Saturday 25 January 2014

Archopolis And Earth In Flandry's Time II

See "Archopolis And Earth In Flandry's Time," here.

We want to know more about Earth in Dominic Flandry's time but our information is limited to certain passages in Poul Anderson's texts. (I think that I speak for more Poul Anderson fans than just myself?) A Knight Of Ghosts And Shadows begins with an unusually up front statement from the omniscient narrator:

"Every planet in the story is cold - even Terra, though Flandry came home on a warm evening of northern summer. There the chill was in the spirit."
- Poul Anderson, Sir Dominic Flandry: The Last Knight Of Terra (New York, 2012), p. 342.

The two opening words immediately establish for anyone who did not already know that this is a science fiction novel. And here is a first datum about Terra, that it is cold in spirit. When we have read the novel, we should pause to remember the other planets in the story:

Diomedes, previously visited by Nicholas van Rijn;
Dennitza, newly created for A Knight...;
Chereion, its environment postulated in earlier installments but here visited for the first and last time.

Regarding Earth, A Stone In Heaven clarifies that, although nothing has occurred to reduce the extent of the oceans, the land masses have become a single city although it is one that preserves many open green spaces. The urbanized areas consist of towers stretching around the planet. The urban nexus is the capital, Archopolis, where Sir Dominic, now a Vice Admiral, lives and works. He eats breakfast looking out onto a roof garden of Terrestrial and extraterrestrial flowers, beyond them two-century old towers and, above the towers, blue sky, white clouds and sparkling aircars.

Then, unfortunately, the text must return to the plot of the novel...

1 comment:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Hi, Paul!

Yes, I agree! I too would have liked to have known more about Terra in the days of Emperor Josip and Flandry. By piecing together the texts you've been collecting we can come at a fairly good picture of what Terra was like in Flandry's lifetime.

And that bit you quoted from A KNIGHT OF GHOSTS AND SHADOWS about how
"...Flandry came home on a warm evening of northern summer. There the chill was in the spirit" made me recall a line from "Tiger by the Tail." While explaining to his captive Flandry why Prince Cerdic thought Scotha could conquer the Terran Empire due to its decadence, he said "...strength sapped by a despair too pervasive for you to realize what it is..." struck a chord with me. I was reminded of how so much of Western civilization in Europe and the US also suffers from this kind of disastrously paralyzing self doubt. Which will open the way to attack by our enemies.

Sean