Our old friend, the Milky Way, returns three times in the first half of Poul Anderson's The Avatar:
"...the Milky Way, the nebulae, the galaxies beyond our galaxy...." (XVI, p. 140);
"...the Milky Way gleamed around its lanes of darkness..." (XVIII, p. 160);
"The Milky Way rivered in silver, nebulae glowed where new suns and planets were being born, a sister galaxy flung her faint gleam across Ginnungagap." (XXIII, p. 201)
Poul Anderson compares intergalactic space to the Ginnungagap of the Norse creation myth. I think that this myth comes closest to scientific cosmogony (see here):
void;
within the void, opposed material forces, heat and cold;
interaction between the opposed forces;
emergence of life and consciousness from the interaction;
thus, no conscious creator in the beginning;
eventual destruction of the worlds by fire;
renewal;
a cosmic cycle.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeletePoul Anderson wrote: "The Milky way RIVERED in silver,..." I think "torrented" instead of "rivered" would have been better. Because "torrented" seemed stronger, more emphatic.
Sean
Sean,
ReplyDeleteI think he does have "torrented" back among previous quotes?
Today we will be in the Lake District for the day but I am mentally drafting the next post.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI'm almost sure I saw PA use "torrented" somewhere. And have a good time at the Lakes!
Sean
Thank you. Departure imminent.
ReplyDelete