I
love the serendipity that working with books provides. This last week I was
cataloguing a bunch of books when this fell on my desk: it’s the Rev. Jedidiah
Morse’s The American Geography, published
in London and dated 1792, with the intriguing subtitle A View of the Present Situation of the United States of America, as
if this was something that needed to be monitored, possibly with the intention
of being able to say “I told you so” at some later stage. Simply put, it is a
ready-reckoner of all the American states at that time, their physical characteristics,
quirks, notable features, governmental structures and various other claims to
fame. Me being me, I of course turned to “Rhode Island” in the chapter listing
and was intrigued to note that the few pages devoted to this state contained
the heading “Curiofities” and that
very few other states had deserved such attention. So obviously, I turned
straight to the section in question.
There,
I found this:
“About four miles north-eaft
of Providence lies a fmall village, called Pawtucket, a place of fome trade and
famous for lamprey eels. Through this village runs Pawtucket river, which
empties into Providence river, two miles eaft of the town. In this river is a
beautiful fall of water, directly over which a bridge has been built, which
divides the Commonwealth of Maffachufetts from the ftate of Rhode ifland. The
fall, in its whole length, is upwards of fifty feet. The water paffes through
feveral chafms in a rock which runs diametrically acrofs the bed of the ftream,
and ferves as a dam to the water. Several mills have been erected upon thefe
falls; and the fpouts and channels which have been conftructed to conduct the
ftreams to their refpective wheels, and the bridge, have taken very much away
from the beauty and grandeur of the fcene; which would otherwife have been
indefcribably charming and romantic.”
Possibly
the most curious aspect of this observation is why he mentioned it at all,
given that all he can do is whinge about how much Industry has ruined the
landscape, but it did set bells ringing in my head so I poked around until I
found this:
“The sound of waterfalls
became more and more distinct, and presently I saw a fairly deep river-gorge
ahead, spanned by a wide, iron-railed highway bridge beyond which a large
square opened out. As we clanked over the bridge I looked out on both sides and
observed some factory buildings on the edge of the grassy bluff or part way
down. The water far below was very abundant, and I could see two vigorous sets
of falls upstream on my right and at least one downstream on my left. From this
point the noise was quite deafening.”
Of
course, this is H.P. Lovecraft – writing in the guise of the unfortunate Robert
Olmstead, narrator of “The Shadow Over
Innsmouth” – describing the first encounter with the Manuxet River falls
and the bridge which crosses them. Leslie S. Klinger in my New Annotated H.P. Lovecraft (Liveright Publishing Corporation,
2014) tells me that “Innsmouth” is the nom-de-plume
of the coastal Massachusetts town of Manchester-by-the-Sea and that the closest
rivers are the Merrimack, the Ipswich and the Rowley, none of which could
easily be identified as the prototype of the fictitious Manuxet.
I
think however, that Rev. Morse has unearthed the answer: isn’t it likely that
HPL would simply have transplanted the Pawtucket River from Rhode Island into
Innsmouth to decorate his fishy community? “Manuxet” and "Pawtucket" have very
similar-sounding names and the falls – dramatic enough to be a feature of HPL’s
fiction – are certainly dramatic enough to be listed by Morse among the local “Curiofities” of Rhode Island. And both
writers note that the local industries have marred the natural beauty of the
scene.
So,
mystery solved, if indeed it ever was
a mystery. As I said, working with books is a joy anyway, but these little
discoveries on the side really make it something extra special!
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