Thursday 6 February 2020

Hyborian Bridge 104


I suppose fans of Howard don’t necessarily like the idea of relating his fantasy stories to the state of contemporary reality we find ourselves in? Nevertheless, if a link is there it should inevitably be found so I’ll carry on regardless.

From HB101 and HB103 it seems clear that The Skull of Silence and The Mirrors of Tuzun Thune are related. The wizard says,

“What matters men’s forgetfulness of you when you have forgotten yourself in the silent worlds of death? Gaze into my mirrors and be wise.” (page 174)

The mirrors have no harmonic sound (silence of the cosmos) because they are images with no sequence of events, representing the ego. A world of mirrors would therefore effectively be a cosmic silence of straight-line (electromagnetic) management and planning, run by acolytes.

So, the question to ask is: is electromagnetism mirrors? That question is difficult to answer; perhaps the best is to go forward on that assumption and see where it lands. A camera – as I think was mentioned previously – is the same as a mirror except that the image isn’t inverted. A self-drive car would operate with cameras analogously to a driver using mirrors.

Basically, all these apparatuses bend light, and light is composed of straight lines. Hence you’re in a perspective universe that could be an illusion, but it is managed, planned and run by acolytes.

The reason it’s not an illusion is that it is managed, planned and run by acolytes. IE the more straight line things get the easier they are to run that way. For example, self-drive cars will probably only ever operate in straight line areas because the illusion of reality is so much greater. The question is: is that futuristic world just a convincing illusion (of the ego)?

It looks real (like The 5th Element) but it is really composed of light. What’s missing is the moon and the blood-cycle of decay and regeneration in twilight landscapes where Diana roams, hunting-bow over her shoulder, deer in her sights and hounds ready for the kill.


One universe is appearance (order, Apollo); the other is reality (blood, Artemis). One is the haed (ego); the other is the body (lithe huntress). Clearly, the latter is very close to Howard’s so it must have a fantasy element which the other doesn’t.

Yes, but an illusion is not the same as reality; it only has the appearance (Apollo) of reality. It is a universe of cosmic silence and the ego. That universe I think can be related to stories like The Skull of Silence and The Mirrors of Tuzun Thune. In other words, Howard’s world exists in a moonlit landscape where the wizards are somewhat like our solar scientists who operate with illusions.

To Howard moonlight, as at the battle scene in Swords of the Purple Kingdom, symbolises and actually is reality. Blood and decay and the lithe body in action. This world is also harmonic and is exposed to the sounds and sights of the cosmos of tumbling stars. It is not run by the ego (of wizards) but by the sword and battle-axe of heroic figures.

To a world of illusion that world is fantasy; but in another sense it is the cosmic reality we’ve lost through illusion. The reality of cosmic sound (silence.)

In a world of electromagnetic illusion, the straight line is reality. So, for example, in the US election all the candidates appear to be managers. They want spending (infrastructure) and Biden was asking Sanders to cost his proposals.

Where are the candidates who want less government and more self-organization by communities? They don’t exist because that is not their reality (illusion). Where is the America of Lil Abner that is not so much political as mythical?

That is not the America that “they” care about. A world of electromagnetic illusions also faces “the riddle of steel” (prev.) since it is aimed at the head. Words feed the ego through “the mirror of nothingness (electromagnetism). The assumption is that one should trust one’s head rather than assume the head may be deceived – as in “the riddle of steel”.

So, the idea of a universe of the ego, managed by acolytes, one could easily think of as a fantastic illusion. I remember as a kid the only TV program I remember watching was the 60s Batman, since we had no TV and went to watch at a friend’s home. The program has always been a mythic memory. Marvel Comics also had a mythic impact.

The age of myth is probably something like 7 or 8 when the power of perception is quite great (Harlan Ellison used to say he “was still that kid”). What you notice nowadays is that the age factor is much less defined in that people watch social media/youtube from about 4 and you almost might suppose that the risk is that they miss “the age of myth” entirely, which is really apprehending something that has a lifelong impact in shaping values and tastes.

These memories, for good or ill, inform my mature mythology. What are they but pure fantasy? Memories should not be the product of ego, but of a vague apprehension of cosmic harmony, in sound, sight, action.

This is what I get from the 60s films of Jean-Luc Godard; at this point there are a couple on order and are due in about a week. Meanwhile, at