Difference between revisions of "Nug and Yeb"
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Very little is known about Nug and Yeb beyond some brief mentions in Lovecraft's letters and briefer mentions in revision stories. In a letter from September 1936 Lovecraft described Nug and Yeb as being twins, each one being spherical or oval in shape with a diameter of approximately 10 feet. Other than that, HPL described Nug and Yeb as being “a bit destructive sometimes” and having the ability to dissolve matter. Lovecraft coined the throw-away term "The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb" in one of his letter closings, and referred to Nug and Yeb off-hand in a couple revision stories, suggesting that rites dedicated to the beings are particularly repulsive and that subterranean shrines to them can be found beneath [[Irem]]. There is no evidence in Lovecraft's stories that Nug and Yeb themselves have ever been on Earth. | Very little is known about Nug and Yeb beyond some brief mentions in Lovecraft's letters and briefer mentions in revision stories. In a letter from September 1936 Lovecraft described Nug and Yeb as being twins, each one being spherical or oval in shape with a diameter of approximately 10 feet. Other than that, HPL described Nug and Yeb as being “a bit destructive sometimes” and having the ability to dissolve matter. Lovecraft coined the throw-away term "The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb" in one of his letter closings, and referred to Nug and Yeb off-hand in a couple revision stories, suggesting that rites dedicated to the beings are particularly repulsive and that subterranean shrines to them can be found beneath [[Irem]]. There is no evidence in Lovecraft's stories that Nug and Yeb themselves have ever been on Earth. | ||
| − | From "[[Out of the Aeons ( | + | From "[[Out of the Aeons (fiction)]]": In ancient [[Mu]], [[T'yog]] believed that Nug and Yeb were among of the gods friendly to man, ready to side with man against [[Ghatanothoa]]. [[T'yog]] hoped that [[Shub-Niggurath]] and her sons would side with him; from the context, it is possible that these sons include Nug and Yeb (further confirmed by Lovecraft's "family tree" of such beings). From "[[The Mound (fiction)]]", the Old Ones of [[K'n-yan]] had temples to Nug and Yeb, where the subtle and orgiastic rites sickened [[Zamacona]]. From "[[The Last Test (fiction)]]", there are underground shrines to Nug and Yeb, possibly in the region of the [[The Nameless City (fiction)|Crimson desert of Arabia]]. |
== Blasphemies and Heresies == | == Blasphemies and Heresies == | ||
* Nug and Yeb were in some way linked to the Egyptian deities Nut (goddess of the air/night sky/space) and her brother/husband Geb (god of the earth/underworld). (Fan speculation, perhaps originally suggested by Robert M. Price?) | * Nug and Yeb were in some way linked to the Egyptian deities Nut (goddess of the air/night sky/space) and her brother/husband Geb (god of the earth/underworld). (Fan speculation, perhaps originally suggested by Robert M. Price?) | ||
** Nug and Yeb might thus be powerful twin elementals aligned with air and earth, respectively. (Derleth's Elemental Theory) | ** Nug and Yeb might thus be powerful twin elementals aligned with air and earth, respectively. (Derleth's Elemental Theory) | ||
| − | * Nug and Yeb might in some way be described in secret analogy by Yin and Yang, "the black truth veiled by the immemorial allegory of Tao" in "[[The Whisperer in Darkness]]". (Fan speculation) | + | * Nug and Yeb might in some way be described in secret analogy by Yin and Yang, "the black truth veiled by the immemorial allegory of Tao" in "[[The Whisperer in Darkness (fiction)]]". (Fan speculation) |
* Azathoth is the asexual grandfather of Yog-Sothoth and Shub-Niggurath, who together spawned Nug and Yeb; Nug asexually spawned Cthulhu (an ancestor of H.P. Lovecraft), and Yeb asexually spawned Tsathoggua (an ancestor of Clark Ashton Smith)... (H.P. Lovecraft's whimsical family tree) | * Azathoth is the asexual grandfather of Yog-Sothoth and Shub-Niggurath, who together spawned Nug and Yeb; Nug asexually spawned Cthulhu (an ancestor of H.P. Lovecraft), and Yeb asexually spawned Tsathoggua (an ancestor of Clark Ashton Smith)... (H.P. Lovecraft's whimsical family tree) | ||
* "Nug is a god among ghouls, while Yeb is the leader of Abhoth's alien cult." (The cult is known as "the Unclean Ones"?) (''[[Encyclopedia Cthulhiana]]''?) | * "Nug is a god among ghouls, while Yeb is the leader of Abhoth's alien cult." (The cult is known as "the Unclean Ones"?) (''[[Encyclopedia Cthulhiana]]''?) | ||
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== Appearances == | == Appearances == | ||
| − | * Fiction: "[[Black Fire ( | + | * Fiction: "[[Black Fire (fiction)]]" by [[Will Murray]] (in Chaosium's ''[[The Cthulhu Cycle]]'') |
| − | * Fiction: "[[To Clear The Earth ( | + | * Fiction: "[[To Clear The Earth (fiction)]]" by [[Will Murray]] (in Chaosium's ''[[The Shub-Niggurath Cycle]]'') |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb (fiction)]]" by [[Joe Pulver]] (in Chaosium's ''[[The Book of Eibon]]'') |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Last Test ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Last Test (fiction)]]" by [[H.P. Lovecraft]] & [[Adolphe de Castro]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Mound ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Mound (fiction)]]" by [[H.P. Lovecraft]] & [[Zealia Bishop]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[Out of the Aeons ( | + | * Fiction: "[[Out of the Aeons (fiction)]]" by [[H.P. Lovecraft]] & [[Hazel Heald]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[Behind the Mask ( | + | * Fiction: "[[Behind the Mask (fiction)]]" by [[Lin Carter]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Thing in the Pit ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Thing in the Pit (fiction)]]" by [[Lin Carter]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Descent into the Abyss ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Descent into the Abyss (fiction)]]" by [[Lin Carter]] and [[Clark Ashton Smith]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Strange Doom of Enos Harker ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Strange Doom of Enos Harker (fiction)]]" by [[Lin Carter]] and [[Robert M. Price]] |
| − | * Fiction: "[[The Jest of Yig ( | + | * Fiction: "[[The Jest of Yig (fiction)]]" by [[Don Webb]] |
Revision as of 15:22, 8 May 2016
"The Twin Blasphemies"
Description
Very little is known about Nug and Yeb beyond some brief mentions in Lovecraft's letters and briefer mentions in revision stories. In a letter from September 1936 Lovecraft described Nug and Yeb as being twins, each one being spherical or oval in shape with a diameter of approximately 10 feet. Other than that, HPL described Nug and Yeb as being “a bit destructive sometimes” and having the ability to dissolve matter. Lovecraft coined the throw-away term "The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb" in one of his letter closings, and referred to Nug and Yeb off-hand in a couple revision stories, suggesting that rites dedicated to the beings are particularly repulsive and that subterranean shrines to them can be found beneath Irem. There is no evidence in Lovecraft's stories that Nug and Yeb themselves have ever been on Earth.
From "Out of the Aeons (fiction)": In ancient Mu, T'yog believed that Nug and Yeb were among of the gods friendly to man, ready to side with man against Ghatanothoa. T'yog hoped that Shub-Niggurath and her sons would side with him; from the context, it is possible that these sons include Nug and Yeb (further confirmed by Lovecraft's "family tree" of such beings). From "The Mound (fiction)", the Old Ones of K'n-yan had temples to Nug and Yeb, where the subtle and orgiastic rites sickened Zamacona. From "The Last Test (fiction)", there are underground shrines to Nug and Yeb, possibly in the region of the Crimson desert of Arabia.
Blasphemies and Heresies
- Nug and Yeb were in some way linked to the Egyptian deities Nut (goddess of the air/night sky/space) and her brother/husband Geb (god of the earth/underworld). (Fan speculation, perhaps originally suggested by Robert M. Price?)
- Nug and Yeb might thus be powerful twin elementals aligned with air and earth, respectively. (Derleth's Elemental Theory)
- Nug and Yeb might in some way be described in secret analogy by Yin and Yang, "the black truth veiled by the immemorial allegory of Tao" in "The Whisperer in Darkness (fiction)". (Fan speculation)
- Azathoth is the asexual grandfather of Yog-Sothoth and Shub-Niggurath, who together spawned Nug and Yeb; Nug asexually spawned Cthulhu (an ancestor of H.P. Lovecraft), and Yeb asexually spawned Tsathoggua (an ancestor of Clark Ashton Smith)... (H.P. Lovecraft's whimsical family tree)
- "Nug is a god among ghouls, while Yeb is the leader of Abhoth's alien cult." (The cult is known as "the Unclean Ones"?) (Encyclopedia Cthulhiana?)
- Nug and Yeb are described as dragons of black and red, respectively, and are identified as preparing the way for their "Father" (Yog-Sothoth?). (Joseph H. Pulver, "The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb")
- Nug and Yeb are (after a fashion) twin self-aware machines, constructed from antimatter and matter, void and substance, which will "terraform" our reality in some unearthly way to prepare the way for the arrival/awakening of the Old Ones (Yog-Sothoth, Shub-Niggurath, Azathoth). The arrival of Nug and Yeb in our universe, in equal portions when the stars are right, will result in the instant annihilation of our world, and the dawn of a new cycle of reality generated by the newly-awakened forces of cosmic destruction, creation, and order. (Lovecraftian Science Blog]
Cult
Nug and Yeb may have been worshiped occasionally by humans under other names (such as the Egyptian Nut and Geb), but seem to have had no lasting human cult.
Nug may be worshiped as a god by one or more cults among the Ghouls, and a cult of alien monsters known as "The Unclean Ones" is led by Yeb in worship of Abhoth.
Subterranean shrines to Nug and Yeb might be found among the Ghouls and Serpent People; no known detailed descriptions of the rites and ceremonies dedicated to these Twin Blasphemies have been identified, but they are alleged to be notably sickening even among descriptions of the rites of Ghouls and other cthonic races.
Quotes
- "The ceremonies of Nug and Yeb sickened him especially—so much, indeed, that he refrained from describing them in his manuscript." - H.P. Lovecraft & Zealia Bishop, The Mound
- "I talked in Yemen with an old man who had come back alive from the Crimson Desert—he had seen Irem, the City of Pillars, and had worshipped at the underground shrines of Nug and Yeb—Iä! Shub-Niggurath!" - H.P. Lovecraft & Adolphe de Castro, The Last Test
Appearances
- Fiction: "Black Fire (fiction)" by Will Murray (in Chaosium's The Cthulhu Cycle)
- Fiction: "To Clear The Earth (fiction)" by Will Murray (in Chaosium's The Shub-Niggurath Cycle)
- Fiction: "The Black Litany of Nug and Yeb (fiction)" by Joe Pulver (in Chaosium's The Book of Eibon)
- Fiction: "The Last Test (fiction)" by H.P. Lovecraft & Adolphe de Castro
- Fiction: "The Mound (fiction)" by H.P. Lovecraft & Zealia Bishop
- Fiction: "Out of the Aeons (fiction)" by H.P. Lovecraft & Hazel Heald
- Fiction: "Behind the Mask (fiction)" by Lin Carter
- Fiction: "The Thing in the Pit (fiction)" by Lin Carter
- Fiction: "The Descent into the Abyss (fiction)" by Lin Carter and Clark Ashton Smith
- Fiction: "The Strange Doom of Enos Harker (fiction)" by Lin Carter and Robert M. Price
- Fiction: "The Jest of Yig (fiction)" by Don Webb