John Norman - Telnarian Histories 01 - The Chieftain.pdf

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norman, john - telnarian histories 01 - the chieftain v3.0.rtf
etext v3.0 based on 1st print edition, 1991, ISBN 0-446-36149-6
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Revision History:
v 1.0 spell-checked scan; saved as RTF because of extensive italics use.
v 3.0 proofread against DT, complies w/ ABEB versioning standard 3.0
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The Telnarian Histories
The Chieftain
John Norman
***
This book is dedicated
to all who disapprove of blacklisting.
***
PROLOGUE
"In this year war was carried on with the Aatii."
—The Annals.
The above entry is not untypical of the dark and troubled times to which I should like, in what
follows, to devote my attention.
I suppose one might distinguish between history and chronicle, though the distinction must surely
be one of grades, or shades, rather than of kinds, for there is seldom a history which does not
clearly contain chronicle, nor a chronicle which does not, at least implicitly, recount a history.
We do not know, incidentally, who kept the Annals. Quite possibly they were set down by a
succession of individuals, men who occupied remote, fortified places, places within which the
most precious of the treasures of Telnaria might be kept safe, the ability to read and write.
"In this year war was carried on with the Aatii."
This entry, with which I have begun, surely approximates to pure chronicle. There is doubtless an
explanation for this. The men of the remote, fortified places had, for most practical purposes,
turned their backs on history and the world. Such matters had little left in them to interest them.
They had little to do with their studies, and the pursuit of their personal salvation, to assure
which they may have withdrawn from the world. Also, they probably knew very little about the
world they had left, perhaps some gossip, some remarks, picked up from merchants or traders.
Yet they did keep the chronicles. Indeed, were it not for such sources we would know much less
than we do about the dark and troubled times.
"In this year war was carried on with the Aatii."
If one listens carefully, perhaps one can hear, beneath this laconic sentence, the ships, the roar of
the engines, the bursting of the shells, the blare of trumpets, the hiss of weaponry, the running
feet, the screams, even the clash of steel. Not all entries in the Annals, of course, are so terse. I
have chosen this one because, you see, my story begins in the year referred to in this particular
entry, the year, one of several, actually, in which war was carried on with the Aatii.
I have wondered sometimes why men tell stories. I suspect they have always done so. In the
beginning perhaps they danced them, or drew them. A man is, after all, a story-telling animal.
One needs no reason to tell a story, or to sing. Those are nice things about stories, and about
singing. Perhaps the story, the song, like seeing, and thinking and breathing, if you like, is its
own justification, its own reason.
I shall, in what follows, speak in simple, familiar terms, for these are the terms in the light of
which we live and understand ourselves, and the worlds, both those without and those within. I
shall ignore then the terrors of distance, the puzzles and paradoxes of time, her crevices, the
clashing and grinding of her walls, the opening and closing, like the coming and going of tides,
of her gates. Though these figure in our story they have little to do with it.
It is raining outside. Water runs down the casement. It gathers on the sill.
I think the vastness of it is what is most frightening. Perhaps, in the corner of some droplet of
water, perhaps even one at hand, one lingering on the sill of the casement, some tiny,
infinitesimal creature, one in which has just arisen the first glimmering of consciousness,
trembles at the awesomeness of his universe. And perhaps we, ourselves, and all our time and
space, and our history, and all the vastness of our own universe, those plenitudes before which
we tremble, lie only upon another sill, inhabiting merely another droplet, somewhere. But the
magnitude of man is not measured in the quantity of his being, that he lingers for such and such a
time in such and such a place, a small time, in a small place, or that his frame contains so many
cubits or less, but in his heart and soul, as tiny, as foul and dark as they may be. He, in his tiny
place and time, may do deeds, and in these deeds he stands among the loftiest, farthest of stars. A
smile, a gesture, an upraised fist, a laugh, a song, with these things, seemingly so small in
themselves, he exceeds dimensions, he challenges all time and space.
Greatness, you see, is not measured in size. The magnitude of man is not measured in cubits.
We must understand that, in the dark and troubled times, the billions of worlds met, in the course
of their turnings, their billions of mornings and evenings, and seasons came and went, as usual,
and vegetations waxed and waned, as was their wont, and so, too, men, and other creatures,
some like men and some not so like them, came to be, and suffered and died. Those times, you
see, were not so different from our own.
I have not written this history to edify or instruct. I have not written it to praise or blame. I have
not even written it, really, to explain, or understand, for who can, truly, understand such things.
My purpose, rather, is a simple one, merely to tell what happened.
Early in the dark and troubled times the wings of the Telnarian empire still spread over galaxies.
My story begins on the provincial world of Terennia, in an arena.
Notes pertaining to manuscript 122B Valens:
1. The Chronicler:
We do not know, at this time, at any rate, the identity of the chronicler, or historian, responsible
for this particular version of the Telnarian histories. This, however, is common with the various
manuscripts. It is interesting to speculate on this. Perhaps, when they sang, or wrote, they knew
well who they were, and it did not occur to them that their names might be lost, blown away in
the winds of time. Perhaps they thought their names would stand forever. Indeed, how many
founders of cities and nations, occupants of thrones, commanders of armies, wielders of scepters,
discoverers and claimers of worlds, have not subscribed to a similar delusion. In most cases, we
do not even know who named the planets in our own system. How many immortals have died,
how many imperishable gods, and peoples, have perished! But one suspects that the reasons lay
elsewhere, that the investment of the time, and toil, the pain and love, was not to procure the
glory of their own names, but to make a thing of meaning, of beauty and significance. These are
not the men to whom "I made this" is all-important; rather they are the men to whom "This has
been made" is all that matters. It is not even clear whether the chronicler, or historian, here is a
single person, or more than one person, nor whether the manuscript was written rather at the
same time, or has been added to, and glossed, at different times. Clearly the chronicler, or
chroniclers, had at their disposal various manuscripts, and documents, which, as far as we know,
are no longer extant. Some scholars, and commentators, from various details, have speculated
that the narrator's relationship to the story may be more intimate than appears upon the surface.
This seems to me unlikely, but much is obscure.
2. The manuscripts:
We have known of the existence of the Telnarian histories for several hundred years, but,
initially, only in virtue of some references, which seemed quite clear, and several seeming
allusions, less clear, more disputable, in certain classical authors, notably Asclepiodorus, Singer
of Olrion; Chi Tung, to whom is attributed the founding of the imperial academy at Hinan;
Umake, counselor of Kreon, lord of Corathon; Philip, count of the Taurine Marches, who
apparently composed his works in exile; Regius, tutor of Urik, tyrant, and third elector, of Kash;
Leland, courtier of Lemanthine; and Heiband, the Benellian, who once served as secretary to
Loren, prince of the Rosterdam Gates.
The first actual Telnarian histories, or fragments thereof, came to light four hundred years ago,
when a cache containing them was accidentally opened by workmen engaged in the construction
of the Andirian Canal. As sometimes happens, once the existence of such things is indisputably
established, and authenticated, a serious search was undertaken in numerous archives, libraries
and treasuries. To the embarrassment of scholarship more than forty versions of the histories, or
fragments thereof, were found cataloged, and apparently forgotten, in almost as many locations.
The manuscripts, of course, were derivative, being copies of copies, and so on. One of the
puzzles concerning many of these manuscripts is why their existence was not more clearly
established, and understood, earlier. The various versions are clearly of different ages, and
different hands. It is not as though they were written at the same time, or copied at the same time,
or even cataloged, at the same time. Perhaps original documents, suggested by the classical
references, were forged, but, if so, why were these "forgeries" not brought to light, that their
perpetrators might then attempt to reap what profits they might? Some of these fragments tend to
reciprocally authenticate one another, and yet others seem utterly independent. It is almost as if
these various manuscripts were placed, in one century or another, in one location or another.
Their origins remain obscure. Perhaps, somewhere, in some dim archive, other such manuscripts
exist, remaining to be found. It is difficult to say.
The current manuscript is that known as the Valens manuscript, because it was found in the ducal
library of the district of Valens, one of the minor duchies of the Talois Confederation. It is known
as 122B, following the system devised by the collegium of Harcourt, to which institution the
original trove, consisting of more than one hundred manuscripts, primarily fragments, was
referred.
This particular manuscript, portions of which I have prepared for the press, is unusual among the
manuscripts, as it deals on a personal level with affairs of states, movements of men, the destinies
of nations and worlds, such matters as seen by individuals involved in them. In such a sense the
vast pageants involved, the sweeping biographies of empires and peoples, are only dimly hinted
at. What a tiny particle of space and time falls within the brief purview of any individual! We are
but specks on a cosmic sea. In this manuscript one discerns, and this seems precious to me, not so
much the vast tides of time and space, the configuration of those awesome seas, understood in
terms of charts of currents and winds, but what it was, at a given time, to be embarked upon
them.
The manuscript may have been glossed. I have, in certain places, set certain materials in italics.
These italicized portions of the manuscript almost invariably provide background information
without which certain actions and events in the story would be obscure. Some regard the glosses
as interpolations by an independent hand, to supply later readers with political, historical and
religious background. My hypothesis with respect to such passages is that they are by one, and
the original, author, and constitute glosses, if they are even to be understood as such, which
seems to me unlikely, on his own work. Certain statistical studies of a linguistic nature support
this theory, that of the single author, both in the more narrative and in the more expository or
explanatory remarks, without which the narrative passages might seem less intelligible.
3. Telnaria:
There seems no reason to doubt the existence, at one time, of Telnaria, and her empire. Too many
records, too many allusions, too many stories and legends, too many ancient place names, too
much linguistic evidence, embedded in current languages, too much archaeological evidence,
now-silent beacons, debris, claiming stones, coins struck by barbarous kings bearing the devices
of an empire perhaps even then little but a memory and a legend, support the hypothesis.
In the legends Telnaria seems mythic to us, but, indubitably, at the bottom of such myths there
once lay a far-flung, bright, formidable, perhaps even terrible reality. The location of the empire
in time and space remains obscure, as do those modalities of being themselves. It is usually
assumed that Telnaria has fallen, and long ago. But this is not actually clear, even in the
manuscripts. Perhaps the empire has only drawn back a border, that it will later fling forth again,
with a hand of iron. Some think that the Telnarian world lies before us, that it is our own world,
others think that it was once our world, others that it recurs, coming again and again, perhaps as
our own might, in the cycles of nature, in years so large and meaningless as to baffle our
comprehension. Some speculate, interestingly, as suggested above, that the empire never fell, but
survives, that it exists even today, and that we are but a lonely, isolated world, forgotten, or
neglected, for a time, and that one day the ships will return, demanding their claiming stones,
their taxes, their tribute. Who knows. Perhaps Telnaria lies at our elbow, and at that of other
worlds, as well, our sleeves perhaps brushing, now and again, a column, unnoticed, in a temple
not antique but one fresh and golden, consecrated but a moment ago. Can you not see the
processions of robed priests, detect the bells, hear the chanting of the choirs, smell the incense?
Universes, you see, might not be parallel, or fully so. Perhaps, now and then, they touch one
another, and a corridor, as sudden as the snapping of an electric spark, forms a crossroads
between realities, perhaps intersecting for a moment, or perhaps longer, perhaps forever, at
certain points. Are there such portals, such gates? Let us believe that Telnaria is past, for I would
not care to glimpse the pennons of her fleets upon the horizon, nor hear the tread of her legions in
the night.
In our own small galaxy there are more than a billion stars, and for each of these stars, another
galaxy can be glimpsed beyond.
Sometimes one is afraid.
Which of us, at one time or another, has not heard the cry of a distant voice? Which of us has
never heard a footfall behind him?
Once, long ago, you see, when I was very young, for the briefest instant, my sleeve did brush
such a column.
CHAPTER 1
It is odd, sometimes, how one notices little things, the way a step is splintered, the eleventh,
rather at the corner, on the climb to the platform, how a cloud, over the rooftops, seen from the
height of the platform, moves in the wind, like a flag, how a board is stained near a block, how
the patterns of dryness and dampness, and, here and there, a bead of dew, appear on the fiber of
the rope, and exactly how it hangs from the hook, slack, bent a little, not yet straight, not yet taut.
One supposes such things are there to be noticed always, the lie of a pebble, the way a blade of
grass bends, such things, but often one does not notice them, nor, I suppose, generally, should
one. There is not much economy in doing so. Often other things are more important, much more
so, the shadows cast by the great stones, the scent of a cat in the wind, the hum of an engine, far
off, in the darkness. But when one has nothing much else to do, and one must choose how to
spend a last handful of perceptions, one, or at least some, grow curious about little things, a
splinter, a stain on a board, a drop of dew on a rope. It is surprising to realize just how
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