"The fog rolled swiftly toward Domkirk; and none in the city noticed that there was no wind to drive it." (p. 4)
Mistress Randa, an outbacker woman with a Skill, controls insects that repeatedly gather dew, then exude fog-generating droplets. For once, in an Anderson work, it is the absence of a wind that is significant although no one in Domkirk notices.
Gathering to be evacuated, the citizens:
"...shuddered in the pre-dawn wind." (p. 25)
When the evacuation has been completed:
"...Domkirk stood empty of everything save the wind." (ibid.)
After three references to wind, I look out for more and find that, from Domkirk, Ridenour is taken to a place where treetops stretch to the horizon:
"...moving and murmuring in the breeze." (p. 27)
Probably these references to the wind and a breeze are not very significant. However, in general, the wind does play an active role in Poul Anderson's texts which is why I have become hyper-sensitive to it.
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
The thought I had here was wondering if someone as wary as Dominic Flandry would have noticed that moving cloud--despite the lack of any wind? If so, I can well imagine him taking swift and decisive action!
Ad astra! Sean
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