of the Relazione published since 1874, there are several versions of this work of interest to the student of hard metaphysics. Many of these versions have been augmented by sick minds that sought to embellish their perversities and subsequently diluted their potency; of the remainder, the following are of interest:
(Source: H. P. Lovecraft, "The Picture in the House")
Italian: Relazione del Primo Viaggio Intorno Al Mondo; Antonio Pigafetta; Venice, 1524 (published 1874); Sanity loss: 0/0; +0 percentiles to Cthulhu Mythos; average 2 weeks to study and comprehend

Spells: None
Latin: Regnum Congo; Abridged from A. Pigafetta, woodcut illustrations by the Brothers de Bry; Frankfurt, 1598; Sanity loss: 1d4/1d8; +5 percentiles to Cthulhu Mythos; average 8 weeks to study and comprehend


Spells: “A Means of Extending Life” (Food of Life); “To Punish An Enemy” (Cause Disease); “To Entrap the Spirit” (Bind Soul); “Awakening The Flesh” (Compel Flesh); “Another Punishment” (Wither Limb)
French: Abominations Africaines; Translation by Giuseppe Balsamo, Count Cagliostro; Manuscript only, 1782, only two copies known to have been made; Sanity loss: 1d3/1d6; +5 percentiles to Cthulhu Mythos; average 4 weeks to study and comprehend


Spells: “Moyens de prolonger la vie” (Food of Life); “Ratatinez-vous le membre” (Wither Limb)
English: Some Queer Accountes of Explorations to Strange Laundes; Translation by John Wilmot, Lord Rochester; London, 1676; Sanity loss: 1d2/1d4; +3 percentiles to Cthulhu Mythos; average 3 weeks to study and comprehend


Spells: “Of the Culinary Artes of Savages” (Food of Life)
*****
Since the 1700s interest has centred upon strange, unidentified creatures inhabiting the jungles of the Congo region. Cryptozoologists have theorised that relict dinosaurs, survivors from eons passed, inhabit the forests and have gained supernatural reputations amongst the indigenous populations, specifically the Pygmy tribespeople. The most famous of the “Big Seven” monsters of the Congo basin is the Mokèlé-mbèmbé, and adventurers have been in search of it, or evidence of its existence, since 1776 when reference to it was first made in the following text:
Histoire de Loango, Kakongo et autres royaumes d’Afrique


“It must be monstrous, the prints of its claws are seen upon the earth, and formed an impression on it of about three feet in circumference. In observing the posture and disposition of the footprints, they concluded that it did not run this part of the way, and that it carried its claws at a distance of seven or eight feet one from the other.”
Abbé Lievain Bonaventure Proyart
Proyart was an eager historian and wrote many books, especially the biographies of former French Kings. His "History of Loango, Kakongo and other African Kingdoms" is based on his firsthand experiences, working as a missionary in those parts.
The translated excerpt printed above is considered the first printed statement concerning the existence of the Mokèlé-mbèmbé, although the name is not specifically used. Captain Freiherr von Stein zu Lausnitz, sent by the German government to perform a survey of Cameroon in 1913, had the Proyart excerpt firmly in mind when he began looking for evidence of the creature there. He later wrote in his report that the beast was
"...very much feared by the Negroes of certain parts of the territory of the Congo, the lower Ubangi, the Sangha, and the Ikelemba rivers."
He was the first to use the term Mokèlé-mbèmbé in print and described the monster as brownish-grey in colour, about the size of an elephant and with a long flexible neck.
While many might argue from Proyart’s description that the tracks he describes are possibly those of an elephant, any reader making a Biology, Animal Husbandry, Zoology or similar Roll, will know that elephants do not possess claws, and yet the description mentions these with some specificity.
French; Abbé Lievain Bonaventure Proyart; 1776; 0/1 Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; 1 week to study and comprehend


Spells: None
In 1914, John Pinkerton published an omnibus of what he considered to be the best excerpts from various accounts of the explorers of Africa. It contains that section of Proyart’s work recounting the discovery of the strange tracks.
English; John Pinkerton: A General Collection of the Best & Most Interesting Voyages and Travels in All Parts of the World (17 vols.); 1914; 0/0 Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; 3 weeks to study and comprehend; someone looking only at the Proyart entries would take only 3 days


Spells: None
*****
Of course monsters aren’t the only thing found in the Congo; rubber, ivory and huge mineral wealth are available too. The Belgian occupation of the region was notable for the ruthless cruelty with which it treated its indentured work force, and soon the outrage felt by the rest of the world was being announced in journals and other organs across the planet. The following two are perhaps the most famous:
The Crime of the Congo


By the early years of the Twentieth Century, international attention was being brought to bear on the state of play in the Congo. Missionary reports, travellers’ narratives and government leaks from Belgian sources were slowly revealing the horrors that the native populations of the region had come to know as part of their daily lives. Public outcry soon followed and several works were published to spread the word even further: Conan-Doyle’s work is perhaps not so well known as Mark Twain’s (see below) but it carries the weight of more textual research and listed sources. Keepers may decide to apply the parenthetical SAN roll listed below for reading the atrocities in this and Twain’s work if they so choose; otherwise there is no penalty for reading this book.
English; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle; 1909; 0/0 (0/1) Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; 1 week to study and comprehend


Spells: None

King Leopold’s Soliloquy


"This work of 'civilization' is an enormous and continual butchery ... All the facts we brought forward in this chamber were denied at first most energetically; but later, little by little, they were proved by documents and by official texts ... The practice of cutting off hands is said to be contrary to instructions; but you are content to say that indulgence must be shown and that this bad habit must be corrected 'little by little' and you plead, moreover, that only the hands of fallen enemies are cut off, and that if the hands are cut off 'enemies' not quite dead, and who, after recovery, have had the bad taste to come to the missionaries and show them their stumps, it was due to an original mistake in thinking that they were dead."
From Debate in Belgian Parliament, July, 1903.
Applying his usual razor-sharp wit to the emerging scandal of Belgian rule in Africa, Twain came up with this zippy pamphlet designed to harpoon King Leopold II as much as it informed the ignorant public of the state of affairs in the Congo. Filled with (at the time) graphic images of the treatment of natives, along with photographic material of handless Congolese workers, Twain’s harpoon was pointed and barbed.


Told as a complaining tirade against international nosey-parkers, ‘King Leopold’ whinges and whines his way through a self-serving justification of his actions in the African heartland, claiming his rule as religiously-motivated and civilising, backed to the hilt by a God who surely wouldn’t have let him get this far if He didn’t approve.
The book reveals how taxes levied under Leopold’s rule caused widespread starvation and the eradication of whole communities; it also quotes information published by an American missionary, William Henry Shephard, concerning an 1899 massacre of over eighty Congolese men, women and children by mercenary natives – the cannibal ‘Zappo Zaps’ - paid for by the Belgian Government.
English; Mark Twain; 1905; 0/0 (0/1) Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; 1 day to study and comprehend


Spells: None

*****


Today, the Congo is a war-torn region, emerging from decades of oppression, both political and ideological, and trying to find its feet in the Twenty-first Century. The stain of superstition and racial division – not only between blacks and whites, but also centuries-older bigotry based along tribal lines – are being thrashed out in violent and repressive confrontations, while the immense wealth of the nation is rapidly being amassed by the privileged few. With all this in the background, the search for the Mokèlé-mbèmbé continues.


“One of the most exciting things about Africa is that, at least since the end of the Cretaceous period, 65 million years ago, the Congo basin has not undergone further climatic and geophysical changes ... Animals evolve and survive because they adapt to changing environments. Conversely, when conditions remain stable for extended periods, some well-adapted species continue to survive and even flourish with very little physical and behavioral alteration. And that is what we find in the Central West African jungle-swamps where, for example, crocodiles have persisted unchanged over the past 65 million years. What other ancient creatures might still lurk in this vast expanse of seemingly changeless, ageless, largely unexplored primeval forest?”
Roy Mackal, cryptozoologist
Roy Mackal comes across rather like Richard Attenborough’s character in “Jurassic Park” – idealistic, slightly cracked and not securely connected with reality. His desire for there to be a dinosaur living in the jungles of the Congo far outweighs his ability to carefully measure the facts at hand. The results of his searching for the Mokèlé-mbèmbé boil down to some unusual ripples on a lake surface and the earnest assurances of Pygmy witnesses that they saw a Diplodocus in the water, just like the one in the book Mackal showed them. (And no realisation, or acknowledgement, from Mackal that possibly they chose the biggest animal pictured hoping that it would equal a greater reward.)
Still, Mackal got a book and television program out of his wanderings, along with publications in (semi-) respectable journals. His enthusiasm has also fired the imaginations of others including a Japanese film crew that thundered off in his wake to catch the beast on film – to no effect. It’s a miracle that he survived his wanderings, although he did quite a bit of damage to scientific credibility.
A Living Dinosaur? In Search of Mokèlé-mbèmbé

English; Dr. Roy P. Mackal; 1987; 0/0 Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; 1 week to study and comprehend


Spells: None
“The Search for Evidence of Mokèlé-mbèmbé in the People’s Republic of the Congo”, article in Cryptozoology magazine, number 1: pp.62-72

English; Dr. Roy P. Mackal, J. Richard Greenwell and M. Justin Wilkinson; 1982; 0/0 Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; 1 day to study and comprehend


Spells: None

*****

Congo Journey


“Dokou, suddenly alert, looked straight at me. ‘Samalé [the forest demon] has three claws,’ he said, breathing hard, his voice harsh and cracked. ‘On each hand,’ he shouted, ‘Samalé has three claws! Long and curved, strong as steel, sharp as hooks!’ He stood up and leaned across the desk, his pupils dilated, his lips retracted, his irregular yellow teeth exposed. ‘But he only cuts with two!’ He raised his right fist as if to strike me, crooked out two bent fingers, and slashed the air in front of my face.”

Redmond O’Hanlon
British naturalist Redmond O’Hanlon, took an interest in the efforts of Roy Mackal and decided to investigate if there was any truth in the rumours of a large dinosaur dwelling in the Congo near Lake Télé. Taking an unsuspecting American friend with him and forming a party from some of Mackal’s team of guides and advisors, he went upriver into a dangerous and unpredictable world, where the presence, or not, of a forest-dwelling monster soon became the least of his concerns.
This is a grimly humorous travel account, one where you have to laugh otherwise you’d blow your brains out. O’Hanlon’s naturalist observations rapidly become secondary to the hair-raising escapades that he and his friend Lary wander blithely into. This is white-knuckle stuff: you have to keep reading just to see if they make it out alive, and the relief when it’s over is palpable. After it’s finished all you can do is shake your head in despair for the condition of the human race.
English; Redmond O’Hanlon; 1996; 0/1 Sanity loss; Cthulhu Mythos +0 percentiles; Occult +10%; 2 weeks to study and comprehend


Spells: None
*****
Of course, it goes without saying that Keepers looking to set their adventures here should read Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad (or watch “Apocalyse Now”, perhaps, if your story is set in the modern era). I don’t think I need to go over that text as it is so well-known, other than to say it should be the first port-of-call for Congo gamers. If possible, try to get an edition that includes Conrad’s “Congo Diary” as it is a good source for discovering how to get to the Congo and then proceed upriver.
Listen out for the drums!

*****


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