Bugg-Shash

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Bugg-Shash ("Bugg-Shash the Terrible", "The Night-Thing", "The Black One", "The Filler of Space")

Origin: (Bugg-Shash is a name which Brian Lumley first mentioned off-hand in his early story "Rising with Surtsey", and later applied to the nameless creature of David Sutton's "Demoniacal" when Lumley wrote "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash" as a sequel, where Bugg-Shash is first described in detail.)


In the Mythos

"...And then came the Black One! Never guessing that any such visitation might actually occur, Nuttall had failed to take the traditional precaution of prisoning the horror in a pentagram. And it WAS a horror! A thing with invisible, evil eyes that saw in the dark, with mouths and lips that sucked and slobbered.... At this, the abominable chittering grew louder still. It surrounded the circle completely now and, for the first time, the two conscious men clearly saw that which the single, tiny remaining flame held at bay. Creeping up on all sides, to the very line of the chalked circle, the Thing came; a glistening, shuddering wall of jelly-like ooze in which many mouths gaped and just as many eyes monstrously ogled! This was Bugg-Shash the Drowner, The Black One, The Filler of Space. Indeed, the bulk of this ... Being? ... did seem to fill the entire study! All bar the blessed sanctuary of the circle. The eyes were beyond words, but worse still were those mouths. Sucking and whistling with thickly viscous lips, the mouths glistened and slobbered and, from out of those gluttonous orifices poured the lunatic chitterings of alien song - the Song of Bugg-Shash - as his substance towered up and leaned inwards to form a slimy ceiling over their very heads!"
— Brian Lumley, "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash"

"One of the Darkest Beings of the Netherworld, whose Trail is as that of a monstrous Snail, who hails from the blackets Pits of the most remote Spheres. Cousin to Yibb-Tstll, Bugg-Shash, too, is a Drowner; His lips do suck and lick; His Kiss is the slimy Kiss of the hideous Death. He wakes the very Dead to His Command, and encased in the horror of His Essence even the worm-ravaged Lich hastens to do His Bidding...."
The Book of Eibon, as portrayed by Brian Lumley in "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash"

Lest any brash or inexperienced Wizard be tempted to call forth one of ye Drowners - be it Yibb-Tstll or Bugg-Shash - this Warning shall guide him & inform him of his Folly. For ye Drowners are of a like treacherous & require ye most delicate Handling & minutest Attention to thaumathurgic Detail. Yibb-Tstll may only be controlled by use of ye Soul-Searing Barrier of Naach-Tith, & Bugg-Shash may only be contained in ye Pentagram of Power. Too, ye Drowners must be sent early about ye Business of them, which is Death, lest they find ways to turn upon ye Caller. Call NOT upon Bug-Shash for ye sake of mere idle curiosity; for ye Great Black One, neither him nor His Cousin, will return of His own Accord to His Place, but will seek out by any Means a Victim, being often that same Wizard which uttered ye Calling. Of ye two is Bugg-Shash most treacherous and vilely cunning, for should no Sacrifice or Victim be prepared for His Coming, He will not go back without He takes His Caller with Him, must needs He stay an hundred Years to accomplish His Purpose....
Feery's Notes on the Cthaat Aquadingen, as portrayed by Brian Lumley in "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash"

"Bugg-Shash is unbearable! His lips suck; He knows not defeat but brings down His victim at the last; aye, even though He follows that victim unto Death and beyond to achieve His purpose. And there was a riddle known to my forefathers: 'What evil wakes that should lie dead, Swathed in horror toe to head?'"
— - John Dee's expurgated Necronomicon, as portrayed by Brian Lumley in "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash"

Heresies and Controversies

  • Yibb-Tstll is literally a cousin (a literal "blood relative" on the family tree) of Bugg-Shash (literal fan interpretation Lumley's occult references to the similar natures of these beings in "The Kiss of Bugg-Shash")

Keeper Notes

Cult

General_description_of_cult.

Associated Mythos Elements

References