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				 Re:  Конан. 
 
  
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        |  | But it was in the west that a power was growing destined to throw down the kings of Aquilonia from their high places. In the north there was
 incessant bickering along the Cimmerian borders between the black-
 haired warriors and the Nordheimir; and the AEsir, between wars with
 the Vanir, assailed Hyperborea and pushed back the frontier,
 destroying city after city. The Cimmerians also fought the Picts and
 Bossonians impartially, and several times raided into Aquilbnia
 itself, but their wars were less invasions than mere plundering
 forays.
 
 But the Picts were growing amazingly in population and power. By a
 strange twist of fate, it was largely due to the efforts of one man,
 and he an alien, that they set their feet upon the ways that led to
 eventual empire. This man was Arus, a Nemedian priest, a natural-born
 reformer. What turned his mind toward the Picts is not certain, but
 this much is history--he determined to go into the western wilderness
 and modify the rude ways of the heathen by the introduction of the
 gentle worship of Mitra. He was not daunted by the grisly tales of
 what had happened to traders and explorers before him, and by some
 whim of fate he came among the people he sought, alone and unarmed,
 and was not instantly speared.
 
 The Picts had benefited by contact with Hyborian civilization, but
 they had always fiercely resisted that contact. That is to say, they
 had learned to work crudely in copper and tin, which were found
 scantily in their country, and for which latter metal they raided into
 the mountains of Zingara, or traded hides, whale's teeth, walrus tusks
 and such few things as savages have to trade. They no longer lived in
 caves and tree-shelters, but built tents of hides, and crude huts,
 copied from those of the Bossonians. They still lived mainly by the
 chase, since their wilds swarmed with game of all sorts, and the
 rivers and sea with fish, but they had learned how to plant grain,
 which they did sketchily, preferring to steal it from their neighbors
 the Bossonians and Zingarans. They dwelt in clans which were generally
 at feud with each other, and their simple customs were blood-thirsty
 and utterly inexplicable to a civilized man, such as Arus of Nemedia.
 They had no direct contact with the Hyborians, since the Bossonians
 acted as a buffer between them. But Arus maintained that they were
 capable of progress, and events proved the truth of his assertion--
 though scarcely in the way he meant.
 
 Arus was fortunate in being thrown in with a chief of more than usual
 intelligence--Gorm by name. Gorm cannot be explained, any more than
 Genghis Khan, Othman, Attila, or any of those individuals, who, born
 in naked lands among untutored barbarians, yet possess the instinct
 for conquest and empire-building. In a sort of bastard-Bossonian, the
 priest made the chief understand his purpose, and though extremely
 puzzled, Gorm gave him permission to remain among his tribe unbutch-
 ered--a case unique in the history of the race. Having learned the
 language Arus set himself to work to eliminate the more unpleasant
 phases of Pictish life--such as human sacrifice, blood-feud, and the
 burning alive of captives. He harangued Gorm at length, whom he found
 to be an interested, if unresponsive listener. Imagination
 reconstructs the scene--the black-haired chief, in his tiger-skins and
 necklace of human teeth, squatting on the dirt floor of the wattle
 hut, listening intently to the eloquence of the priest, who probably
 sat on a carven, skin-covered block of mahogany provided in his
 honor--clad in the silken robes of a Nemedian priest, gesturing with
 his slender white hands as he expounded the eternal rights and
 justices which were the truths of Mitra. Doubtless he pointed with
 repugnance at the rows of skulls which adorned the walls of the hut
 and urged Gorm to forgive his enemies instead of putting their
 bleached remnants to such use. Arus was the highest product of an
 innately artistic race, refined by centuries of civilization; Gorm had
 behind him a heritage of a hundred thousand years of screaming
 savagery--the pad of the tiger was in his stealthy step, the grip of
 the gorilla in his black-nailed hands, the fire that burns in a
 leopard's eyes burned in his.
 
 Arus was a practical man. He appealed to the savage's sense of
 material gain; he pointed out the power and splendor of the Hyborian
 kingdoms, as an example of the power of Mitra, whose teachings and
 works had lifted them up to their high places. And he spoke of cities,
 and fertile plains, marble walls and iron chariots, jeweled towers,
 and horsemen in their glittering armor riding to battle. And Gorm,
 with the unerring instinct of the barbarian, passed over his words
 regarding gods and their teachings, and fixed on the material powers
 thus vividly described. There in that mud-floored wattle hut, with the
 silk-robed priest on the mahogany block, and the dark-skinned chief
 crouching in his tiger-hides, was laid the foundations of empire.
 
 As has been said, Arus was a practical man. He dwelt among the Picts
 and found much that an intelligent man could do to aid humanity, even
 when that humanity was cloaked in tiger-skins and wore necklaces of
 human teeth. Like all priests of Mitra, he was instructed in many
 things. He found that there were vast deposits of iron ore in the
 Pictish hills, and he taught the natives to mine, smelt and work it
 into implements--agricultural implements, as he fondly believed. He
 instituted other reforms, but these were the most important things he
 did: he instilled in Gorm a desire to see the civilized lands of the
 world; he taught the Picts how to work in iron; and he established
 contact between them and the civilized world. At the chiefs request he
 conducted him and some of his warriors through the Bossonian marches,
 where the honest villagers stared in amazement, into the glittering
 outer world.
 
 Arus no doubt thought that he was making converts right and left,
 because the Picts listened to him, and refrained from smiting him with
 their copper axes. But the Pict was little calculated to seriously
 regard teachings which bade him forgive his enemy and abandon the
 warpath for the ways of honest drudgery. It has been said that he
 lacked artistic sense; his whole nature led to war and slaughter. When
 the priest talked of the glories of the civilized nations, his dark-
 skinned listeners were intent, not on the ideals of his religion, but
 on the loot which he unconsciously described in the narration of rich
 cities and shining lands. When he told how Mitra aided certain kings
 to overcome their enemies, they paid scant heed to the miracles of
 Mitra, but they hung on the description of battle-lines, mounted
 knights, and maneuvers of archers and spearmen. They harkened with
 keen dark eyes and inscrutable countenances, and they went their ways
 without comment, and heeded with flattering intent-ness his
 instructions as to the working of iron, and kindred arts.
 
 Before his coming they had filched steel weapons and armor from the
 Bossonians and Zingarans, or had hammered out their own crude arms
 from copper and bronze. Now a new world opened to them, and the clang
 of sledges re-echoed throughout the land. And Gorm, by virtue of this
 new craft, began to assert his dominance over other clans, partly by
 war, partly by craft and diplomacy, in which latter art he excelled
 all other barbarians.
 
 Picts now came and went freely into Aquilonia, under safe-conduct, and
 they returned with more information as to armor-forging and sword-
 making. More, they entered Aquilonia's mercenary armies, to the
 unspeakable disgust of the sturdy Bossonians. Aquilonia's kings toyed
 with the idea of playing the Picts against the Cimmerians, and
 possibly thus destroying both menaces, but they were too busy with
 their policies of aggression in the south and east to pay much heed to
 the vaguely known lands of the west, from which more and more stocky
 warriors swarmed to take service among the mercenaries.
 
 These warriors, their service completed, went back to their wilderness
 with good ideas of civilized warfare, and that contempt for
 civilization which arises from familiarity with it. Drums began to
 beat in the hills, gathering-fires smoked on the heights, and savage
 sword-makers hammered their steel on a thousand anvils. By intrigues
 and forays too numerous and devious to enumerate, Gorm became chief of
 chiefs, the nearest approach to a king the Picts had had in thousands
 of years. He had waited long; he was past middle age. But now he moved
 against the frontiers, not in trade, but in war.
 
 Arus saw his mistake too late; he had not touched the soul of the
 pagan, in which lurked the hard fierceness of all the ages. His
 persuasive eloquence had not caused a ripple in the Pictish
 conscience. Gorm wore a corselet of silvered mail now, instead of the
 tiger-skin, but underneath he was unchanged--the everlasting
 barbarian, unmoved by theology or philosophy, his instincts fixed
 unerringly on rapine and plunder.
 
 The Picts burst on the Bossonian frontiers with fire and sword, not
 clad in tiger-skins and brandishing copper axes as of yore, but in
 scale-mail, wielding weapons of keen steel. As for Arus, he was
 brained by a drunken Pict, while making a last effort to undo the work
 he had unwittingly done. Gorm was not without gratitude; he caused the
 skull of the slayer to be set on the top of the priest's cairn. And it
 is one of the grim ironies of the universe that the stones which
 covered Arus's body should have been adorned with that last touch of
 barbarity--above a man to whom violence and blood-vengeance were
 revolting.
 
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