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writings [2022-10-27 13:42] – [The featherless biped] concavenatorwritings [2022-10-27 13:43] (current) – [The desert of Kulla-tag] concavenator
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 “And still you confuse your aesthetic pleasures with iron laws of nature, even in a world of conjecture. I wager, for you even the caravans of Yakak'ratu would be unsufferably alien. This being has sprouted from another branch altogether of the delta of life. What is pleasurable to us would probably be disgusting to it, and viceversa; but if the selfsame happiness is achieved by different means, what makes a form of it inferior to another? Tagra, even our noble city of Grikaa, is hardly perfection embodied. I have counted more than enough beggars and cutthroats leaving my house this morning. Who can say whether the thinking mammal, in her garden-world, isn’t happier than we?” “And still you confuse your aesthetic pleasures with iron laws of nature, even in a world of conjecture. I wager, for you even the caravans of Yakak'ratu would be unsufferably alien. This being has sprouted from another branch altogether of the delta of life. What is pleasurable to us would probably be disgusting to it, and viceversa; but if the selfsame happiness is achieved by different means, what makes a form of it inferior to another? Tagra, even our noble city of Grikaa, is hardly perfection embodied. I have counted more than enough beggars and cutthroats leaving my house this morning. Who can say whether the thinking mammal, in her garden-world, isn’t happier than we?”
-==== The desert of Kulla-tag ====+==== Kulla-tag ====
  
 +« Many are the riches of the desert spreading between the Lightning and Thunder Mountains, most of them imaginary, some real; all the more precious is the knowledge of the paths and oases that allow the caravans to go from a coast to another of the ocean of dust, and yet more their control. Through the Yqsal Gate, that sun-burnt gullet of rock, pass all the commmerces between the Kru'u Union and the two other main powers of the world. In that passage where it is still impossible to maintain a paved road or a railroad, as there is no solid ground on which to lay them down, each grain of iron or coal, each palm of rope or leather, each digit of naphtha or liquor must pass on the back of caravans, and pay a tribute to the guardians of the Gate.
 +
 +Armies from all directions have pushed throughout the centuries into the heart of the burning land of the Kullaran, and while some of them returned thence, none did so as conqueror. Each army had come gleaming with bronze and steel, marching under standards and oriflammes, with their good retinue of wagons and iguanodonts. Each has saluted with trepidation the sight of the towers rising where soil and rock give way to sand.
 +
 +The Kullaran sentinels, accustomed to tell the glimmer of oases apart from mirages, to recognize the meanest trace of moisture in a field of stone, see the armies at the horizon from their watchposts at the summit of the sandstone pillars. They call each other, they warn each other; leather drums and terracotta flutes sound their signals among the dunes, and within hours the whole nation of the desert has received the message. Feasts are interrupted, quarrels are forgotten; all water is drunk, and all food is swallowed, in a moment, without speaking.
 +
 +The tents, paper-light constructions of woven feathers and hollow bones, which contain no furniture but only bags and carpets, are dismantled in an eyeblink and loaded onto the back of people and beasts. The families depart into different directions, throw onto their backs sand-colored coats; a camp of a thousand souls dissolves like brine in the sunlight. The explorers of the various tribes run on the dunes, spying every movement of the invaders, whistling to each other messages that codify their discoveries in the pattern of notes, or their own lineage; tribes bloodied by generation-long wars forget their hostility.
 +
 +The stone piles marking the safe paths are moved or buried; the road to the oases is barred or strewn with poisonous herbs, the secret storehouses of water and food emptied and scattered; the torches that ought to light water dwells in the night shine at the center of salt pans. No single Kullaran, even if captured and delivered to the tormentor, could reveal the location of more than a minimal fraction of the desert's resources.
 +
 +The dispersed Kullaran do not fight, except to prevent the return of enemy explorers; the desert fights for them. The sun slowly consumes the invaders, burdened by useless and increasingly suffocating armor; the spiders and scorpions of the sand emerge in the night to disturb their sleep; the columns of soldiers, blinded by duststorms, separate and lose their way among the dunes that change their shape every day.
 +
 +Sometimes they attempt to goad the invisible enemies into battle. If they meet by chance a group of Kullaran that has taken the wrong path, they abandon themselves to massacre, to avenge their own consumption, to quench their thirst with blood, but it's worth nothing.
 +
 +The flower of empires is powerless, like a dagger sinking its blade into water. The heroines of a hundred battles die one by one without having taken up their sword. Prayers are vain: desiccated tongues cannot articulate them, and the burning wind scatters them. Warriors throw away their shields and unlatch their armors, hoping to march lighter, disrobe themselves and tear off the denser feathers from their necks, and perhaps a few of them survive to the end of the journey. No general, not even the Kru'u strategae educated to cruelty since their hatching, is as empty of mercy as the desert.
 +
 +A few armies reach the opposite end of the desert, decimated, crestfallen, having gained nothing, and often having lost everything. Generals return home in disgrace, if they return at all, with flesh wrapped more tightly around their bones. These are the fortunate ones. I've seen several times, with Shalasha, a great mound of mummified bodies, with their skin white and featherless, their heads contracted backward, briefly uncovered by a gust of wind. I must believe that the sand of Kulla-Tag is nothing but the remains of a million armies ground into dust by sun and wind.
 +
 +The bodies have no longer arms or insignia; the Kullaran take their toll from all who trample their lands. In the camps I saw fathers give crop milk to their children in Chaatai helmets, produced, I believe, during the Second Kingdom, but polished clean as if they had just left the forge; I saw infirm old men walk leaning on rifle barrels as canes; steaming blood roasts served in shields of Kru'u making, and iguanodonts with broken hooves wrapped in the imperial standards of Takrakaya.
 +
 +Then the flutes and the drums sound victory, first softly, undistinguishable from the hissing wind, then loudly. The Kullaran meet each other again, they divide and unite according to their tribes, bring the provisions back to the storehouses, the torches and stone piles back to their place. They collect the abandoned weapons, and feast on the scavenger birds attracted by the hecatomb. They drink and they laugh, the lords of the sands, from whom not a single feather was taken. The invasion has only made them richer; more trophies to flaunt in the tents of the matriarchs, more fables on the wonders of Kulla-Tag, one more call for the next empress, who will have already forgotten the lessons of her predecessors.
 +
 +Once in a while a kingdom falls, or an empire contracts in the spasms of a rebellion; but the Kullaran, untouchable, keep living as they did at the dawn of our species, and so they will even when the iron and the coal will no longer pass through the Yqsal Gate; and so they will, following on the ground the invisible paths that the Aurora mirrors in the sky, until the last breath will have left Tagra, and this world will disappear entirely beneath ice. »
 +
 +– Kukri Taika-Daagru, travel records
writings.1666878120.txt.gz · Last modified: 2022-10-27 13:42 by concavenator

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