The Chronicles of Corum

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Authors: Michael Moorcock

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The Swords of Corum

Michael Moorcock

Fantasy Masterworks Volume 30

Being a History in Three Volumes Concerning the Quests and Adventures of Corum Jhaelen Irsei of the Vadhagh Folk, Who Is Also Called the Prince in the Scarlet Robe

Content

The Knight of Swords

Book One

Introduction

The First Chapter
At Castle Erorn

The Second Chapter
Prince Corum Sets Forth

The Third Chapter
The Mabden Herd

The Fourth Chapter
The Bane Of Beauty: The Doom Of Truth

The Fifth Chapter
A Lesson Learned

The Sixth Chapter
The Maiming Of Corum

The Seventh Chapter
The Brown Man

The Eighth Chapter
The Margravine Of Allomglyl

The Ninth Chapter
Concerning Love And Hatred

The Tenth Chapter
A Thousand Swords

The Eleventh Chapter
The Summoning

The Twelfth Chapter
The Margrave's Bargain

Book Two

The First Chapter
The Ambitious Sorcerer

The Second Chapter
The Eye Of Rhynn And The Hand Of Kwll

The Third Chapter
Beyond The Fifteen Planes

Book Three

The First Chapter
The Walking God

The Second Chapter
Temgol-Lep

The Third Chapter
The Dark Things Come

The Fourth Chapter
In The Flamelands

The Fifth Chapter
Through The Lion's Mouth

The Sixth Chapter
The God Feasters

The Seventh Chapter
The Bane Of The Sword Rulers

The Eighth Chapter
A Pause In The Struggle

The Queen of Swords

Book One

The First Chapter
What the Sea God Discarded

The Second Chapter
The Gathering at Kalenwyr

The Third Chapter
Lywn-an-Esh

The Fourth Chapter
The Wall Between the Realms

Book Two

The First Chapter
The Lake of Voices

The Second Chapter
The White River

The Third Chapter
Beasts of the Abyss

The Fourth Chapter
The Chariots of Chaos

The Fifth Chapter
The Frosen Army

The Sixth Chapter
The City in the Pyramid

Book Three

The First Chapter
The Hoard from Hell

The Second Chapter
The Siege Begins

The Third Chapter
Prince Gaynor the Damned

The Fourth Chapter
The Barbarian Attack

The Fifth Chapter
The Fury of Queen Xiombarg

Epilogue

The King of Swords

Introduction

Book One

The First Chapter
The Shape on the Hill

The Second Chapter
The Sickness Spreads

The Third Chapter
Chaos Returned

The Fourth Chapter
A New Ally for Earl Glandyth

The Fifth Chapter
The Weary God

Book Two

The First Chapter
Chaos Unbounded

The Second Chapter
The Castle Built of Blood

The Third Chapter
The Rider on the Yellow Horse

The Fourth Chapter
The Manor in the Forest

The Fifth Chapter
The Lady Jane Pentallyon

The Sixth Chapter
Sailing on the Seas of Time

The Seventh Chapter
The Land of Small Stones

The Eighth Chapter
Into the Small Storm

Book Three

The First Chapter
Voilodion Ghagnasdiak

The Second Chapter
To Tanelorn

The Third Chapter
The Conjunction of the Million Spheres

The Fourth Chapter
The King of the Swords

The Fifth Chapter
The Last of Glandyth

Epilogue

Introduction

In those days there were oceans of light and cities in the skies and wild flying beasts of bronze. There were herds of crimson cattle that roared and were taller than castles. There were shrill, viridian things that haunted bleak rivers. It was a time of gods, manifesting themselves upon our world in all her aspects; a time of giants who walked on water; of mindless sprites and misshapen creatures who could be summoned by an ill-considered thought but driven away only on pain of some fearful sacrifice; of magics, phantasms, unstable nature, impossible events, insane paradoxes, dreams come true, dreams gone awry, of nightmares assuming reality.

It was a rich time and a dark time. The time of the Sword Rulers. The time when the Vadhagh and the Nhadragh, age-old enemies, were dying. The time when Man, the slave of fear, was emerging, unaware that much of the terror he experienced was the result of nothing else but the fact that he, himself, had come into existence. It was one of many ironies connected with Man, who, in those days, called his race "Mabden."

The Mabden lived brief lives and bred prodigiously. Within a few centuries they rose to dominate the westerly continent on which they had evolved. Superstition stopped them from sending many of their ships toward Vadhagh and Nhadragh lands for another century or two, but gradually they gained courage when no resistance was offered. They began to feel jealous of the older races; they began to feel malicious.

The Vadhagh and the Nhadragh were not aware of this. They had dwelt a million or more years upon the planet which now, at last, seemed at rest. They knew of the Mabden but considered them not greatly different from other beasts. Though continuing to indulge their traditional hatreds of one another, the Vadhagh and the Nhadragh spent their long hours in considering abstractions, in the creation of works of art and the like. Rational, sophisticated, at one with themselves, these older races were unable to believe in the changes that had come. Thus, as it almost always is, they ignored the signs.

There was no exchange of knowledge between the two ancient enemies, even though they had fought their last battle many centuries before.

The Vadhagh lived in family groups occupying isolated castles scattered across a continent called by them Bro-an-Vadhagh. There was scarcely any communication between these families, for the Vadhagh had long since lost the impulse to travel. The Nhadragh lived in their cities built on the islands in the seas to the northwest of Bro-an-Vadhagh. They, also, had little contact, even with their closest kin. Both races reckoned themselves invulnerable. Both were wrong.

Upstart Man was beginning to breed and spread like a pestilence across the world. This pestilence struck down the old races wherever it touched them. And it was not only death that Man brought, but terror, too. Willfully, he made of the older world nothing but ruins and bones. Unwittingly, he brought psychic and supernatural disruption of a magnitude which even the Great Old Gods failed to comprehend.

And the Great Old Gods began to know Fear. And Man, slave of fear, arrogant in his ignorance, continued his stumbling progress. He was blind to the huge disruptions aroused by his apparently petty ambitions. As well, Man was deficient in sensitivity, had no awareness of the multitude of dimensions that filled the universe, each plane intersecting with several others. Not so the Vadhagh nor the Nhadragh, who had known what it was to move at will between the dimensions they termed the Five Planes. They had glimpsed and understood the nature of the many planes, other than the Five, through which the Earth moved.

Therefore it seemed a dreadful injustice that these wise races should perish at the hands of creatures who were still little more than animals. It was as if vultures feasted on and squabbled over the paralyzed body of the youthful poet who could only stare at them with puzzled eyes as they slowly robbed him of an exquisite existence they would never appreciate, never know they were taking.

"If they valued what they stole, if they knew what they were destroying," says the old Vadhagh in the story, ‘The Only Autumn Flower,’ "then I would be consoled."

It was unjust.

By creating Man, the universe had betrayed the old races.

But it was a perpetual and familiar injustice. The sentient may perceive and love the universe, but the universe cannot perceive and love the sentient. The universe sees no distinction between the multitude of creatures and elements which comprise it. All are equal. None is favored. The universe, equipped with nothing but the materials and the power of creation, continues to create: something of this, something of that. It cannot control what it creates and it cannot, it seems, be controled by its creations (though a few might deceive themselves otherwise). Those who curse the workings of the universe curse that which is deaf. Those who strike out at those workings fight that which is inviolate. Those who shake their fists, shake their fists at blind stars.

But this does not mean that there are some who will not try to do battle with and destroy the invulnerable.

There will always be such beings, sometimes beings of great wisdom, who cannot bear to believe in an insouciant universe.

Prince Corum Jhaelen Irsei was one of these. Perhaps the last of the Vadhagh race, he was sometimes known as The Prince in the Scarlet Robe.

This chronicle concerns him.

—The Book of Corum

Book One

In which Prince Corum learns a lesson and loses a limb

The First Chapter
 At Castle Erorn

At Castle Erorn dwelt the family of the Vadbagh prince, Khlonskey. This family had occupied the castle for many centuries. It loved, exceedingly, the moody sea that washed Erorn's northern walls and the pleasant forest that crept close to her southern flank.

Castle Erora was so ancient that it seemed to have fused entirely with the rock of the huge eminence that overlooked the sea. Outside, it was a splendor of time-worn turrets and salt-smoothed stones. Within, it had moving walls which changed shape in tune with the elements and changed color when the wind changed course. And there were rooms full of arrangements of crystals and fountains, playing exquisitely complicated fugues composed by members of the family, some living, some dead. And there were galleries filled with paintings brushed on velvet, marble, and glass by Prince Khlonskey's artist ancestors. And there were libraries filled with manuscripts written by members of both the Vadhagh and the Nhadragh races. And elsewhere in Castle Erora were rooms of statues, and there were aviaries and menageries, observatories, laboratories, nurseries, gardens, chambers of meditation, surgeries, gymnasia, collections of martial paraphernalia, kitchens, planetaria, museums, conjuratoria, as well as rooms set aside for less specific purposes, or rooms forming the apartment of those who lived in the castle.

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