Poul Anderson Appreciation
Wednesday, 18 February 2026
Moving Books
Tuesday, 17 February 2026
Why Should An Interstellar Civilization Be Unstable?
The Peregrine.
See:
I set out to summarize Trevelyan's account of the Stellar Union but found that I had already done it. He says that cross-purposes have clashed and that this has:
"'...meant annihilation.'" (CHAPTER XII, p. 105)
But why? Each home planet of an intelligent species must be economically self-sufficient. Trevelyan states that there are no strong economic ties with colony planets. Apparently he has said somewhere, on- or off-stage:
"'...that there was no reason for interstellar empire...'" (CHAPTER XVIII, p. 159)
- although he then makes a single exception, as a defence against ideological attack.
But surely space is big enough for starfaring races to bypass each other or to communicate, at most, at a distance? What purposes would clash? Let alone seriously enough to mean annihilation? This requires further elucidation.
I think that there would be not one civilization, not many, and that, if one went under, others would not.
Peregrine Trevelyan
I became unsure as to whether Trevelyan Micah's departure from the Coordination Service to become a Nomad had been mentioned in a text by Poul Anderson or only in an interstitial passage by Sandra Miesel. The only possible text was Star Ways/The Peregrine. However, the relevant passage, when sought for, is to be found not in the concluding CHAPTER XX but slightly earlier in CHAPTER XIX.
Trevelyan explains that the Service dislikes the Nomads because:
Tachyons
A spaceship in the normal mode can be tracked by:
Monday, 16 February 2026
An Existential Conflict And A Creative Tension
If "The Chapter Ends" is to be believed, then the next level of thesis and antithesis is between human and Hulduvian ways of controlling cosmic energy and this conflict is resolved by agreeing to divide the galaxy between oxygen- and hydrogen-breathers.
The Slain Race
Poul Anderson devotes six pages to what Trevelyan learns about the slain race from their architecture, art, pictorial record and decayed technology. They had not used automobiles, had avoided pollution and had clearly thought ahead about such problems. It pays to reread these pages carefully. Trevelyan and the readers want to know what it had been like to be those people but the whole point of the story is that this entire race is not discovered until it is extinct so its legacy must be preserved:
"We guard the great Pact, which is the heart of civilization, of society, and ultimately of life itself: the unspoken Pact between the living, the dead, and the unborn, that to the best of our poor mortal abilities they shall all be kept one in the oneness of time. Without it, nothing would have meaning and it may be that nothing would survive. But the young generations so often do not understand." (p. 251)
In another Andersonian universe, Time Patrollers have an even closer experience of the oneness of time.
Sheila is at choir and I am about to go to Zen. Next week, Monday to Friday, we will be in a hotel in Wales and I will be without my laptop.
Two Kinds Of FTL And One Of Time Travel?
In "Gypsy":
"The principles of the hyperdrive are difficult enough, involving as they do the concept of multiple dimensions and of discontinuous psi functions." (p. 20)
But, in "The Pirate":
"...once [another spaceship] went over to the tachyon mode, only a weak emission of super-light particles was available." (p. 219)
- "available" for tracking purposes.
Sound like two completely different means of faster than light travel although in the same future history series?
Elsewhere in space and time:
I Have Found That Passage
Worth quoting in full:
Farewells
"'You don't have to go, not yet,' Braganza Diane said, a little desperately because she cared for him and our trumpeter blows too many Farewells each year." (pp. 212-213)
How could we have forgotten that? Well, we do remember tones but misremember details. And this reminds us of a passage in Anderson's A Knight Of Ghosts And Shadows where Flandry and Kossara, as members of their respective armed forces, speak of remembering their dead... (Can anyone out there locate this passage?)
There are other details to notice in the opening pages of "The Pirate." The Dordogne country is not only:
"...in the fullness of time..." (p. 212)
- but also:
"...steep, green, altogether beautiful..." (ibid.)
As in The Peregrine, written earlier but set later, Trevelyan is summoned by a "machine" (p. 212) but this time he updates his terminology, referring to his summoner neither as a computing machine nor an integrator but as a "computer"! (p. 213) (We still use the archaic phrase, "time machine," because of Wells.)
After all this build-up, all that remains is to reread the story and to re-accompany Trevelyan and Smokesmith on their mission to the planet called Good Luck.
Sunday, 15 February 2026
Time Passing
The theme of time passing, past and to come continues on the following page. Diane asks Trevelyan to add the rest of this leave to his next and to spend it with her but he avoids a promise.
"...he...phoned good-bye to some neighbors - landholders, friendly folk whose ancestors had dwelt here for generations beyond counting." (p. 213)
Then Diane flies Trevelyan to Aerogare Bordeaux. I thought that "Aerogare" sounded futuristic but it is just French for "Air terminal."
When he flies to Port Nevada:
"His timing was good. Sunset was slanting across western North America and turning the mountains purple when he arrived." (ibid.)
Slanting sunset, endlessly evocative, fits the elegiac tone of a story about actual and anticipated endings.