LYRICS

The applications are to blameAll the people do all dayIs stare into a phone (Placebo, Too Many people)

“Take nothing but memories, leave nothing but footprints!” (Chief Seattle)

When rock stars were myths (Sandi Thom, I Wish I Was A Punk Rocker)

Machines were mice and men were lions once upon a time, Now that it's the opposite it's twice upon a time (Moondog)

Time is an illusion (Einstein)

Tuesday 31 December 2019

Hyborian Bridge 96


Believe it or not, the preceding could still relate to Howard’s Hyborian Age! A lifecycle which is ritualised then becomes sanctified as a faith, with priests and disciples. Welcome to a typical Hyborian city-state! (see next post)


In the Corinthian city where Conan first encounters the priest of Anu (#10), the rascally nobleman Murilo fears for his life when the Red Priest Nabonidus finds he has been selling state secrets (#11 Rogues in the House). Much like the later yarn of the siege of Makkalet (#s 19-25), the priest-sorcerer is the real ruler of the city’s nobility. Both are laws unto themselves, as this panel from #19 shows.




HB19

Back in #11, Murilo and Conan find themselves in league with the Red Priest when, in the house to hunt and slay him, the Red Priest’s man-ape Thack runs amock
 
As you see, the technology of mirrors figures here, as it does for the sorcerer in #20 HB20

The obvious reason is that mirrors are an optical illusion and hence the most fundamental of all technologies (P83). In this story, Nabonidus is clearly a cultivated man, and his house and garden give BWS ample scope for employing art-deco flourishes.
 
It’s not that there’s anything innately nefarious about technology. BWS’s print The Ram and the Peacock features a prism that is there to represent the fallen wizard’s broad and cultivated idealism.





(BWS says somewhere that the wizard is a fallen hero)

It’s not that mirrors or prisms are nefarious, it’s that in a world of mirrors (or prisms) the sorcerer is then the law, as opposed to the city guardians and aristocracy. The sorcerer’s law puts the devious head in a dominant position.
In Howard’s world, the barbarian is on his own ground and there is no real dominion (outside of Stygia). In both these tales, the king and the faith of the city – or cities in the case of the Tarim – hold dynastic and legitimate sway. The sorcerers may be laws unto themselves, but they also keep themselves to themselves.
Reason being, their powers are not global and omnipotent, they’re quite localised and they can be cut by naked steel. So Howard’s stories tell of a world where sorcery and barbarism and civilization are all very evenly balanced.
The cultivated sorcerer has a bond with humanity that is well illustrated by Zukala’s Daughter


Conan #15 HB21 
The bond, as I would say, is the bodily sense of line and movement that gives activity to the world. A dance of life and death. The disorder of the hunt; the strength of revival from decay. Once this bond is broken, the sorcerer enters the looking-glass world of the immaterial (sun, reflection). This is Newton’s world of the induction of technology (head). Because the head can’t deny the physique (Pictorial83), the result is physical boredom and a type of compulsion to a numerical order of a hygienic reality (of the ego), and its compulsive behaviour in a world of straight lines - sun, reflection.


Induction is the world of straight lines (speed), of compulsive behaviour by the ego - numerical or psychotic - that cannot deny its own physique. A two-faced reality of anodyne machines in a  hygienic order, and the reptilian urges underlying it (see next post)
The order is induced; it becomes a reality, replacing what was there. In Howard’s stories, the shared experience of aristocrats and priests and citizens in cities that are fairly filthy (representing decay and lifecycle) are never replaced by the sorcerous reality.
Quite similar things are seen in CL Moore’s Northwest of Earth sci-fi yarns, where the borderland cities of the Martian drylands have decrepit, derelict districts.
Northwest Smith bought his shawl in the Lakkmanda Market of Mars. It was one of his chiefest joys to wander through the stalls and stands of that greatest of marketplaces .. So many songs have been sung and so many tales written of that fascinating chaos..

He shouldered his way through the colorful cosmopolitan throng, the speech of a thousand races beating in his ears, the mingled odors of perfume and sweat and spice and food and the thousand nameless smells of the place assailing his nostrils. Vendors cried their wares in the tongues of a score of worlds. (CL Moore, Scarlet Dream, Gollancz Omnibus, page 208
Pictorial 23)
Spacetravel is only hinted at, as Northwest never sets a foot in one! It’s also true that both CL Moore – in Judgement Night  - and Leigh Brackett in her later works, raise all sorts of qualms about the clash between civilizations at different levels of technology.
In Judgement Night, the prospect of a parallel world planetoid of “resolved space” is quite close to the physical boredom that breeds psychotic behaviour.
Juille's reason told her that she had stumbled into one of the darker levels of Cyrille.. This undulating reptilian horror must be one of the hopeless addicts, wealthy enough to indulge his madness even when civilization was crumbling outside the walls.. (page 484 Pictorial 8)
Yes, because inductive worlds breed compulsive behaviour of the head. It could be a numerical compulsion; it could also be psychotic sexual behaviour as a consequence of physical boredom. There’s a scene in Frank Thorn’s Ghita of Alizarr where the sorcerer performs a bizarre sexual ritual with a reptile. We may not sleep with our iphones, but there’s a cold-blooded reptilian urge underneath the innocuous exterior.
Sorcery has an innate tendency to keep itself to itself and so breed a type of diabolical boredom. This can take the form of bizarre sex – and there are hints of it in Northwest of Earth. Northwest’s savage core of masculinity saves him from being easy prey to such beings.
So, inductive technology is sort of two-faced, a sit inhabits a hygienic order (of the compulsive head) that cannot deny its own physique and so becomes physically bored, with possible psychotic behaviour.
Inductive technology makes the assumption that no bond is required with the shared experience of people (and animals, natch) in places of power – wilderness, cities of decrepit dereliction. The bond that is the disorderly sense of line and movement that spontaneously transfigures places to a naïve ambiance.
It’s our world, and that means it’s not a type of global nervous system, as Blake’s print of Newton seems to infer (prev.) What “they” always assume is that technology can replicate reality, when really induction is nothing more than an advanced mirror (reflection) in immaterial (resolved) space.
Irresolvable space is decrepit and sultry with goblets of gloom and vaulty doom. It is space where the cycles of life and death cannot be resolved into anything less than that; the aura of decay and finality. It’s no surprise that the resolved space of a Pixar animation becomes popular but, actually, the irresolvable space of Pinocchio has an eternal vigour. The vigour born of decadence, naivety of texture in places of humble origin and dismal colour.
Where Pixar is all sorcery, classic Disney is finely balanced between the technology, the disordered expression of the barbarous lines, and the civilized restraint of the cultivated act. The fine sense of balance cannot be resolved down anything else.
The same really goes for the shared experience of people in places of power and texture and colour. It’s a type of cosmic balance that a cold-light, reptile technology of endless reflections can never have or, as Sheryl Crow sings