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  • 00:01

    At last!

  • 00:11

    The spheres arise to the din of dark concert, as here beneath the gibbous eye of the watching

  • 00:18

    moon waits lonely Earth.

  • 00:21

    Probably.

  • 00:24

    That certainly seems like the kind of thing that should be going on.

  • 00:27

    I mean, we've been promising this series for almost two years now!

  • 00:31

    You'd think the horrors that lurk in the darkness beyond the cosmos would have something to

  • 00:35

    say about the fact that we're finally making videos about them.

  • 00:39

    Then again, I suppose hopeless insignificance is half the fun of cosmic horror, isn't it?

  • 00:44

    So, astral omens or no, I think it's time we faced the void together.

  • 00:49

    Let's talk about H.P.

  • 00:51

    Lovecraft.

  • 00:52

    The man has an interesting legacy.

  • 00:56

    Although he was born and died in relative obscurity-hardly a penny to his name, the

  • 01:00

    majority of his creations relegated to the pages of lurid pulp mags-the work of Howard

  • 01:06

    Phillips Lovecraft has since...

  • 01:09

    evolved.

  • 01:10

    Over the last few decades, his fiction has slowly turned into something malignant, invading

  • 01:15

    pop culture through every available artery from the direct canal of homage to the branching

  • 01:20

    venules of aesthetic mimicry.

  • 01:23

    If you look, you can find traces of it in film, television, games of both the video

  • 01:28

    and paper variety, even heavy metal music.

  • 01:31

    A lot of well-loved authors like Neil Gaiman, Terry Pratchett, and Stephen King have paid

  • 01:36

    credit to Lovecraft's role in their work.

  • 01:39

    In fewer words, he's become one of the great icons of Western horror.

  • 01:44

    Nevertheless, Lovecraft's fame springs not from the man himself, but from the "mythos"

  • 01:50

    he built: deities like tentacle-mawed Cthulhu and ineffable Yog-Sothoth, locales like Arkham

  • 01:56

    and Miskatonic University, fictional sources of profane wisdom like the Necronomicon.

  • 02:02

    All belong to the same cabinet of familiar, interweaving props that combined his otherwise

  • 02:07

    disparate works into a single mythological performance on a single cosmic stage.

  • 02:13

    That's a very literary, verbose way to put things, but it's important.

  • 02:19

    There's strange arcana to uncover in the classification of Lovecraft's mythos-stranger than any number

  • 02:25

    of tentacle monsters or non-Euclidean angles.

  • 02:28

    The key to understanding Lovecraft's mythos is to understand that they're actual myth,

  • 02:34

    not just the product of clever worldbuilding.

  • 02:36

    For a single author, that's very unique.

  • 02:40

    In the context of fiction, "mythos" is usually just an affectation for titles from a set

  • 02:45

    of tales that share connecting lore.

  • 02:47

    Think of Tolkien's Silmarillion, or Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire.

  • 02:52

    Both are full of unrelated stories that contribute to a larger fiction, but that doesn't quite

  • 02:57

    qualify them as actual myth.

  • 03:00

    They're novel.

  • 03:01

    The brain-children of clever authors.

  • 03:04

    They may contain gods and supernatural feats, but these are only the common elements of

  • 03:09

    myth.

  • 03:10

    Ultimately, they're missing one key component-something present in all major world mythologies: Mimetic

  • 03:17

    Circulation.

  • 03:19

    Big, scholarly words.

  • 03:21

    What we're really talking about is the game of telephone that cultures play with their

  • 03:25

    folk tales.

  • 03:26

    A story is told and altered and told and altered until its iconography is so tempered by the

  • 03:32

    exchange that it reflects something about its tellers.

  • 03:36

    The gods and the heroes and the strange origin stories are only props that they use in the

  • 03:41

    habitual projection of their ideals, feelings, fears-their cumulative psyche-onto a larger,

  • 03:48

    less ephemeral platform.

  • 03:50

    That "cosmic stage" I mentioned earlier.

  • 03:53

    And somehow, shut away in the dim solitude of his study, Lovecraft managed to do the

  • 03:59

    same.

  • 04:00

    A large part of it comes from his specific artifice-or rather, the lack of it.

  • 04:05

    Unlike the authors of most fictional "mythos", Lovecraft didn't really bother to contrive

  • 04:10

    what he was creating.

  • 04:12

    It just... happened.

  • 04:14

    He had a habit of making passing references to items, figures, and locales of limited

  • 04:19

    intrigue, only to appropriate them for bigger roles in later stories, incidentally tying

  • 04:25

    them together.

  • 04:26

    Arkham was just a place-name when it first appeared in his story Hebert West-Reanimator,

  • 04:30

    but a year later it featured again in The Festival, earning its role as a hub for the

  • 04:36

    supernatural in his works.

  • 04:38

    Dagon is a key deity in one of Lovecraft's most famous stories, The Shadow Over Innsmouth,

  • 04:43

    but it began as a vague, disconnected reference in the story Dagon fourteen years earlier.

  • 04:49

    The other part of this comes from his peers.

  • 04:53

    Lovecraft was a decidedly strange individual with an incredibly traumatic early life, and

  • 04:58

    as a result did most of his socializing through letters.

  • 05:02

    Unsurprisingly, the majority of his correspondents were other amateur writers who worked in similar

  • 05:07

    spheres.

  • 05:08

    It was through his dialogue with them that he was able to broaden the scope of his mythos

  • 05:13

    beyond the usual self-appropriation.

  • 05:16

    He encouraged them to borrow freely from him, watching and enjoying the ways in which they

  • 05:20

    built upon his mythos.

  • 05:22

    Clark Ashton Smith introduced the "toad-like god-creature" Tsathoggua, who received multiple

  • 05:27

    cameos in Lovecraft's works, including The Whisperer in Darkness, The Horror in The Museum,

  • 05:33

    and At The Mountains of Madness.

  • 05:35

    In the unpublished introduction to his story The Space-Eaters, Frank Belknap Long famously

  • 05:40

    quoted an apocryphal version of Lovecraft's Necronomicon supposedly translated by the

  • 05:46

    real-world scholar John Dee.

  • 05:49

    Lovecraft snatched this up and adapted it for his lore, referring to the John dee translation

  • 05:55

    in letters about the Necronomicon's history.

  • 05:58

    In this way, Lovecraft was able to develop a cabinet of props to use in the performance

  • 06:03

    of his own psyche.

  • 06:05

    He did with his mythos what cultures do with their mythological iconography-a kind of internal

  • 06:10

    mimetic circulation, projecting his thoughts and fears and feelings onto that cosmic stage.

  • 06:18

    Actual myth created by one person.

  • 06:21

    See his philosophy of cosmic insignificance in the minor role of mankind against a backdrop

  • 06:26

    of indifferent alien creatures and oblivious deities.

  • 06:30

    See his racism and fear of "the outside"-anything beyond the scope of his limited world in New

  • 06:36

    England-manifest as invasive and malevolent entities like the shapeshifting Nyarlothotep

  • 06:42

    and the cross-breeding Deep Ones of Innsmouth.

  • 06:45

    If you look, you'll find these projections everywhere in his work, sometimes even at

  • 06:49

    the expense of consistency.

  • 06:52

    He didn't spare time for the articulation of a specific canon.

  • 06:56

    It was what the elements of his mythos represented that drove him to keep using them.

  • 07:01

    What we officially call the "Cthulhu Mythos", he flippantly referred to in his letters as

  • 07:06

    "Yog-Sothothery" and "Cthulhuism".

  • 07:10

    This is what we love most about Lovecraft's mythos.

  • 07:14

    Just as romantics invoke Apollo and Aphrodite, Artemis and Athena, so too do we invoke Azathoth

  • 07:20

    and Yog-Sothoth, Nyarlothotep and Cthulhu.

  • 07:24

    Not just because we like tentacle monsters or people going mad or because we enjoy Lovecraft's

  • 07:30

    writing so much that we really just want to copy him-because their meaning resonates with

  • 07:35

    us.

  • 07:36

    We want to use them as the props in our own psychological performance.

  • 07:41

    And that's exactly what we plan to do for this month's short story.

  • 07:45

    It should be an interesting experiment to apply Lovecraft's method to my own psyche.

  • 07:51

    I'm still not sure what part of me that will reflect, and I'm still not sure whether I

  • 07:55

    find that troubling.

  • 07:57

    Especially...

  • 07:58

    in light of recent circumstances.

  • 08:01

    If you frequent our discord server, you may already have an inkling as to what I'm talking

  • 08:05

    about.

  • 08:06

    I've been rather absent lately.

  • 08:09

    Part of this is due to my role in the foundry-the extensive research I do for each of these

  • 08:14

    series.

  • 08:15

    The other part...

  • 08:16

    well, this will make more sense if you've listened to "Human, Almost," the biographical

  • 08:21

    story I created with the help of our writer.

  • 08:24

    But the short of it is that my taleoids have stopped bringing me book pages from inside

  • 08:28

    the Foundry's great press.

  • 08:31

    Instead, I've been receiving...

  • 08:33

    letters.

  • 08:34

    I don't know who they're from, but the correspondence has been... fascinating, to say the least,

  • 08:41

    if very time-consuming.

  • 08:44

    Between this and those...

  • 08:46

    things that interrupted our shooting of the Junji Ito episode, it's very clear that something's

  • 08:51

    going on here.

  • 08:52

    Now the trick is finding out what that something is...

  • 08:56

    If you'd like to help us, you can support the Tale Foundry team on Patreon.

  • 09:00

    With only two trustworthy humans at our disposal, we don't exactly have the means of clearing

  • 09:05

    the rubble and delving deeper into this... facility, whatever it is.

  • 09:10

    But the support of each of our patrons brings us that much closer.

  • 09:15

    You can also support the show for zero dollars by starting a free one-month trial with audible.com.

  • 09:21

    Sign up using the link in the description and you'll get access to two free audiobooks

  • 09:25

    of your choice from Audible's catalogue of over 100,000 titles.

  • 09:30

    Lately, the Tale Foundry team has been listening to the "Complete H.P.

  • 09:34

    Lovecraft Omnibus, Volume 2", compiled and read by Finn J.D John.

  • 09:39

    If you haven't yet had a chance to catch up on your Lovecraft, this is a great opportunity

  • 09:43

    to do it while you drive or work or create whatever art it is that you create.

  • 09:49

    At any rate, that's all for this video.

  • 09:51

    Thanks for watching, and keep making stuff up!

  • 09:55

    We'll see you next time!

  • 10:08

    Bye!

All

The example sentences of ROMANTICS in videos (3 in total of 3)

just adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction romantics noun, plural invoke verb, non-3rd person singular present apollo proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction aphrodite proper noun, singular , artemis proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction athena proper noun, singular , so adverb too adverb do verb, non-3rd person singular present we personal pronoun invoke verb, non-3rd person singular present azathoth proper noun, singular
venice proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present for preposition or subordinating conjunction romantics noun, plural who wh-pronoun love verb, non-3rd person singular present gliding verb, gerund or present participle through preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner grand proper noun, singular canal proper noun, singular with preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner gondolier adjective, comparative singing verb, gerund or present participle italian proper noun, singular
but coordinating conjunction deep adjective down adverb they personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present romantics noun, plural most adverb, superlative infjs proper noun, singular can modal appear verb, base form to to be verb, base form cynics noun, plural on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner outside adjective while preposition or subordinating conjunction deep adjective down adverb

Use "romantics" in a sentence | "romantics" example sentences

How to use "romantics" in a sentence?

  • I'm romantic to some degree, if I really like somebody. I'm more romantic if there's someone that I like than I am a romantic just for romantics sake.
    -Vince Vaughn-
  • The French are true romantics. They feel the only difference between a man of forty and one of seventy is thirty years of experience.
    -Maurice Chevalier-
  • Books have souls. Or so romantics like me tend to think.
    -Douglas Rushkoff-
  • The romantics would call this a love story, the cynics would call it a tragedy.
    -Nicholas Sparks-
  • Romantics might like to think of themselves as being composed of stardust. Cynics might prefer to think of themselves as nuclear waste.
    -Simon Singh-
  • When I think of Boris Diaw, I think of Beethoven in the age of the romantics
    -Bill Walton-
  • Most Beethoven symphonies require 80 or more instruments, and the late romantics even more.
    -Neville Marriner-
  • The problem most nonprofits have is that they are run by romantics who are great to hang out with, but they have no clue.
    -Mohnish Pabrai-

Definition and meaning of ROMANTICS

What does "romantics mean?"

/rōˈman(t)ik/

noun
person with romantic beliefs or attitudes.
other
People who like love, candlelit dinners, etc..

What are synonyms of "romantics"?
Some common synonyms of "romantics" are:
  • idealist,
  • sentimentalist,
  • romanticist,
  • dreamer,
  • visionary,
  • utopian,
  • fantasist,
  • fantasizer,
  • fantast,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.

What are antonyms of "romantics"?
Some common antonyms of "romantics" are:
  • realist,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.