Friday, March 28, 2008

Carbombs for all!

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

The Herbaliser - Song for Mary

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

I forgot how good this movie is...

bury the past : www.phraust.com

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Anonymous approves...

bury the past : www.phraust.com

Friday, March 21, 2008

And carved upon the stone was a single word...

I think something bit me...

Monday, March 17, 2008

Yes, thats a rolls royce in the garage...

bury the past : www.phraust.com

Happy St. Patty's day...

Saturday, March 15, 2008

I think ive seen four people palu so far...

bury the past : www.phraust.com

The world facinates me...

And it begins...

Friday, March 14, 2008

What a wild night...

Monday, March 10, 2008

Pedantic semantics...

Monday night @ Niko's

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Mike-a-saur & Bren-a-don...

I

Saturday, yeah it's Saturday...

The Innsmouth Interpretation Test


Your Score: Captain Obed Marsh


In H. P. Lovecraft's universe you are




Captain Obed Marsh









Benevolence Inquisitiveness Obstinacy Discretion
medium highlowhighhigh

Devil worship, human sacrifice, and in-law problems: these were the personal tribulations of Captain Marsh. Add to them the War of 1812, which made his shipping business especially risky, and you come up with plenty of reason for a man to get religious. The captain's choice of religion, however, was what led to devil worship, human sacrifice, and in-law problems, so perhaps Obed was his own worst enemy. He founded the Esoteric Order Of Dagon in his home port of Innsmouth, Massachusetts, and while the Order's practices led to suspicion and arrests, eventually it became the town's dominant church. The Captain needed cunning, fortitude, and some flexibility with regard to the good/evil boundary to prevail over the Christian townsfolk, and your score on this test suggests that you may have similar strengths. May you use them for a more humane purpose than he did in The Shadow Over Innsmouth.

The image above is a card from the H. P. Lovecraft Tarot deck, an item whose existence I had never even suspected until I started searching the web for a picture of Captain Marsh.

Similar Entities



less benevolent



more benevolent



more inquisitive


Scoring

Your Inquisitiveness score indicates a high degree of self-confidence. This may be a good or bad thing: if the result of training, experience, and accomplishment, it's a boon; arising from arrogance or self-deception, it's a hazard. In either case, you're more likely to rely on your own knowledge and instincts than to seek the counsel of others when faced with something bizarre and/or unbelievable. In Lovecraftian terms, you're the person who opens the tomb, hatch, portal, or dimensional rift because he's sure he's right, safe, far enough away, or in possession of the proper protective charm. This action lets the [insert entity here] out to destroy the universe beginning with you.

Your Benevolence score suggests a wariness that may stem from being tricked or swindled at some time. While you retain a generally trusting and helpful nature, you recognize that some calls for assistance need not be answered, and in fact may do more harm to the supplicant than letting him solve the problem himself. In Lovecraft's universe, your instincts would deflect an invitation to doom proffered by an unnamable horror, but you'd probably succumb to similar advances made by an old friend or family member under the thing's influence.

Your Obstinacy score indicates a high degree of perseverance and resilience. In fact, in an early draft of this test I labeled this factor Perseverance, but then I reconsidered when I realized that in Lovecraft Land it really defines how you meet your doom. You're the character who goes too far, who unlocks one more door, who reads one more inscription, who descends the 700 Steps of Deeper Slumber, who won't leave when trouble moves in next door, who drinks from the mysterious vial, who awakens Cthulhu. In other words, you don't know when to quit.

Your Discretion score indicates ability to keep a secret and go about your business without calling attention to yourself. In the real world that's a good thing, but in a Lovecraft story it can be fatal. You're the character who keeps his discoveries to himself and thus precludes any warning or rescue from those who may have unearthed a piece of the Cosmic Puzzle that could counteract the one imperiling you. When you travel into the Unknown, you go alone and tell nobody your destination; eventually it's just you standing before Something Huge and Horrible on the next-to-last page.

Test Methodology and Complete List of Characters


The comparisons below won't mean much because this test only records the categories (high, medium high, medium low, or low) of your scores rather than the exact values, and the totals only include half the possible range of characters. The comparisons at the end of The OkLovecraft Test are much better indicators of how your results compare to those of other test-takers.






Link: The Innsmouth Interpretation Test written by Utopius on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the The Dating Persona Test
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Friday, March 07, 2008

Sleepy cat is sleeeeepy >:3

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Yakitori craziness...

Food of KINGS!

Monday, March 03, 2008

Testing...

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Sunday @ the sandbar...

Sunday @ the sandbar...