"The Man Who Found Out" is an excellent example of "pure cosmic horror" in that the horror derives totally from knowledge which is (in-story) so terrible that it forever blights the minds of the knowers. First Professor Ebor and then Dr. Laidlaw learn the contents of the Tablets of the Gods, and even though this information is short enough to be
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You may be able to expand point 5 regarding the contents of the message, about contradicting the Bible: "Scriptures of the World" is sometimes used to refer to translations of the Bible into many vernacular languages, but it can also refer to collections of the writings belonging to multiple religions. The latter strikes me as a more likely thing for Dr. Ebor to have, although you could certainly make an argument for his being linguist enough to appreciate the former ( ... )
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That's a very good point! This implies among other things that the Horrid Truth was even worse than, say, the Sumerian or Mexican cosmologies -- which is a terrifying thought indeed!
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