See:
Poul Anderson Appreciation
Saturday, 16 May 2026
Languages
Strange Dimensions
The Broken Sword, XXII.
En route to Jotunheim, Skafolc and Mananaan sail further than any mortal ship ever can over chill, dead water under stars, moon and aurora. I think that, like some lost sailors in Tolkien's Middle Earth History, they sail not around the curve of the earth but straight out from the earth.
"Skafloc thought this realm could not lie on earth at all, but in strange dimensions near the edge of everything, where creation plunged back into the Gap whence it had arisen. He had the notion that this was the Sea of Death on which he sailed, outward bound from the world of the living." (p. 156)
Maybe so but I am quite certain that Skafloc did not think of "dimensions"! This is sf terminology intruding into heroic fantasy.
CS Lewis, not as author but as fictional first person narrator, quotes an entirely fictitious seventeenth century writer, Natvilcius, who hypothesizes that an angelic or demonic body:
Mananaan And The Wind
The Broken Sword, XXII.
Mananaan Mac Lir is an Irish sea god and the son of Lir, one of the Three of Ys. When Mananaan and Skafloc embark for Jotunheim, Mananaan sings to the wind, calling it to blow him on his quest. And indeed a strong breeze springs up so that the boat surges. The wind tosses Mananaan's hair.
He refers to the Tuatha De Danaan as no longer gods or at "'...their full might.'" (p. 155) These powers are fading.
The Demon Of Scattery by Poul Anderson and Mildred Downey Broxon (illustrated by Alicia Austin) is a tale told to Skafloc by Mananaan during their voyage to Jotunheim. Some of Anderson's works have extraordinary intertextual interconnections. (In sf, the Maurai future history is a work of fiction published during the course of the time travel novel, There Will Be Time.)
Stars In People
The Broken Sword, XXI.
At the council of the Sidhe:
"Eochy Mac Elathan, the Father of Stars...sat wrapped in a cloak like blue dusk, and bright points of light winked and glittered in it and in his hair and deep within his eyes. When he spread his hands, a little shower of such glints was strewn to dance on the air." (p. 150)
Why have we never noticed this guy before? He reminds us of some guests in the Old Phoenix who:
Skafloc In Ireland
The Broken Sword, XXI.
Acting on information imparted by the dead, Skafloc rows to Ireland where Lugh of the Long Hand, anticipating the arrival of:
"'...an elf...with strange tidings...'" (p. 148)
- has already:
"'...called all the Tuatha De Danaan to council in the cave of Cruachan, and the lords of other people of the Sidhe as well.'" (ibid.)
For some relevant references, see:
Snow, Sea, Sun, Stars And Sidhe
The Tuatha De Danaan remind us of Anglo-Israel theory. See:
British, English, Israelites And Trojans
But what I did not mention before was the extraordinary history of the Stone of Scone.
Wind And The Dead
The Broken Sword, XX.
When the sun sets:
"A wolf-toothed wind howled..." (p. 138)
When Skafloc and Freda depart by night to raise the dead:
"The wind skirled and bit at them. Sleet and spindrift blew off the waters in stinging sheets..." (p. 139)
"The night was gale and sleet..." (ibid.)
"...the wind skirls in icy branches..." (ibid.)
"The wind still drove sleet before it..." (ibid.)
When Skafloc prepares to raise the dead:
"Sleet blew in on the wind." (p. 141)
When he speaks the spell:
"The wind shrieked like a lynx..." (ibid.)
The wind ceases to be mentioned. One of the dead reveals that Skafloc and Freda are brother and sister. Their relationship ends but Skafloc's quest, and thus also the narrative, continues...
Friday, 15 May 2026
Scandinavian Countries
Odin and the Aesir are not mentioned although I sense their presence in the background. They were here in Northern Europe whereas it was a very different pantheon, the Olympians, that had held sway in Greece and Italy. This evening, I reread Poul Anderson's account of Odin appearing and intervening during the events of The Broken Sword, then returned to rereading Larsson's Trilogy. Sometimes it is a relief only to deal with human beings!
Freda, Wind And Odin
The Broken Sword, XIX.
While Freda waits for Skafloc to return from Elfheugh with the broken sword, wind fills a paragraph and comments on the action:
When Not To Kill
"...would too likely make a noise and thus cost him the sword." (p. 130)
A New Way
The Broken Sword, XIX.
Skafloc reflects:
"Was Freda - was the White Christ of whom she had told a little - not right in saying that wrongs only led to more wrongs and thus at last to Ragnarok; that the time was overpast when pride and vengefulness give way to love and forgiveness, which were not unmanly but in truth the hardest things a man could undertake?" (p. 132)
The New Testament can be seen as fulfilling not only the Law and Prophets but also:
Virgil's Fourth Eclogue;
the transformation of the Furies into the Kindly Ones;
the mighty lord who comes on high, all power to hold, all lands to rule, in Voluspa 65.
A Christian missionary interviewed on British TV said that, in China, he learned of a mythological figure, the Old Grandfather, then identified this being with God the Father! You have to start somewhere.
Everything is the Old Testament if we see it that way.
"David's words with Sybil's blending..."