Lays of the Elanthian Moons (book): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (Book:MNceLEM moved to Lays of the Elanthian Moons (book)) |
m (duplicate book) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
#redirect [[Lays of the Elanthian Moons, Volume 1 (book)]] |
|||
by Celebras Eleran |
|||
'''Volume I''' |
|||
'''Lament for Katamba''' |
|||
I write these volumes for you, Arelos, my cherished mother. |
|||
You were not a follower of the moons as I have become, though |
|||
you spent countless nights in the wilds bathed in their light. |
|||
Yet you beheld the wonder in my eyes so very early when I would |
|||
gaze at the night sky, and you told me these tales those long |
|||
years ago to lull me into sleep. Though my studies have shown |
|||
that these fanciful stories might not be wholly accurate, they |
|||
remain at the depths of my calling. Wherever you are now, I |
|||
hope you still remember to look up from time to time at wondrous |
|||
Xibar, and see in its deepest blues my eyes smiling at you. |
|||
<pre> |
|||
Greenswards shimmering under glinting light |
|||
From silvery clouded sun-soaked mortal-home, |
|||
An emerald eye ever spinning, |
|||
Was Phelim's plan, fair Katamba. |
|||
Its dense forests rose dark and towering, |
|||
All unblemished, no axe-hewn scars. |
|||
Rowan trees whispered of rest and slumber |
|||
While hooves trod silent, hushed upon pine needles. |
|||
And Lemicus danced through dells languorous |
|||
In the sheen of starlight shifting down |
|||
From Tamsine's Tears, her trim, sinuous |
|||
Limbs, stirring wildly the luminous airs |
|||
That ringed her shape like sheeting rain. |
|||
From mountain tarn mirroring snowcaps |
|||
To sucking bog solemn and wind-swept, |
|||
Burns and brooklets, clear becks and gills, |
|||
Rivulets cascading into rushing streams, |
|||
Each lake and mere, Lemicus nurtured. |
|||
And spindly-legged fawns sported and gamboled, |
|||
While dulcet Faenella dandled and cosseted them. |
|||
Cooing mourning doves called quietly |
|||
As Kuniyo passed 'neath their arbours. |
|||
A pleasance for the gods, peaceful and untainted, |
|||
Katamba shone down, turning in the heavens |
|||
Heedless of Elanthia's strife, a hope-laden sign |
|||
For mortal eyes moist with sorrow. |
|||
Aeons passed peacefully, long ages of mortal years; |
|||
The sun shone warmly, skies boldly azure. |
|||
Farmers tilled loamy soil while fishermen sailed, |
|||
And towns were raised, towering skyward. |
|||
No shrike's call was heard to shiver the night's repose. |
|||
No poisoned fang pierced the souls of men |
|||
with venomous barb. Vipers not nor asps were found. |
|||
Waxing placid the world peacefully slumbered. |
|||
On a time when Katamba towards the endless stars turned, |
|||
Last sliver of emerald sliding into shadows, |
|||
Elanthian eyes last looked upon it's grace. |
|||
Immortals were absent, man's needs calling them below, |
|||
And the fourth shining moon, Phelim's smallest |
|||
Whose name is now forgotten, nestled behind Katamba. |
|||
Gone from mortal sight, its glimmer paled and ashen, |
|||
The ivory-hued orb its end awaited. |
|||
A faint pulsing first heralded the birth. |
|||
One side of the moon surging and heaving. |
|||
Delicate fissures appeared darkly on the pallid skin, |
|||
Running ever larger from a rupturing peak. |
|||
Then a mammoth shattering, and the moon burst asunder. |
|||
Ominous and glistening an ebon snout emerged, |
|||
Wings twitched and limbs flailed. The worm rent its shell. |
|||
The final broken shards were flung into the void. |
|||
It's birth-home splintered, the beast, scales sparkling, |
|||
Still slick its wings with wet, slithered and tumbled to Katamba. |
|||
Eyes flashed about with cunning. Flicking sharply |
|||
Was it's scarlet tongue, scales polished black. |
|||
From it's nostrils arose noxious vapors reeking of |
|||
Ash and brimstone. It's empty gullet grumbled. |
|||
Along its snout, lean and grinning, |
|||
Lodged a shell-shard, last remains of broken moon, |
|||
Slickened with birth-blood. Slapping with talons sharp, |
|||
The shard was thrown, shield was hurled away. |
|||
Fir trees it rove, leafy frith it felled, |
|||
As the holt was covered, with hard moon-stone helm. |
|||
The drake forhungered, drawn to Katamba's essence, |
|||
Slithered with pleasure to slake its thirst. |
|||
The black serpent, emboldened by the quietude |
|||
The waters drained, the wooded wolds burnt. |
|||
Ablaze in flames, belching gases rising from its maw, |
|||
Its teeth glittering from torrents of red flames, |
|||
The beast took wing, brazen with fervourous lust. |
|||
Wrack and ruin it wrought with delight, |
|||
Consuming tall shaws, scouring the grasses. |
|||
Aloft over Katamba, its languid neck |
|||
Craning hither and yon, turning crimson what was green. |
|||
Baleful Dragon's gaze no bent escaped. |
|||
The frenzied beast folds and slades devoured. |
|||
A single haven was saved from fiery demise, |
|||
The shield, sun-hardened shard from Dragon's-womb, |
|||
The hidden holt harboured from scathing fire. |
|||
A flickering light flared round Katamba's girth, |
|||
Like the auroral flame ringing an eclipsing moon. |
|||
Mages on Elanthia, mystics and soothsayers, |
|||
Were struck by visions, streaming with fiery clouds. |
|||
Circling twice Elanthia, the seared husk of Katamba |
|||
A sickle-blade grew for seers mortal. |
|||
Where once a leaf-green orb glowed soothingly, |
|||
Blackened and cinder-strewn the blasted moon appeared. |
|||
It's fires still raging, flaming red was its aura, |
|||
As if new-born twin nodding to Yavash. |
|||
Sages knew not the cause, how serpent's breath begat ruin. |
|||
The shadow over Katamba no shaman could pierce. |
|||
Drakes belching forth flames, the dreams of prophets filled, |
|||
Fey and bewildered they fell in dread. |
|||
Burning groves they sensed, a blackened vale. |
|||
Glades vanishing, glens and thickets. |
|||
Scanning the heavens, they scried for signs, |
|||
The white moon had vanished, wisps of dust in its place. |
|||
In the gloaming light, glowing Katamba, |
|||
Wan and umbraged, grew withered and died. |
|||
Immortals as well marked the deathknell. |
|||
Their eyes from their work upwards to heavens turned. |
|||
The flames consuming, flew they to Xibar. |
|||
Waters there they gathered, the woods of Katamba to save. |
|||
But life was gone, lost to dragon's-breath. |
|||
Cinders and ashes left sodden and caked, |
|||
Were sole remains of sylvan life, |
|||
Once blazes were quenched, blasts extinguished. |
|||
"The Dragon is sated," said Drogor and Ushnish, |
|||
"Let us trouble it not, triumph will not be found." |
|||
Phelim was wrathful, fain would fight the beast. |
|||
The worm its life weregild would forfeit. |
|||
The serpent had fled, seeking new fields to despoil. |
|||
Pupils twinkling with pulsing blood-lust, |
|||
Its fleshy tongue flittered over its grinning fangs. |
|||
Looming in its vision was Elanthia's glory. |
|||
Fear that was shameful was by Truffenyi's rede |
|||
Wrested from the gods. To wreak vengeance |
|||
Storm-thewed Everild and steely-eyed Kuniyo, |
|||
Dulcet-voiced Peri'el, and dread Rutilor, |
|||
The gods hied to battle, girt in silvern armor. |
|||
Mortals trembled, and mountains fell into the seas. |
|||
The stars were hidden, steam billowing |
|||
From the serpent's fiery breast. Seas churned from the lost moon, |
|||
Drogor reveled to drown hapless souls. |
|||
The worm spread wide its wings powerful, |
|||
Talons sharpened, teeth flashing keen, |
|||
Its foes awaiting, fearless and terrible. |
|||
Seven days and more they fought the serpent's fire, |
|||
No sight of rest, sun enfurled by |
|||
Storm-clouds towering, by steam-clouds red. |
|||
The weakened beast, worthy enemy, |
|||
Did Phelim catch, fires quieted, |
|||
His sand he cast, slitted eyes did drowse. |
|||
In Elanthia's depths locked they the Dragon, |
|||
Cold to vanquish, rekindle the life-hearth, |
|||
Peri'el its keeper placating with melody. |
|||
His vengeance loosed, vigour lessened, |
|||
Moon-father wept for Katamba, mourned his broken pearl. |
|||
In comfort and solace, Kertigen lief would |
|||
Hammer a new moon, a haven for the gods. |
|||
Though sore was his ruth, sadly Phelim declined. |
|||
"Katamba must remain, turning ever in our thoughts. |
|||
A signal for vigilance, sign of our failures past." |
|||
When finally Katamba full-faced looked down, |
|||
The eyes of mortals emptied their rushing tears. |
|||
Its sooty visage cinders only and ashes, |
|||
A blackened hole in the sky, a blight eternal. |
|||
Would they never see again nestled above them, |
|||
The sheen of grasslands shining in the night sky? |
|||
No gossamer clouds green-tinged, over forests? |
|||
No lakes nor rivers, lacing blue across its face? |
|||
Forever more eyes would see its husk, |
|||
Memories would fill the mind of mourning for Katamba. |
|||
Sages for eternity will see the visions |
|||
Of the drake's fire-breath, of drouth and burning. |
|||
A solitary mote, set alone at the deepest edge, |
|||
Gleamed ivory and bright. Only plot to escape the fires, |
|||
The shard from serpent's-cradle, shaken from the Dragon's snout, |
|||
White and pure it shown down, unwhithered by searing heat. |
|||
Scarce it is that shard is seen, pale scar upon the inky moon, |
|||
For the tilt of the sphere, or its turns gyrating, |
|||
The cycle of Yavash covering in shadows, |
|||
The orbit of Xibar ever confusing. |
|||
A unique event, never foreseen by the wisest mystics, |
|||
Last remaining joy, the light of the Dragon's Helm. |
|||
Some prophets still wonder, predicting the ages, |
|||
Whether below that shell life might yet survive, |
|||
For gods to reawaken, again would greenswards shimmer, |
|||
Turning emerald above us, Katamba may revive. |
|||
</pre> |
|||
[[Category:Book]] |
Latest revision as of 07:06, 19 November 2007
Redirect to: