(Swedish Valborg.)
While the name Walpurgis is taken from the eighth-century English Christian missionary Saint Walburga, Valborg, as it is called in Swedish, also marks the arrival of spring.
-copied from here.
"Two days from San Francisco, they encountered a fog bank. When the early November night had fallen, there was no visibility beyond the rail, and the Valborg made her way at reduced speed."
-Poul Anderson, Murder Bound (New York, 1962), i, p. 1.
There are several evocative/atmospheric words and phrases:
San Francisco, with its many connotations but also the by now familiar setting of Anderson's detective novels;
fog and November night, both appropriate for Chapter One, page 1, of a mystery novel;
Valborg, suggesting Valhalla and turning out to mean Walpurgis.
The scene is set.
The bow lookout wears a pea jacket, in fact "huddles" in it. On the deck, there is "murk," hatch covers crouch and king posts are "gaunt." (p. 2) Is the viewpoint character about to see a ghost? Read on.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI think it's simpler to say the description we see at the beginning of MURDER BOUND is meant to seem OMINOUS for readers, which would be apt in a mystery!
Sean