Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Pricey Items from the Wish List



I'm afraid all my good wishes to finish the LOTR chapter today came to naught; I couldn't even write a little section. Yesterday was a singularly unfortunate and 'off' day; I'm still recovering my spirits. But I still had the odd compulsion to make a list of stuff I wanted from my Amazon Wish List; it is the first of the month and I have no truly compelling item that I have knocking at the door. But these 'big ticket' items have been tickling my fancy for a while; there's just no really good reason to buy them (except for aesthetics, if you can call that a good reason) and prices are high.

Especially enticing but most unnecessary are those deluxe editions of Tolkien books, each with Tolkien's own illustrations; they are volumes of which I already have multiple copies. Would I even read them, or would I be too fearful of even besmirching them with my touch? But they are beautiful, and impressive, and a luxury that I would be hard-pressed to justify. 

More justifiable would be the Annotated editions, dripping as they are with various illustrations and scholarly notes. But it would be the third edition of The Annotated Alice that I've ever owned, each more intricate than the last. I already have adequate versions of The Arabian Nights and Hans Christian Andersen; the only book I really don't have is The Secret Garden, and my interest in that is kind of marginal.

I'll probably have several other Wish List inventories through the day, not all of books, but certainly all items that I either can't afford or can't justify, but I certainly would like to own. If it were just a matter of wishing.

Monday, March 31, 2025

Fools in April 2020


3/29/2020: Up at about 2:30 AM. Tried to get to sleep again, but no go. More obsessive straightening (I wouldn’t call it cleaning) and rearranging, and planning in my head what to do tomorrow. Prayers, Bible. Went to bed about 4 AM, setting the clock for 6:25 AM.

Got up, prayed rosary, and had Mass on EWTN. Andy called me in at 9:30 AM or so and I fried bacon and eggs and made pancakes. Cleaned up. About 12:45 they called me from shopping. I got up and got an apple, then started sorting the Writing Files. They needed it. Put Elf & Bear stuff together in order, and Alben stuff, and Gothenburg stuff, and AGODP stuff, and Ortha stuff. The diaries, poems, and dreams were in good enough shape. Sorted the rest into Ideas, Story Beginnings, Developed Stories, completed Stories. That leaves [sigh] the Drawings to work on. It’s now almost 5 PM.

Not too long after Susan came to me and asked me to start supper. I tried a new idea: cooking the hamburger in a baking dish then cutting it into square patties, and it was simple and worked a treat. Also fried onions and mushrooms together for the patties and made avocado dip and there were some very nicely spiced HEB Taco flavored tortilla chips. Andy had been mowing and doing other yardwork all day, and he began again after supper. Came out and watched Kenny reading more Jungle Book and came to his aid when he fell short of his time by reminding him there was a second Jungle Book. ‘Tis now 8:30 PM, and he should be back shortly to read Dracula. Which he did. As usual, there was an interruption as he froze before the end. Bah. Bed 10 PM.

 

3/30/2020: It was a cool night and I think having a thicker pillow to cushion my knees helped. Still alarming pains in the veins and general weakness, with some loss of stability when I get up, especially if it’s dark. Up about 4:30 AM, wrote some notes on “A Friend You Haven’t Met” (AFYHM). Dressed, prayers, Bible. Now 5:30 AM.

Wash at 9 AM, which I finished by 11 AM. Ramen at lunch. Made broccoli salad. John called and told me he was off work (paid) for a while. Amy was off as well (not paid). He told me that just before all this coronavirus started, Morgandy got a package direct from Wuhan, China, and they’ve been in dread of that for a while. Poor John. He seems particularly worried.

Supper fish rings and couscous. The drizzly rain of the day finally let up by evening. Rosary. Went in at 8 PM and made Kam supper, washed up, and retired for the night. Moved action figures from one bureau to another. Listened to Kenny reading The Second Jungle Book and then Dracula.

Had a strange reluctance all day after making the notes in the morning to write anything. The usual apprehension of not being able to match my conception with the actual incarnation. Well, tomorrow is another day. I hope.

 

3/31/3030: Up about 7:30 AM, showered, dressed, said my prayers and read my Bible. Watched Perry Mason face a gorilla.

That Good Old 1960's Gorilla

 

Translated a page, wrote a paragraph, went in, and boiled eggs and made chicken salad. Had ramen, with an egg and bread. Borrowed a mirror from Susan when they came home for lunch, and I buzzed my head. Kam has some school project on his plate; doesn’t want to work on it just yet but makes sure I stand ready to help him.

Sunny but cool all day. Watched some “House”. About 3:30 PM went in, grassed the dogs, fed the pets, stuffed the peppers, and shucked the corn. Brought the garbage bin in. Supper ready at 5:30 PM. Got a good block of writing in on AFYHM (4 pages) and some notes. Interrupted my flow to help Kam with his homework – a dreadful thing for a 56-year-old man to have to worry about. Went in and washed up, then returned home. Said Rosary, and now at 10:30 PM I’m ready to hit the hay. Tomorrow’s April Fool’s Day. Sheesh. I wouldn’t be surprised with the country being as paralyzed as it is if some fool still tried to flush a cherry bomb down the toilet of the world for the hell of it.

 

4/1/2020: Up about 6:30 AM, prayed, wrote a couple of pages of AFYHM, more prayers, Bible, than transposed a page of KK [King Korm] while I made some ramen. Now about 8 AM. Went in at 9 AM and made Kam his bacon and eggs. For some reason I’m particularly ravening this morning, so making some more ramen (with bacon grease, bread, and a leftover bell pepper cap) right away. Heard news of Rick and Morty new episodes come early May, so that’s a thing. Sunny, but a little cold this morning.

From e-mails to John: I got up fairly early when my brain juice was still pretty fresh and surprised myself by producing a few entire pages on the new story (tentatively titled "A Friend You Haven't Met" or AFYHM for short) in a sort of breeze. It was still getting things 'cranked up' but I found it so technically fascinating, even apart from what was happening, that I galumphed along until I found a good stopping place. There are still a few introductions to do, but the real action is immanent. So we'll see how that goes. Afterwards I translated a page of script to prose, and I vowed that I never would do bits in script again - unless I'm writing a script. It's not hard but it's irksome.

I was reminded of [a quote] this morning for some reason and posted it on Facebook. Here is the longer version of the anecdote:  


 

The story is told of Zusha, the great Chassidic master, who lay crying on his deathbed. His students asked him, "Rebbe, why are you so sad? After all the mitzvahs and good deeds you have done, you will surely get a great reward in heaven!"

"I'm afraid!" said Zusha. "Because when I get to heaven, I know God's not going to ask me 'Why weren't you more like Moses?' or 'Why weren't you more like King David?' But I'm afraid that God will ask 'Zusha, why weren't you more like Zusha?' And then what will I say?!"

Later: And here it is, almost evening. I spent the early afternoon starting to sort drawings, and it’s been so many years since I actually looked at them, that they were a sort of revelation. I'm making a special file of drawings by and of the family; there a quite a few by you in there. I've also started to gather, for the first time, all my "Last Drawings of the Year", starting from 1982. There are quite a few gaps, and I don't know if they are still misplaced, accidentally thrown away, or just never got drawn. As I say, there is much sorting yet to do. I'm also putting groups of drawings associated with specific writings together.

For supper, I brewed a prodigious pork stew that should last for at least two days. It contains pork roast, onions, celery, carrots, potatoes, and cabbage, and there is jalapeno cornbread on the side.  I'm dreading this evening, for Kam has computer homework to do, and guess who is assisting him? Gathering his attention and getting him to work is like herding cats.

And so: Kam and I worked on his stuff, and it wasn’t so bad, except that for one of his assignments a site he needed to reference was down. I finished going through the drawings, finding a few more last pictures, beat the folders into some kind of shape, and put them back. It was something of a revelation looking at them again with a distanced eye, but also with that inner knowledge of their place and origin in different times of my life. I could write a short biographical explanation about each of several 1000 pages! (That’s just a guess, as to number.) Listened to Yen reading Dracula (missed the first part of the evening, helping Kameron). 



Found an old drawing by Susan (she must have been about 7, she says) of the back yard at Loop Drive. A blast from the past, indeed. She also reminded me that I need to get in gear for SSI [Supplemental Security Income], a daunting prospect.

 

4/2/2020: Up about 5 AM, showered, dressed. Short prayers, but also Litany in Time of Plague. Caught up diary and looked at sites. Ready for longer prayers. Prayed, and did Rosary.

Family Medical Center: 303-5224. Appointment Monday, April 13, 10 AM. Well, that’s done.

Since Kameron had to be up to meet his pastor, he was ready to go ahead and do his homework after lunch. That’s out of the way.

I was ready to go in at 4 PM and grass the dogs when there was a sudden boom of thunder, and it began really raining. When it slows down, I’ll go in to heat the stew and take care of the pets.

Did so and went in about 7 PM to clean up. Got some Broccoli Salad and a new thing, Kameron’s miniature Jack-in-the-Box tacos. Watched Elijah play some world of Warcraft, then Yen reading Jungle Book and Dracula. Lost the connection about 10 PM. Wrote a page or so of AFYHM. Read some ghost stories.

Ready for bed, I guess. Having little stinging, shooting pains in my legs, abdomen, and now throat. Is this it? Is it coming on me? Now my hand. Oh my Jesus, forgive us our sins, save us from the fires of Hell, and lead all souls to Heaven.

 

4/3/2020: Up at 6 AM, still alive. Dressed, prayed, Bible.

From John:  It's been pretty weird.  I've been doing various chores, both inside and outside, when the weather has allowed; looks like we are in for a pretty rainy week ahead, so probably not a lot of lawn work will be in the offing for a while.  Reading, watching various things and trying not to think too much about the horrors sweeping the globe.  It just seems like a bottomless pit of shit, to be sure.  Do ya'll have any masks? It would probably be a good idea to wear one if you are heading into the Family Clinic- that place is kinda skeezy even in non-plague times. Ask Susan- they probably have them from the shop, for painting, etc. We are past the point of worrying about over-reacting to this now. We got our new washing machine delivered today, and boy, has that been great, being able to catch up on laundry. Not having one for last couple of weeks has certainly added to the stress- we could use the Loth's washer, and did a little, but the pain in the butt of ours crapping out right as society crumbled was pretty harsh. But now-luxury!

Made Kam eggs and bacon. Made myself ramen for breakfast. At lunch, ramen again, with an egg. About 3 PM started preparing the fried potatoes (peeling, getting the pan) and spent right up to 5:45 PM frying them. We had supper (fish, taters, broccoli salad); I said a rosary about 6:30 PM. No writing so far and I don’t know if I will. Day rainy, damp, and cold.

 

4/4/2020: What a blaugh day. Hard, heavy rain, and cold. Prayers, Bible. Ramen for breakfast, ramen for lunch, with the house closed up and didn’t see anyone until 4 PM, when I got Kam to do homework and I got leftover broccoli salad and (what else) ramen. Finished, went in, and got the leftover chicken salad. Watching “Targets” Boris Karloff, Peter Bogdanovich. I did write 3 new pages on AFYHM and sent the whole thing so far to John, in a fit of ennui. No kid’s reading from Yen tonight; Dracula later.

E-mail from John, as I sent him AFYHM so far: Ha! Okay, this is going to be fun! Just saw I had this a little while ago- I've been pretty much bumming around today, and finally checked in on the wide world.  We watched "Time Bandits " last night- I almost cried just from the sheer nostalgia it evoked. I watched "Brazil" a few nights back- that one is still the brilliant bummer I remembered, seeming more and more prescient every time I watch it again, which has been about once a decade these last few times. The idea of Roth and Korm on the loose in "Walnut Springs” is certainly tantalizing! I love the Monroe Engbrock and Danny Daniels references! Keep rolling, if the weather allows- that heavy gray is certainly a zap on one’s gumption.  I finished "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance " - an interesting philosophical examination which, strangely, but not unpleasantly, had more to do with Greek philosophy than Zen, although that does tie in, in the ineffable way it can tie in to anything else.  Send more when you can!

Notes

So the town of 'Walnut Springs' is based on my hometown of Seguin, Texas; indeed that used to be its name in the old days. 'A Friend You Haven't Met' (see elsewhere on this blog) was a strange little endeavor, a bit of fun to bring together the Bureau of Shadows with the Morg/Ortha stories; I had been writing so many of both then. The tale brings a lot of town lore into it as well, suitably fictionalized; it is indeed almost 'a love letter to a town'!

I remember what a struggle it was to get Kameron to settle down to his homework, to resist the temptation to just do it for him and be done with it! I'm pleased to say in the end he completed his work by himself; my input was mainly encouragement and guidance, and getting him to buckle down to it. I'm afraid he had some of my dilatory, last-minute nature. 

What a lot of cultural balloons we kept and keep in the air to help our spirits stay alive! Perry Mason, Dracula, The Jungle Book, Time Bandits, House, Boris Karloff, -- even Rick and Morty, to an extent! I remember how sad it was seeing certain resources sputtering out, certain shows discontinued, as the lights went out all over the world and we huddled around our campfires.

As you can see by my health panics and my recollection of Covid times, I have a tendency to pessimistic dramatics.

Saturday, March 29, 2025

A Wish That Your Heart Makes?


I have sometimes fancied that it will one day be our restored preternatural power (either in Heaven or after our Resurrection) to have total recall of our past, whether to relive the best moments of our life and have them grow sweeter in the process, or to recall our worst moments and repent and redeem and heal them with forgiveness.

And I’ve further fancied that this total recall would cover not only our waking moments, but our dreams, and we’ll finally know clearly what they meant and whether or not they were simply the brain clearing out mental garbage. I have further farther imagined that we will somehow have the power to finally share these dreams fully, and not just as a clutched handful of fading, withered images. Perhaps my most tenuous hope is that others will finally see what I mean and might actually be interested in them.

I have attached these thoughts to Tolkien’s theory of Subcreation, which found the most full-bodied example in Leaf by Niggle, where the imaginative production by an artist is given reality and things half-guessed are at last fully expressed and perfected in the afterlife, thus adding in their small way to the creation of the Prime Creator. There are people in my dreams I would like to meet, and dreamscapes I would like to wander and explore. And as for my waking creations...! Korm and Roth already seem real and separate from me, and I would love to explore the streets of Morg City. And Bob Bellamy might be able to teach me a thing or two.

Of course, the flipside might also apply if I go to a not-quite-so desirable afterlife. Complete memory might be an added pain and affliction as I relive all my poor decisions and missed chances. I can remember some nightmares that might well add to the pains of Hell. But then Hope is one of those virtues that I try to hang onto. And I reflect that if my strange whims and fancies about Heaven are not true, then something better will be.

As King Arthur in Excalibur might say, “It is a dream I have.”


 

Life is Brief, But When It's Gone, Hate Lives On and On


Just yesterday I had made some offhand remark about my grandmother, Nanny, to my nephew (she would have been his great-grandmother), and he asked me, “Did you really hate Nanny so much?” I was immediately reminded of this quote from King of the Hill: “Hate is a strong word, Mr. President. That’s why I used it.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9B7egX52K2Q Hate

“Sylvia Doiron was born on December 31, 1920 and passed away on Wednesday, November 12, 1997. Sylvia was a resident of San Marcos, Texas.” - The only obituary I could find.

"Dr. Pym has only treated one side of the psychology of murder. If it is true that there is a kind of man who has a natural tendency to murder, is it not equally true”—here he lowered his voice and spoke with a crushing quietude and earnestness— “is it not equally true that there is a kind of man who has a natural tendency to get murdered? Is it not at least a hypothesis holding the field that Dr. Warner is such a man? … “So we see,” resumed Moon, in the same melancholy voice, “that a man like Dr. Warner is, in the mysterious workings of evolution, doomed to such attacks. My client’s onslaught, even if it occurred, was not unique. I have in my hand letters from more than one acquaintance of Dr. Warner whom that remarkable man has affected in the same way. We are in the presence, as Dr. Pym so truly says, of a natural force. As soon stay the cataract of the London water-works as stay the great tendency of Dr. Warner to be assassinated by somebody. Place that man in a Quakers’ meeting, among the most peaceful of Christians, and he will immediately be beaten to death with sticks of chocolate. Place him among the angels of the New Jerusalem, and he will be stoned to death with precious stones. Circumstances may be beautiful and wonderful, the average may be heart-upholding, the harvester may be golden-bearded, the doctor may be secret-guessing, the cataract may be iris-leapt, the Anglo-Saxon infant may be brave-browed, but against and above all these prodigies the grand simple tendency of Dr. Warner to get murdered will still pursue its way until it happily and triumphantly succeeds at last.” -Manalive, G. K. Chesterton.

So it was with Nanny. Was it a simple coincidence that her first husband chased her around the house with a knife? Or that her last husband (and her last ‘boyfriend’) both threatened to kill her? Or that her own oldest son said that they had to part, before he killed her or killed himself? When she finally passed away (from natural causes, to all appearances) there was still some speculation among us about whether she had been done in. When the man who was going to preach her eulogy asked my mother and her other brother if they remembered any particularly happy or tender moments they wanted mentioned, they were both stumped for an answer. And they were the people who most defended her while she was alive.

Though God knows why Mom did. I suspect it was a form of Stockholm Syndrome. After Nanny and Poppa Harold separated, Nanny made sure that Mom never contacted her biological father again, more as a test of loyalty than anything else. I think Nanny withheld her from Harold out of spite to him rather than any other reason. My uncles did contact him in later years, but Mom never dared to. When Nanny passed away, and we learned that Harold himself was on the downward spiral, Mom finally was able to talk to him. I was surprised; I had never been told my biological grampa was even alive.* Nanny kind of robbed us of that, as well. Her several ‘replacements’ (she could never hold onto anyone for long) were never grandfatherly people.

Nor was Nanny a grandmotherly figure. She was neither sentimental nor nurturing, and she saw us grandkids as a resource to be used or exploited for cheap labor. Even when we lived with her during college, we paid her rent with the added drawback of no privacy and always to be on hand to mow the lawn or move furniture between her several beauty shops. The upshot was we overheard her calling us “stupid Germans” to her last boyfriend, who she didn’t mind lavishing funds and support on to keep him tied to her crumbling charms.

And Mom was treated no less as a resource. When it became obvious that she wasn’t going to become a second Shirley Temple she was trained as a beautician, to help Nanny, and when Mom ran off to marry Pop (partly to escape Nanny, she later admitted to us kids) Nanny sold everything she left behind. Still Mom stayed devoted to her (she was her mother after all, and you only get one mother) and would pick herself up (even when she could barely drag herself along with arthritis) and travel 30 miles, often with us kids as additional labor, at Nanny’s whim. Mom took classes with H&R Bloch just so she could do her taxes at her insistence. Nanny still favored her brothers (who were smart enough to live out of easy visiting distance) and held the thought of ‘inheritance’ over all their heads to compel … well, their love would be too warm a word. Perhaps attention. And that in the end proved an empty lure, as her businesses were closed and she was almost broke.

Well, it’s been nearly thirty years since she was found alone and collapsed on her way out to the garbage bins. In the aftermath we found out a lot of things about her: her birthname Arzenath, how she had supported a foreign college student (Arabic?) but never her own grandkids, and her metal box of ‘dirty tricks’ (including saltpeter to cut her last husband’s sex drive). Do I hate her? Perhaps not as much as I did, but I can’t bring myself to feel any affection for her, mainly because of how she treated Mom. I remember how I was moving beds around for her once, and she held a shotgun from under one of them. Wherever I moved, she kept the barrel pointing at me, even when I asked her not too. She seemed amused at my nervousness; I think if she ‘accidentally’ shot me (“I didn’t know it was loaded!”) it would have mattered not one whit to her except as a momentary annoyance.

Still, she was my grandmother (“The same blood flows in my veins. The same weakness.” https://www.youtube.com/shorts/7fB2MiFiXp )

And the past cannot be changed; all that is part of my story. “That’s why I hate it.”

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/PCKkVkXyi6s )

My only comfort is that I’m still here to set the record straight. As I know it. Take that, you old ... witch. I forgive you on my own part, but I cannot forgive you for Mom.

*My brother John explains: "Even worse - the Uncles had awesome relations with Harold the whole time, hunting, fishing, hanging out at his ranch, as did our cousins. We did not even have the knowledge that he was alive. They were also able to inherit from his not insignificant estate."

Friday, March 28, 2025

Friday Fiction: King Korm (Part Two)


The next day the Market in Morg City was closed and vacated by noon, leaving the vast central area of tables and benches eerily empty. Booths were erected across the four great entryways and registrars took their places next to swing bars, and at the last stroke of the hour, young male Morgs began making their way into the square, some warily, some triumphantly, some merry, some sober. The one thing they all had in common was that besides being clothed in the same simple crude robe of rough material, they carried nothing whatever with them, not the simplest trinket or plainest rag. For the next few months, all they had was to be supplied by the kingdom.

Korm said farewell to Uncle Akko in the street outside, gave his name, address, and parentage at the turnstile, then was handed, much to his consternation, a stick.

“What do I do with this?” he asked, puzzled.

“Keep it and take care of it,” the harried registrar said, head bowed over his parchment. “During your training, that stick will be your sword, your spear, your shield, and your, ah, well, your stick.”

“A sword?” Korm asked incredulously, looking at the well-worn length of wood.

“You didn’t think we’d give you gorbs a sharp piece of metal right away, did you?” the other said acidly. “Next!”

He had barely stumbled blinking into the sun of the market when he was suddenly accosted by a hearty, roaring voice on his left.

“By Mog’s starry crown!” it boomed. “That’s the most magnificent beard I’ve ever laid eyes on. Surely here’s a fellow destined for greatness!”

Korm turned instinctively to his left at the sound, cringing warily. There, already seated on a table and surrounded by a host of followers was a big barrel-chested Morg with a broad black beard. Although clothed no differently than anyone else, there was an air of habitual command and casual strength about him. He held his stick effortlessly in the crook of his arm, like a scepter.

Korm bobbed his head, only wanting to slink by, but to his dismay the other jumped down from his perch, landing gracefully on his feet and approaching in one confident movement, arm extended. He pinioned Korm’s shoulder with one strong claw, and the skinny young Morg found himself shaking hands before he knew quite what was going on.

“Glad to meet you, fellow Cadet. And what’s your name, friend?”

“Korm, son of Tessa,” he managed to squeeze out breathlessly. The other’s grip tightened.

“Good, good. By the gods, what a beard! Korm,” he repeated with satisfaction, as if to fix it in his head. “Well, sir, I am Nast, of the House of Keth.”

“The House of Keth!” Korm squeaked. He looked at the other in awe. “I’ve heard of the House of Keth!”

There was general laughter from the big Morg’s companions.

“You’d have to be a blind mole-rat not to have heard of the House of Keth!” one barked.

“One of the richest, the oldest, the most famous …,” one started listing.

“Oh, but we’re all the same here at Camp!” Nast bellowed jovially. He shook out the sleeves of his tabard, then held one open with his claw. “You don’t see any jewels tucked up here, do you? What we gain here, we get by merit!”

“I guess that’s true,” Korm started, then squawked when Nast pounded him on the back.

“Of course it’s true! And I’m sure we’ll be hearing a lot more about you, Mr. Korm.”

He gave a cheerful parting handshake and a grin and finally let Korm go. The skinny Morg hurried away from the babble of hearty voices as Nast rejoined his group. Although he had been pleasant enough, he couldn’t shake the feeling that Nast was somehow mocking him.

Whatever the case, the encounter had been too overwhelming for Korm. He skulked away, head down, to the perimeters of the Market where pillars from the surrounding buildings held up shadowy eaves. He started to duck behind one of the pillars when he was startled to hear a voice pipe up.

“Sorry. Already taken.”

“Oh, I do beg your pardon,” Korm began, trying to duck away hurriedly, but one furtive glance at the speaker stopped him cold. His muzzle dropped open. “Oh, my,” he said softly.

“Don’t worry,” the other said, voice full of rue. “It’s not catching.”

Before him, sitting almost defiantly straight on the bench next to the nearly hidden table, was the palest Morg Korm had ever seen. The stranger’s skin was a mottled pink, like boiled ham, and his light buttermilk eyes looked back at Korm unflinchingly, as if daring him to come up with a comment that he had never heard before. But the most unusual thing that struck Korm dumb was his beard.

It was long and thin. It was wispy, the hairs almost silken fine, threads rising like restless spiderweb in the nearly non-existent wind. It was everything a beard shouldn’t be, according to Morg lore. And it was yellow as butter, yellow as straw, yellow as false and fleeting gold in the old songs. Korm stood petrified with curiosity.

The other let him look his fill for a full beat, then looked away casually.

“It’s not catching, but if you stand there like that much longer, you might catch a fly or two in your mouth.”

Korm unfroze.

“Oh, I am sorry. Please forgive me.” To the other’s vast surprise, Korm approached him, hand out in greeting. “Korm, son of Tessa.”

The other shook hands, eyes wide in wonder.

“Prull, son of Prinn,” he said. He looked Korm over appraisingly, as if searching for signs of duplicity. “You really don’t mind … talking to me? Even shaking my hand?”

“No. Why shouldn’t I? You’re the first fellow I’ve ever seen of your … ah … type. I hope you’ll pardon my curiosity. It’s just the way I am.”

“Hurr,” the other laughed bitterly. “Folks do like gawking at a freak.”

“Not at all,” Korm said. “A rarity, perhaps. An anomaly. And it is the anomalies in the world that can teach us most about the truth.” He gestured. “May I sit down?”

“Not afraid of a bit of bad luck then, are you?” Prull asked, his tone challenging.

“Oh, I’ve had some training with my uncle as a Witness,” Korm said. “They have to go everywhere, to see without judging. There’s no good luck or bad luck, I think. There’s just the world and what people make of it.” He sat down.

“Well, that certainly doesn’t jibe with the Lore I’ve heard,” said Prull, smoothing his beard under his claws. Even his nails were nearly transparent. “And believe you me, I’ve heard everything bad there is to hear about a yellow beard. If you think differently, I suppose that makes you a bit of an anomaly yourself, Master Korm.”

“I suppose so.” Korm grinned in happy surprise. He looked around the square. More and more young Morgs were flowing in, finding their friends, making groups, and sitting down. The noise level was starting to rise. “I wonder if we should try to mingle more with the others.”

You might,” the other growled. “I wouldn’t even be here if it wasn’t for my old dad. ‘All your brothers went,’ says he. ‘You’re not going to flout the traditions; that’s the last thing you need. The most they can do is send you home.’ It was all right for my brothers. None of them were … like this.”

“But maybe if more people got to know you … got used to seeing you … “

“You think that will do any good, when even my own family … Let’s put it this way, any bit of mulishness on my part when a boy was put down to the beard. Any bit of bad fortune that came the family’s way? My curse. It’s made me toe the line more than most even try. But if my own madra can’t hardly stand my presence …” Prull gestured at the growing throng. “What makes you think they will?”

“Well, what makes you think they won’t?” Korm countered. He loved to debate. “You can’t really be sure what people will do, until they actually do it, can you? Even if most have rejected you, even if most will reject you, you could make a friend or two. And for those who don’t – forget them. Don’t make their job easier by doing it for them beforehand.”

Prull snorted.

“You really think I could make a friend here?”

Korm leaned back in his chair with a little smile.

“Well, you and I seem to be getting along pretty well, don’t we?”

That seemed to stump the other for a minute, then he grinned back at Korm.

“You’ll excuse me saying so, Mr. Korm, but you don’t exactly strike me as having the biggest store of common sense in the world, at that.”

“Well, Mr. Prull, that’s another opinion we have in common, then.”

They both laughed at that, a laugh that was suddenly interrupted by the distant solitary stroke of the bell in the White Tower, announcing the first hour after noon. It was immediately followed by clanging bells from the market gates.

“Five minutes!” a voice bawled. “Five minutes before we commence! Five minutes and the gates are closed! Draw near the podium. Five minutes, and we commence!”

Korm jumped to his feet, like a trained dog. He started forward, then looked back questioningly at Prull.

“You go on ahead if you want,” Prull said, settling back. “I’ll be along in a minute.”

Korm held back for a few seconds, then looked helplessly at the blonde Morg.

“I’m sorry,” he said again. “I have this compulsion about being late. But I’m sure we’ll see each other again. We’re stuck together at Camp anyway, right?”

“I understand,” Prull said. “Go, go. I’ll be somewhere here at the back, but I’ll be here.” He shrugged. “I have to be.”

“Thanks,” Korm said. He turned reluctantly and began to make his way to the milling crowd that was crowding around the raised platform at the south end of the square.

Notes

This little bit gave rise to the Morgish tradition of ‘gorb’ and ‘gorbos’. As The Morgish Lexicon states:

Feckless Gorb

While most scholars agree that Gorb (or Feckless Gorb, as he is popularly known) was a real historical figure, living sometime in the uneventful years between the Settling and Barek and the Ogre Invasion, though it is sometimes jestingly asserted that it must have been his grandfather who kept the pilot logs during the Migration [in which the location of the Morgish Homeland was lost].

He is hard to pin down to a definite date, though, because Gorb has become a byword for a clumsy or thoughtless person. While some of the anecdotes connected to him are possibly actual incidents in his life, it would be hard to say which, as many tales and jokes became attached to him over time.

As a character, Gorb is never described as feeble-minded or crazy, but thoughtless, careless, or foolish in the extreme. He could be wise if he was paying attention or applying himself, but he never does. A gorb is inexperienced or unskilled; the term is applied to beginners or novices.

Gorb also gave rise to at least two popular sayings. One goes “Well, Gorb’s madra loved him.” The story goes that he was accidentally responsible for his mother’s death, and that with her last words she forgave him. The colloquial meaning implies that one may be enamored with one’s foolish actions, but they could lead to disaster. The other says that “Gorb is the only one remembered from his time,” meaning both that fame is not necessarily good, but also that it is anyway a form of immortality.

There is also a light form of comic poetry, called ‘gorbos’. The verses are short, seldom more than four lines long, with a loose but definite form. They purport to recount Gorb’s amusing adventures. The following is a typical example:

“Feckless Gorb milked a billy,

Put the squeezings in his tea.

Took a sip, frowned, and grumbled,

“This tastes rather odd to me!”

 

It also reveals a rather odd prejudice or superstition among the Morgs, the same sort of unfortunate beliefs that have followed albinism through the ages, or the left-handed, or the red-headed in our world. I deepened the lore by attaching it to Karn, the contrarian son of Mog Gammoth, who had existed in some form since the early 1980’s. And thus the groove wears deeper. I knew Korm had to have some other ‘outcast’ or marginalized friends at camp, to oppose the socially entrenched privilege of Nast and his party. A ‘Nerds vs. the Snobs’ situation, as it were. I didn’t quite realize how Eighties a trope that I was using until recently.

The rather loose oath 'By the gods!' used by Nast basically means 'by all the supernatural powers', and would include Morlakor Shyreen (the Supreme Being), Orathil (a Mother Nature type), their Manichaen offspring Aman and Belg (Good vs. Evil), and the Yorn (Angels, both helpful and wicked). That Nast would lump them so carelessly together in a casual oath shows he has no real belief in any of them. If he has any 'religion', it's faith in the superiority of his family. As Uncle Akko might say, this does not augur well for him.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Synchronicity?


Last night for maybe the first time in a year I found I could look at my book A Grave on Deacon's Peak again, maybe because it was mentioned so often in the diary entries I've been posting. At the end of Chapter Two, 'Up a Crooked Path,' the Bellamy family and Mr. Culpepper encounter a pod (or rafter) of wild turkeys walking out of the woods next to the Deacon's cabin. Today when I went to take some recycling out to the bin, I saw these four birds strutting across the yard. That white structure is no cabin, of course; it is one of the original ticket booths from Disneyland. My sister bought it. We sometimes, but not often, see wild turkeys in transit, remarkable to me in that we are only a few blocks from the town square. It is an odd coincidence.

 

Thursday Thoughts: Inhuman, All Too Inhuman


I was thinking this morning about The Tales of the Morgs, and I started wondering about why I could write so easily about the Morgs and but only with more difficulty about humans, particularly "modern" humans.
 The obvious answer that occurs to me right off is that since I made up the Morgs, nobody can say what I say about them is "unMorglike". Only I can tell myself whether they are going off-model, as it were.

Of course, there is something about "inhuman" characters that is particularly appealing, especially to children or uncomplicated persons. Little people like Bilbo, animals (even stuffed animals) like Pooh, creatures like the Scarecrow or Raggedy Ann, are frequent heroes in children's literature. Imaginary races, like Hobbits in general or Harry Potter-type wizards and even Vampires, can be so appealing that there are people who identify with them in real life, even going so far as to dress up and pretend to be these creatures. So-called "furries" can carry their admiration for animals a bit too far.

I think part of these impulses go back to the fact that we associate being human, especially adult humans, with a peculiarly guilty state. Whether tracing it to the Fall of Man, or the destruction of the earth through greed and carelessness, or an imagined paradisal state of innocence when we were children, we feel that humans, when they reach the Age of Reason, are bad news. Some of us would rather not be part of that club, so we eschew membership and try to identify with something else, something less fraught with consequences.

"He who makes a beast of himself gets rid of the pain of being a man." This, of course, is not to solve the problem, but to erase the equation altogether. And like most erasures, you can still see the outlines underneath. We can't become Hobbits, or Wizards, or Bears, or Living Toys, or even Morgs. But we can see the virtues they can embody, and strive to imitate those. We shouldn't be contented to lavish our love and care only on pets rather than children.

In short, it's hard to be a human, especially an adult human. But it should not be abandoned, it is folly, to simply count yourself out of the group. Doing so does not make one inhuman; it simply makes one a once-human, human remains, a creature aping another state that you cannot, by nature, belong to. I like the Morgs. I like writing about them; it is a way to write about the human condition at arm's-length, as it were, in 'laboratory conditions'. It is when I am writing about humans, especially adult humans, that I am balked and wary.