Sunday, 29 June 2025

In The Near Future

Let us look ahead, not for the next five hundred years, just for the next two weeks. Tomorrow will be 30 June and I will probably end this month with a round number of posts, thus with this one. The coming Thursday through Sunday will be spent in London (including travel time), therefore away from this computer. The following Tuesday, I will hopefully visit Andrea above the Old Pier Bookshop. A day trip to another town is planned for the following Friday. What will happen globally during this fortnight or so? I confidently predict that something unexpected will occur.

In "day after tomorrow" sf, the recognizably familiar contemporary world is the setting for a revolutionary invention or discovery. James Blish refers to a dying breed of attic inventors. His readers remember Frankenstein, the Time Traveller, Cavor, the Invisible Man, Doctor Moreau, Robur etc. Blish's Adolph Haertel discovers anti-gravity and flies a tree hut to Mars. In CS Lewis' That Hideous Strength, scientists keep a guillotined head alive although the intelligence that speaks through the "Head" is demonic, not human. In Poul Anderson's Brain Wave, the discovery is that animal and human intelligence is increasing because Earth has moved out of an inhibiting radiation field. In all these cases, the point is that mankind interacts with the cosmos - with gravity, Mars, hyper-somatic intelligences, cosmic radiation - not just with itself. The universe waits while governments fight over parts of the Earth. (I was not leading towards that conclusion but now it seems inevitable.)

CS Lewis wrote somewhere that only the first visit to another world is of interest to a reader with imagination. We see what he meant without necessarily agreeing in detail. When a Lunar or Martian base has become an everyday environment for colonists and space travellers, then it has lost its newness. However, Anderson maintains the planet Avalon as an intriguing environment through three short stories and one novel.

Ad astra.

What Should The Lann Do?

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 7.

Lenard, captured son of the Chief of the Lann invaders, explains that his people - hunters, herders and small farmers in a harsh and barren country - have always fought cold, rain, blight and each other for diminishing resources while their numbers steadily grow. Brothers fight like wild dogs. Now they have come together to attack possessors of better lands. Dalesmen will be displaced or become servants. The Lann do not vote but follow their Chief. They will not accept an offer of empty forest tracts and, in any case, Lenard does not think that there is enough room for both tribes.

If I were the Lann Chief, then I would accept any offer of empty tracts while also sending scouts or leading groups further south in the hope of finding empty lands to colonize. But, if I were a Lann, then I would not become Chief. I would leave home and trek south alone or with a small group to live by hunting or by finding employment among other tribes.

An individual solution should be possible even if a social solution is not. 

See you in Sky-Home. (I don't think so but it is a good story.)

Saturday, 28 June 2025

Shadowy Powers

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 7.

"...the gods..." have been mentioned since p. 21 but that becomes just a phrase, a part of the spoken language. At last, we get some sense of what is meant:

"...those great shadowy powers of sky and earth, fire and water, growth and death and destiny, before which men quailed." (p. 72)

Powers to be feared and propitiated? Elsewhere, Poul Anderson shows us "the gods" developing beyond that earliest and most primitive of roles. See Gods And Men.

A Unitarian that I knew in Dublin read the Roman philosopher, Marcus Aurelius, and told me, "He talks about 'the gods,' you know, but you could easily replace that with 'God' and the rest would remain the same." 

I am happy to have "the gods," including the monotheist versions, angels and saints etc, in speech and literature, provided only that we have moved beyond that earliest stage of fearing them as if they were ghosts.

The universe is haunted by an awesome presence.

The Old Enemy

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 5.

After driving off a tiger with arrows, Carl mentally lists and reviews the enemies of men:

tiger
bear
snake
dog packs
demons
ghosts
gods
night 
storm
flood
fire
drought
winter
man

That last enemy, remorseless, deadly, old, strong and crafty, wrecked civilization and has returned as taboos and barbarians.

Exactly the same phrase:

"...that enemy was old and strong and crafty." (p. 58)

- occurs both here and in Anderson's first future history series.

See previous posts on the "protean enemy."

Vault... is pre-future history.

Servants

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 5.

"'The Chief,' Ralph had said, 'is the first servant of the tribe.'" (p. 54)

Jesus called them together and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise authority over them. 26 Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, 27 and whoever wants to be first must be your slave
-copied from here

Comments
An unusually good Biblical passage.

Says same as Ralph.

Poul Anderson could have inserted this passage from Matthew. However, few books have survived the Doom and few people have learned to read. Ralph's remark is an example of inherited wisdom.

I might chose this passage if I were asked to read at the funeral of a trade union steward or campaigner.

Leaders are not rulers.

POV Cop

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 4.

Six Lann pursue three Dalesmen at night, both parties on horseback. This passage is definitely narrated from the point of view (pov) of the leading Dalesman, Carl. A metal object is:

"...cold in his hand..." (p. 46)

When he has used an ancient, hand-cranked flashlight to make the superstitious Lann flee:

"Carl sat for a minute, not daring to believe..." (p. 47)

However, during the pursuit, we are informed that:

"Owl's horse stumbled on a root and went rolling." (p. 46)

This information about the cause of the stumble is directly imparted by the omniscient narrator to his readers. Carl cannot have seen the horse's hoof hit a root. At most, he sees or hears the stumble and infers its cause. So a narrative entirely confined to Carl's pov might have included the sentence:

"Owl's horse stumbled, maybe on a root, and went rolling."

Most readers perhaps neither notice nor care whether a narrative steps outside its pov but I have been sensitized to such issues by years of reading and rereading a writer as careful and methodical as Poul Anderson whose texts always repay close analysis.

A New World?

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 3.

"'...the Dalesmen will come here in force, learn how to make weapons like the ancients had - and drive the invaders away!'" (p. 42)

This is a historic opportunity. Drive the Lann invaders back, yes, but then make peace, share the benefits of technology and build a new world no longer divided into hostile armed camps. The combination of restored technology with the lesson of the Doom should make this possible. On that basis, further advances in technology should make competition for reduced resources even less necessary whereas cooperation against the advancing ice will become necessary. 

Poul Anderson usually ends a novel optimistically but anticipating his twin values of freedom and diversity, not universal peace. How does he end this novel? I cannot remember from previous readings. (Peace, of course, should be dynamic, not static, but our competitive economy encourages aggression and almost equates peace with death. Do I exaggerate? No.) 

Friday, 27 June 2025

Red And Gold

"...the sky was ablaze with red and gold streaked across aquamarine.
"...the brilliant shore slip[ped] by across the mother-of-pearl mirror of the sea."

"The yacht...slid quietly across the broad bay, now lemon and gunmetal in the last light, towards the anchorage. The small township beneath the mountains was already dark with indigo shadow in which a sprinkling of yellow lights showed."

I quote these passages because they share the quality of colourful natural description that we regularly find in Poul Anderson's works. However, this is our "other reading" time of the evening. The passages are quoted from:

Ian Fleming, "The Hildebrand Rarity" IN Fleming, For Your Eyes Only (London, 1964), pp. 150-191 AT pp. 187, 189.

How many people associate James Bond with this kind of descriptive prose? And how many also realize that "The Hildebrand Rarity" and a couple of other short stories are not Secret Service adventures but Ian Fleming trying out other kinds of writing albeit with his mascot, 007, remaining on stage?

Flandry is not Bond in space but read both anyway.

You Who Come After

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 3.

Words engraved on a bronze plaque on a wall inside the Time Vault:

"TO YOU WHO COME AFTER: THE WORLD IS ON THE EDGE OF THE FINAL WAR, THE WAR WHICH I THINK WILL DESTROY ALL CIVILIZATION AND HURL MAN, IF MAN SURVIVES, BACK TO SAVAGERY AND IGNORANCE..." (p. 40)

It continues...

Many sf works, including several by Poul Anderson, are set during recovery from a nuclear war. This plaque reminds me of an episode in the live action Planet of The Apes TV series. Someone finds a video beginning with something like "We, the scientists, greet you..." The video introduces a store of scientific knowledge, like the Vault, but a gorilla general destroys it. The ancient knowledge is dangerous. It is taboo in Vault...

The scientist who composed the words on the plaque did not record his name. Ronwy thinks that he wanted to be thought of as "'...the whole human race...,'" (p. 41) bequeathing knowledge. If I were in his place, then I also would prefer anonymity. I would not have created all the knowledge that I was transmitting.

At the end of Alan Moore's V For Vendetta, Evey can unmask the dead anarchist terrorist, V, but does not because who he might have been is greater than who he is. Or something. If I were Evey, then I would want to know something about the individual who had been V while at the same time remembering that the public image and the legend were always greater than the individual who had created them.

In this post, we have compared a novel, a TV episode and a comic strip. The sky is the limit.

See also:

V On Stage

Dredd And V

Who Are No 1 And V?

Dredd And V III (I can't find a II)

Vault And Palace

Vault Of The Ages, Chapter 3.

On a dark night, Ronwy takes Carl, Tom and Owl into the Time Vault. We remember three chapter headings in The Time Machine:

10 WHEN THE NIGHT CAME
11 THE PALACE OF GREEN PORCELAIN
12 IN THE DARKNESS

The building that the Time Traveller calls a "Palace" is a museum but its books have decayed into hanging rags resembling tattered flags whereas Carl by contrast sees glassed-in shelves:

"...of books from floor to ceiling..." (p. 40)

Nevertheless, we feel that Anderson's characters walk in the footsteps of Wells'. Carl seeks means to resist the Lann. The Time Traveller seeks means to resist the Morlocks. After leaving the Morlocks and Eloi, the Time Traveller flees into the further future. Anderson's Martin Saunders is obliged to flee into an even further future. Wells and Anderson span the twentieth century. We have come a long way with them.