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 25 August 2020

Hyborian Bridge 133


In perhaps the best and most spine-tingling Kull tale, The Shadow Kingdom, there are many mentions of the labyrinthine ways of old. The archaic nature of Kull’s palace is inlaid with “inscrutable wisdom” and “inhuman powers.”

Almost akin to CL Moore’s Black God’s Kiss, the cold-blooded reptile urge underlies all human strivings, and the archaism is unnerving.

For as he watched, Tu’s face became strangely dim and unreal; the features mingled and merged in a seemingly impossible manner. Then, like  fading mask of fog, the face suddenly vanished and in its stead gaped and leered a monstrous serpent’s head! (King Kull, page 34)

The serpent is sinuous, supple and sexual in a degenerate way. Mention is even made that the original expelling of the serpent-men led them to mate with snakes in the bush so that their race would eventually become extinct.

Throughout the story, the uneasy sense of time-lost illusion haunts Kull. When Brule repeats the phrase, Ka nama kaa lajerama, Kull cannot remember having heard the phrase. But, says Brule, it is in “the soul mind that never dies.”

The serpent is a strong predecessor who haunts Man’s memories and, when Kull sees that his own form has been taken by one of the arcane priests, he babbles,

“Am I a figment of thought?”

Brule brutally wrenches him back to reality with the pragmatic, “Slay him!” All figments vanish when the blood flies. Quite a similar scene occurs at the end of Milius’s Conan (1982), where Thulsa Doom’s hypnotic utterances sap Conan’s will to fight. He is saved when he glances at his sword which serves to slay his enemies, regardless of the state of his head.

The serpents are real in our own race memories, and those are the “inhuman powers of archaism”. Our modern reality seeks to do without archaic powers of the sinuous kind by placing us in an inductive mirror of illusions.

This resolvable space generates compulsive behaviour of the head – numerical, algorithmic. But even here the serpent cannot be ignored since it is like ignoring the symmetries and rhythms of the human physique.

The serpent is our primordial ancestor, and within the mirror a profane version is manifested. It is not so much the serpent-men of The Shadow Kingdom with men’s bodies as it is the man-serpent from the Conan tale The God in the Bowl (Conan #7)

 
CH4


The head in this case is classically ideal, somewhat like a PR poster! But flailing along powerfully is the inhuman reptile urge of primeval rhythm.

The compulsions of the modern head in the mirror of illusions (electromagnetism) cannot deny the primal origins. It is the primal fertility that takes profane form when it is subject to the sterile illusion (see “clean meat” P130)

The modern scene affects a sterility that cannot exist, and that is a product of the mirror of illusions. By welcoming fertility in all its decadence and morbidity, the convincing illusions of the modern system are effectively banished.

Banished by the fields, by honest dirt that symbolises a fertility that is physically pure and clean (quote at end of A Boy and his Dog, “I want to get dirty so I can feel clean again”). The cycles of life and death are self-evidently there in areas that have the symmetry of fertility (such as planet Earth).


I was reading a piece by Ian Botham – ex test-cricketer all-rounder turned professional hunter – on the enemies of grouse shoots on the Scottish moors. All he is saying is that nature by-and-large should be left alone, with gamekeepers allowed to control predators in moderation. The fact that “green” spokespeople quarrel with this indicates what a fictional land they inhabit!
© BWS