Friday, 2 September 2016

Firedrake

Poul Anderson, Three Hearts And Three Lions (London, 1977), Chapter Ten.

Apparently, "'...firedrake...'" (p. 63) just means "dragon." In Alan Moore's Miracleman, it means a pyrokinetic.

Holger has to face the fantasy cliche of a dragon. Does Poul Anderson describe the dragon so that we recognize it and also learn something new about it? -

thunderclap wingbeats;
fifty feet long;
scale-armored muscle;
snake head large enough to swallow a man;
bat wings;
iron talons;
flame and smoke from the fanged mouth;
a whiff of sulfur dioxide;
hissing "...like an angry locomotive..." (p. 64);
afraid of water;
therefore, unable to chase Holger and co into a river;
vulnerable to helmetfuls of water thrown into its mouth;
is not killed but retreats.

How can its metabolism generate fire? (Digestion is like slow combustion. The dragon can speed it up?) How can it fly? In an sf series, Anderson carefully explains how a heavy body is able to fly.

Don't take refuge in a cave. The dragon can suffocate you in there. Yes, we learn quite a lot about a dragon in two pages of Anderson's text.

5 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I think the most difficult bit to swallow (ahem!) about a dragon is that it can fly! How can its wings propel so massive a body thru the air?

And I remember Holger's cleverness about how to handle a dragon breathing fire--throw water into its gullet! Metabolism is a kind of slow burning by the body? Then a dragon breathing fire must have a VERY fast metabolism. That would also imply it needs to eat large amounts of food at frequent intervals.

Sean

Jim Baerg said...

So, is a dragon more like a cast iron stove with fire always in it, or like an oil lamp with fuel in it & fire only at the mouth?
If the first you fight it by putting the fire out, if the second you fight it by setting fire to the fuel inside.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Jim!

It might be easy to end up feeling sorry for dragons! They seem to be so vulnerable! (Laughs)

Ad astra! Sean

Jim Baerg said...

We are making dragons sound like 'glass cannons'.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/GlassCannon

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Jim!

A glass cannon would be very fragile! Never thought of it like that before.

I'm reminded of poor mad Charles VII of France (r. 1380-1422). One of his delusions during his truly pathetic bouts of insanity was being convinced he was made of glass. And hence of being terrified of getting smashed.

Ad astra! Sean