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June 06, 2005
That's Why He's The Captain
This is by way of being a companion piece to “Like A Thousand Iron Curtains.” If you ever intended to read it for yourself, you should be aware that I’m about to give away the ending. Fair warning… THE SET-UP… If the stars are indeed suns like our own, each attended by planets like our own, this demolishes the crystal-sphere theory…Scripture has never said in so many words that Paradise lies directly above the birthplace of God’s Daughter; this was merely assumed, during those centuries when the earth was believed to be flat. Why should Paradise not be those planets of other suns, where men dwell in magnificence, men who possess all the ancient arts and flit from star to star as casually as we might go from Lavre to West Alayn? VAL NIRA’S PITCH… “I know what the damage is,” he said ardently. “I’ve not forgotten…a certain subtle engine in the ship requires quicksilver… I need no more than the volume of a man’s head. Only that, and a few repairs easily made with tools in the ship. When this cult grew up around me, I must needs release certain things I possessed, that each provincial temple might have a relic. But I took care never to give away anything important. Whatever I need is still there.” THE PRIZE… In length—height, rather, since it stood on its tail—it was about equal to our own caravel, in form not unlike a lance head, in color a shining white untarnished after forty years. That was all. But words are paltry, my lord. What can they show of clean soaring curves, of iridescence on burnished metal, of a thing which was proud and lovely and in its very shape aquiver to be off? How can I conjure back the glamor which hazed that Ship whose keel had cloven starlight? CAPTAIN ROVIC’S DECISION… Even that adamantine hull could not withstand a wagonload of carefully placed gunpowder, set off at one time. There came a crash that knocked me to my knees, and the hull cracked open. White-hot chunks of metal screamed across the slopes…I saw the Ship fall. It rolled down the slope, strewing its own mangled guts behind…More than this I have no heart to remember. CAPTAIN ROVIC EXPLAINS WHY… “I was not afraid Guzan or anyone else would seize the Ship and try to turn conqueror. We men of Montalir should well be able to deal with any such rogues. Nor was I afraid of the Paradise dwellers. That poor little man could only have been telling truth. They would never have harmed us…willingly. They would have brought precious gifts, and taught us their own esoteric arts, and let us visit all their stars.” What would you have done? posted by Justin on 06.06.05 at 01:25 AM
Comments
If the stars are indeed suns like our own, each attended by planets like our own, this demolishes Akhenaton's blasphemous attempt to establish monotheism by making the Sun the only God. Even 'twere the Sun the only God, as there are hundreds of billions of Suns swirling in hundreds of billions of galaxies throughout an infinite Universe, then there are billions upon billions of Sun Gods. So there! Akhenaton was the first to deny the Gods and the Goddesses, the first blasphemously to deny the Holy Myth of Osiris and Isis. I therefore regard him exactly as Ayn Rand regarded Immanuel Kant, as L'Abbe de Barruel regarded Adam Weishaupt, as Richard Weaver regarded the Nominalists of the 14th century. Dawn and Norma have wisely noted that Akhenaton was "the first Communist". I admire instead General Horemheb, that great Conservative who restored Egypt's holy polytheism as well as Egypt's military might, which Akhenaton had so treasonously neglected. I am a reactionary -- proudly. Steven Malcolm Anderson the Lesbian-worshipping man's-man-admiring myth-based egoist · June 6, 2005 01:15 PM The problem for many people is that they don't have time to ponder the difficult moral choices because the mundane material choices have hijacked too much of their time. The choice-obsessed consumer product culture has ruined their character and destroyed their lives. Here here! for the captain, who saw it all coming!
Eric Scheie · June 7, 2005 09:13 AM |
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If the stars are indeed suns like our own, each attended by planets like our own, this demolishes the inside-out-universe theory proposed by Cyrus ("Koresh") Read Teed at the end of the 19th century. He argued that the Earth is indeed a sphere, but a concave sphere, that we are facing inward, that the Sun, the planets, the stars, the Milky Way, are all inside the Earth, and that there is no outside.
That view directly contradicts our Western ("Faustian") Prime Symbol of infinite space, and so Dawn opposes it. Most interesting, the spiritual ramifications of it all....