Saturday, January 27, 2024

Weird Tales, May/June/July 1924-Non-Fiction & Other Fillers

Following is a list of the fillers in the May/June/July issue of Weird Tales, a list transcribed from the Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Thanks to them again. All are by uncredited authors. Most have asterisks around them. Read on to see what they mean.

  • **"Juvenile Criminal," about the Hon. Grey Bennett and a boy named Leary. There really was a Grey Bennett, as remote from the first year of Weird Tales as we are from it.**
  • **"Retaliation," about a British ship.**
  • **"Providential Warning at Sea," about Captain Thomas Rogers and his ship Society in about 1694.**
  • **"Pastime of Despots," about Czar Peter.**
  • **"The Unnatural Son," about a theft in Salisbury.**
  • **"Singular Discovery of a Murder in 1740," an account of events at St. Neots, England.**
  • **"Giants," about very tall men known to history.**
  • **"Sham Fight," about a battle between Christian and Musselman armies at Bostra [sic].**
  • **"War Horses," about war in Funen, Denmark.**
  • **"The Original Bluebeard," about Gilles, Marquis de Laval. Seabury Quinn had covered him before in his non-fiction series "Weird Crimes," in October 1923.**
  • **"Distressing March of the Crusaders Through Phrygia."**
  • **"Remarkable Accident," about Baptiste, an actor at the Comedie Francaise in 1820.**
  • *"An Account of a Family Who Were All Afflicted with the Loss of Their Limbs," about John Dowling of Wattisham, England.*
  • *"Hypocrisy Detected," set in Paris.*
  • *"Force of Imagination," also set in Paris.*
  • *"Immolation of Human Beings," about the Ashantees [sic] of Africa.*
  • **"Imprisonment of Baron De Geramb."**
  • *"Anecdote Concerning the Execution of King Charles the First."*
  • **"Anne Boleyn."**
  • **"The Heroes of Hindoostan."**
  • *"Extraordinary Instance of Second Sight," about a French army officer quartered in Scotland during "the previous century."*
  • **"Miracles," about a Dr. Connell and his patient, named Anne Mulligan, in 1777.**
  • **"National Superstition," about two Venetians.**
  • **"Death of the Duchess of Bedford."**
  • **"Pardon for Forgery," a case from 1803.**
  • **"Terrific Death of a Painter," about Peter Peutemann.**
  • **"Deaths by Lightning," set in Ireland.**
  • **"Wonderful Providence," about war in France in 1562.**
  • **"Monsieur Rouelle," about the "celebrated chemist."**
  • **"A Singular Experiment," about an Irish boy named Magrath who fell into the hands of a "subtile doctor," a kind of Procrustes who experimented on the boy and made of him a monstrous creation. This account goes along with my suggestion that medical doctors are very often psychopaths or sociopaths and see their fellow human beings as mere material and subjects for their bizarre and monstrous experimentation. We recently had one of those at the head of a large governmental agency. He and his fellows very likely developed and loosed upon the world a deadly virus and in response created an oppressive regime that is still lurking, still preying, including in the minds of his and their followers, supporters, and apologists. Monstrous medical doctors recently won a victory for themselves in Ohio, too. Now they have the power under the state constitution to decide who is a human being and who is not. Now we have another Moloch State.**
  • **"Pentilly House, Cornwall," about a Mr. Tilly, an atheist.**
  • **"Singular Combat," about England in the time of Henry IV.**
  • **"Fatal Misfortune and Singular Instance of Affection in a Horse," set in England.**
  • *"Punishment of the Knout in Russia."*
  • **"Intrepid Conduct of Admiral Douglas," about a mutiny on board the ship Stately.**
  • "Only Sound," a very brief item from the Los Angeles Times. (Below it are two jokes.)
  • "Odd Facts," half a dozen brief fillers. (Below it are three anecdotes or jokes. So there are five untitled anecdotes or jokes in addition to 37 titled fillers.)

As I was about halfway through this list, I discovered the original source of most of these accounts. The source is:

The Terrific Register; or, Record of Crimes, Judgements, Providences, and Calamities, Volume I and Volume II, published in 1825 by Sherwood, Jones, and Co., of London, and Hunter of Edinburgh.

Presumably all are factual, so no fiction to add to the 37 stories in this issues. Items taken from Volume I have single asterisks around them in the list above. Those from Volume II have double asterisks. Seven of the items are from Volume I of The Terrific RegisterTwenty-eight are from Volume II. That makes 35 in all, leaving only two that are from other sources.

So, if we're trying to get from 37 new stories in the interior of the anniversary number to the 50 promised on its cover, then we'll have to add 13 of the items listed above, I guess. You get to choose. A couple of them are almost as long as the shortest new stories.

It's clear that Otis Adelbert Kline was not the author of these fillers, as he had been (or probably was) in previous issues. But if he was acting as editor, or co-editor, then maybe he was the one who chose them for inclusion. And that makes me think that there must have been copies of these two volumes either in a public or university library in Chicago or in a private collection to which he had access. And now I think we had better look at the fillers in previous issues for their possible origins in the same two volumes of The Terrific Register.

I have written before about the Fortean method. I called it that after Charles Fort (1874-1932), author, gadfly of science, and collector of oddities. People who read and wrote for Weird Tales knew of Fort and his ways. Some became Forteans themselves. Others simply availed themselves of the Fortean method in creating their fictions. Like I said, I have suspected that Otis Adelbert Kline was the author of the many non-fiction fillers printed in Weird Tales in its first year, and maybe he was after all, taking after Fort in the process. But it's clear with this discovery of The Terrific Register as a source that Kline was not the sole author of the Weird Tales fillers and that Fort was not the first collector of oddities. He, along with Kline, was simply working in an older tradition. I wonder how far back that tradition goes. And I wonder: is history simply a field engaged in telling about the odd events--the crimes, judgements, providences, and calamities--of the past? Aside from that, are not these accounts simply retellings of how weird works in our lives and affairs?

Original text copyright 2024 Terence E. Hanley

1 comment:

  1. Re "my suggestion that medical doctors are very often psychopaths or sociopaths and see their fellow human beings as mere material and subjects for their bizarre and monstrous experimentation"

    Not primarily for these psychopaths' "monstrous experimentation" but for their greed and addiction to power. It is why allopathic mainstream medicine has been referred to as "psychopathic medicine" --- https://www.rolf-hefti.com/covid-19-coronavirus.html

    "... doctors and scientists are now on the same lever of public confidence as the scum living in the swamp." --- Unknown in 2022

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