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From: grotesqueforms
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  • hail the great cthulhu !!!

  • The Necronomicon? You can't be shown one!

    While the libraries never will loan one!

    But if it's so rare

    And guarded with care

    Why does every nut case seem to own one?

  • Didn't Abdul have his Kundalini activated? I heard if you unlock your Kundalini Serpent you can see these "angels and demons" from other dimensions. And I know I read a story about Abdul unlocking his, I just don't know where.

  • Ah yes the Acient book of dark magic If im going to destroy the darkness i need to study the darkness

  • The images seem here make me tremble...not out of fear but because I have seen them before.

  • Ph'ngl mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.

  • nice!

  • 3:52 How dare these idiots use a Farvahard on the cover of some ridiculous fictitious book of witchery!? Indeed, blasphemous, but ignorant and absolutely beyond stupid. May the idiots who believe in this FICTION, written as FICTION HORROR STORIES, burn and die in all pits. And for your information, Al-Hazred is a play on the ENGLISH WORDS: All Has Read!!! There's nothing here that is real, only real madness from all of you imbeciles believing this. Karapan Dregvantem Daevayasnis!!!

  • @ganondorf59 Honestly, Lovecraft's vision of the universe and its inhabitants , to me anyway, seems far more likely than the theistic beliefs of the major religions of the world. In fact, Lovecraft's fiction is actually less ridiculous than the fiction of the Bible, Quaran, or any other holy book or scripture.

  • You're all idiots! Haha, there is no satan worship here, and there is no hidden implication behind the names of any of these books. It's horror fiction. It's for fun, you know? Reading in the dark? A nice spooky story for you ro read alone? The necronomicon doesn't exist and there's no such thing as a cthulhu cult. It's make believe, like dracula or the cucuy, lol.

  • @Davidportilloprometh Yeah, in Lovecraft's writng there was no God or Satan or demons or angels. The beings in these stories that are referred to as Gods were done so for lack of a better word. They were really alien intellegences beyond our human understanding that defied the laws of physics.

  • Sigh... More satan worshipers.

  • @anonymous1140 Sigh... Double comment. And FYI, it's fiction. There's nothing satanic about it. Look it up.

  • Sigh... Just another form of satanic worship.

  • Wonderful video. Mesmerizing music. I own several of the books presented. Interesting to say the least. In 2010, I modified the Nox Arcana picture for my original channel Lisa3679. It was too fantastic to pass up. I used to have an older version of the Necronomicon. Then, I threw it away, after Christians got a serious grip on my mind. Glad that's finally over. Now I can get back to a serious study of things far more interesting than mainstream religion ever was. Never did me any good anyway.

  • Van disel tem uma tatoo iqual a esse simbolo!

  • The Necronomicon is the apple of knowledge.

  • Lovecraft wrote from his dreams, and dreams are older than the hanging gardens of Babylon. Simply because he wrote of these 'fantasies', these 'mad delusions' under his own pen name does not mean that they are truly of his origin. Who knows for sure? Abdul Alzahred, which was a nickname lovecraft donned upon himself during childhood, could very well be a real man, trapped in the dreamworld, the outer dimensions, as all the Old Ones may be. Who knows but those who have been taken by the madness?

  • @TheIrishGeisha Scholars have suggested various solutions to the mad Arab's true name:

    a) Abd al-Azrad, "the worshiper of the great devourer" (from abd = worshiper/ servant, al = the, Azrad = strangler/ devourer)

    b) Abd Al-'Uzza, "servant of Al-Uzza" a pre-Muslim goddess

    c) Abdallah Zahr-ad-Din, "Servant-of-God-Flower-of-the-­Faith" (given the mad Arab's religion, an unlikely name at best)

    d) al-Hazred, a name which has only kept its meaning of "one-who-sees-what-shouldn't-b­e-seen" in Yemenite

  • @grotesqueforms Also, 'Abd-al-Hazrat, Servant of the Saint, which has Sufi implications. There is a lot of Sufi influence in the Ahl-e-Haqq, as well as the related Kurdish sect of the Yezidis, who worship the Peacock Angel, Melek Taus, who is heavily associated with the Qur'aanic form of the devil, Iblees. A few Sufis have also considered Iblees the perfect unitarian for refusing to bow before Adam. I heavily recommend the essay "Iblis the Black Light" in Peter Lamborn Wilson's Sacred Drift.

  • @jeretical Thanks for the information, I appreciate.

  • @grotesqueforms No problem at all. Upon looking further I also realized that the word Hazrat is derived from Hazrah -- Presence. And it could refer to either a Sufi saint or perhaps Ali, who is worshiped by the Ahl-e-Haqq and certain other "Ghulat" Shi'ites. Or related to your option c, it could also be 'Abd-az-Zahrah, Zahra or radiance also being a name for the daughter of Muhammad who is also venerated and worshiped as a goddess by some of the "Ghulat" groups.

  • @TheIrishGeisha ~Lovecraft also copied from his fathers occult colection.

  • @candiceevans1 it's still FAKE. your superstitious beliefs do not make this stuff REAL, any more than your beliefs would make vampires or were wolves real. or the monster who hides in my closet... oops - wasn't s'posed to mention that... never mind....

  • You do know that Necronomicon is Not a real book?

    It's made up by Lovecraft as well as rest of the stuff.

    There has not been mad arab Alhazred.

    Lovecraft was a great writer, but he was A Writer ...

    and he wrote Fiction..

  • @YakYak2U i was gonna point that out my self. this all came of lovecraft's mind. the fact that people believe "the mad arab" was torn apart by some invisible creature should be a BIG tip-off.

  • fiction....

  • What is all this "occultic" knowledge to the modern world, does it really have any lasting vigor 'r potency? If only one could explore said places Abdul Alhazred once traversed.

  • @JosiahSCooper crowley supposedly did just that....

  • There's only 3 real books(Necronomicon). The 9th Gate. Baal. watch?v=a12p0Qwe-IQ&feature=re­lated

  • The Necronomicon isn't real, it was invented by horror writer H.P. Lovecraft.

  • @candiceevans1

    Nah dude, it's fake, they're just yanking your chain. It's all just funny spooky bullshit. There may be some cunts in power, but it has nothing to do with a 1920's horror author's fiction. Seriously, get a grip.

  • ¿No decían que el libro era pura invención de Lovecraft?. Pues en el video aparecen textos originales, o sea que Lovecraft tenía razón.

  • If you have to ask stupid questions about the validity or power of the Necronomicon, any of them, you are a fool and doomed to be consumed by our Lord and Master Nyarlethothep- the Creeping Chaos.

  • Even Wikkipedia knows that your knowledge of the Necronomicon is lacking...

  • so is the necronomicon the stan version of the bible or is it just to summon demons n stuff?

  • @saberman41 stan?

  • is there a place i can download/buy this book? 

  • Now about the "terrible and forbidden books” — I am forced to say that most of them are purely imaginary. There never was any Abdul Alhazred or Necronomicon, for I invented these names myself.

  • what do the words mean?? i really want to know

  • @hideHYDEimcoming It is the invocation, in the tongue of the Old Ones, to summon Yog-Sothoth and open the gate between our world and the worlds outside the circles of time. Yog-Sothoth knows the gate. Yog-Sothoth is the gate. Yog-Sothoth is the key and the guardian of the gate. Past, present and futur, all is one in Yog-Sothoth.

  • is he real or not give me evidence!

  • Wasn't the writer Kitab Al-Azif torn apart by invisible forces? I heard that's how he died... being ripped to pieces by invisible forces.

  • @Severe777 His twelfth-century biographer Ibn Khallikan records a gruesome tale of Abdul Alhazred being "seized by an invisible monster in broad daylight and devoured horribly before a large number of fright-frozen witnesses."

  • Comment removed

  • @grotesqueforms

    Sheesh, stop bringing that up. Abdul and I were leaving a shisha bar in Damascus at about mid-day, and I got the munchies. He was there, he was human, ate him, and yes I was probably invisible at the time. Call him up and ask him yourself. You people are so prejudiced against anyone who isn't from your own dimension.

  • @Locus56287 This legend is disputed ; some state that his death was illusory and that Alhazred was borne off to the Nameless City to be tortured and killed. A few heretics of his time proclaimed that he returned to the Empty Quarter, from which he would one day return. Legend has it that his voice can still be heard in the insects of the desert, teaching apprentice magicians his forgotten lore.

  • @Locus56287 Best comment. Ever.

  • what is the difference between this book and the goetia??

  • Awesome video

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