Possessive Possession
24 August 2022 – Geneva
I’ll call this my Geneva piece, even though I happen to be writing it on a train travelling from Geneva to Lyon. Mind you, it does somewhat surprise me that most places around train stations seem to be pretty seedy. Well, okay, maybe not Sydney or Brisbane, or Paris or London, but certainly a number of other places that I have noticed. This was particularly the case in Geneva (and Frankfurt, and Cologne). Actually, I discovered pretty quickly that you really shouldn’t be going out for a walk at night if you, like me, accidentally book a hotel near the station. That is probably why it ended up being so cheap (and it was a shame because, well, I like visiting bars and having a beer). Actually, they were still wondering around at 7:30 in the morning – don’t they ever get any sleep.
Anyway, enough of my stories about the underside of Geneva, which I have to admit that it is quite a beautiful city, and in a way, like Bangkok, it is only a rather small section that really should be avoided, and on to discussing this short story. In a way it is similar to the first short story in this collection, and that is that it is set during World War I and out in the ocean. Basically, the story is a testimony by a German u-boat captain who sunk a British ship, and then filmed the u-boat machine-gunning the survivors. Later though, they find the body of a sailor clutching the hull and carrying an carved ivory piece. Liking it, the captain takes it, and that is when strange things start to happen.
One could argue that what eventually happens, and that is that pretty much everybody on the u-boat, including the captain, go mad. They start seeing and hearing things, and everybody is convinced that these manifestations are due to the carving, but the captain has become so attached to it that he refuses to let go of it, even going to the point of executing people who disagree with him. This idea of obsession over an object is a theme that seems to be prevalent in horror stories, but in another sense you also see it in roleplaying games, namely with cursed items. Sure, in a roleplaying game, it usually is the case that these items are stuck on your character sheet, or in your inventory and cannot be removed. However, Lovecraft is giving us a much better picture of how these items operate, namely that the owner will become so obsessed with it that they will kill friends and colleagues rather than let go of them.
Yet one also wonders whether this ivory carving was also in possession of the sailor while on the British Boat, which could also explain why everybody died. It is difficult to tell though, but there is an indication in the story that the dead sailors were cursed to undeath, though Lovecraft is somewhat coy on the whole thing, making us question whether the what people are seeing is the truth or an illusion. We also know that events have taken control of the u-boat, which at the end finds itself in a sunken city. What is also unclear is whether this curse came upon the u-boat because of the captain, or there is another reason.
It is an interesting story though, but I’ll leave it there for now, and move on to something else.