This has been an amazing ten days of medieval and European experiences and accomplishments!
First, I and my lady went to Malbork, Poland for the International Medieval Combat Federation world championships. She went as part of the support staff for USA Knights, America's team n the tournament. My reasons for going were twofold: 1) I was producing a documentary of USA Knights at the event, and 2) I was doing the on-air commentary of the action for half of each day on the steaming webcast.
Both experiences were highly rewarding. I had contracted two camera peole, Tadej Znidarcic and Nawojka Cracke, and though I haven't looked through all the footage yet, what I have seen so far is very promising! The video will be called "American Knights." Watch for it at http://www.captainzorikh.com/usaknights2014
Calling the play-by-play of a sports event has been one of my lifelong dreams. Ever since I was listening to Phil Rizzutto on WINS 1010AM radio as Reggie Jackson and Thurman Munson were leading the Yankees to the World Series I wanted to be in the booth calling all the action. But I never could figure out the career path, aside from being a retired professional athlete.
This year, being as I would not be fighting due to my injured knee, I sort of lived up to that carer path, and took my baptism of fire in the booth. I had a few rough patches, not knowing all the fighter' names, for instance, but by the time I was done, people all over were telling me that I did a great job and I really brought something valuable to the broadcast.
I intend to do more of this. It is possible that I might be doing some broadcasts later this year. But I learned from my mistakes this time. I will be doing a little more homework on the teams and saying "um" a little less often, for starters.
As a result of all this, it appears that I have become a bit of a celebrity in the world of medieval armored combat. When I came across the French team as they were hanging out with the Spanish team and a couple of Poles after a hard day of fighting, when I asked to take a picture with one of them, the next thing you know they were saying "Everyone get together for a picture with Captain Zorikh!"
When this was all done, my lady and I headed down to Prague for a little vacation. We visited the famous astrological clock tower, St. Vitus' cathedral and Prague Castle, the gardens of the Senate, St Charles' Bridge, took a tour to Kuna Hora with its "bone church," silver mine, and high Gothic cathedral and another tour of Konepiste Castle, the home of the lade Archduke Ferdinand, and its magnificent armor and hunting trophy galleries, and another tour about WWII in Prague, saw "La Traviata" at the National Theater and "The Magic Flute" as performed by the National Marionette Theater, dined in some excellent restaurants, did a little shopping at the Battle of the Nations, drank good beer (including the "real Budweiser"), and finished off the week with a river cruise with dinner on the Vlatava.
I shot loads of pictures and video over this trip, and will be posting them on Facebook and YouTube as soon as I can.
Watch This space for more details!
Saturday, May 9, 2015
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
How to make the most of the NYC MTA fare hike
I guess I haven't been paying attention to the news, because I totally missed the word that the NYC MTA bus and subway fares went up this past Sunday until I curiously clicked on something on Facebook.
So it seems that once again, the Metropolitan Transit Authority has decided that the way to raise money is to raise prices. A single ride, which had been $2.50, is now $2.75 if you get a Metrocard and put more than $2.75 on it, and $3 if you buy just a single ride (and getting a new Metrocard will still cost an additional dollar). They have also pulled a sneaky little fast one. The "bonus" that you get for buying a bunch of rides at once on a Metrocard is now 11%. That is higher than it was before, but it's a weird number. When you put some round number of dollars onto your card, like $10 or $20, you are going to have an odd number of dollars and cents left over after you have used up all the $2.75 rides you can get out of it. Eventually, if you decide to discard the card, you will lose those odd pennies and dimes. And so long as you have that odd change left over, the MTA will have money for which, technically, they have not provided service.
Fortunately, our good friends at the Village Voice (that once-radical downtown newspaper that has followed all other Print Media into the Interwebs while leaving its print version mere shadow of its former self) has kindly done the math to figure out exactly how much money to put on your metrocard to wind up with zero cents left over after using up all your $2.75 rides:
Village Voice Rides-Per-Dollar chart
In short, $22.30, $27.75, and $49.55 are the magic numbers that will get you your full compliment of subway and bus rides without any money left over. You can take advantage of this by using the "Another Amount" button when you buy or refill your card at a MTA Metrocard machine.
If you want more info on this whole rate-increase thing, Here is the official MTA web page about the fare increase.
Here is the Transportation Nation web page that answers pretty much every question you could have about the fare increase.
And here is a Brooklyn-centric news site that happens to have a picture of the subway entrance I use every day.
You know, back in the late 1980's/early 1990's I used to go to the public hearing about fare increases and say a few words about how the job of the MTA is to help people enjoy the benefits of our rights. I kind of wish I had heard about this sooner and gone this time around.
So it seems that once again, the Metropolitan Transit Authority has decided that the way to raise money is to raise prices. A single ride, which had been $2.50, is now $2.75 if you get a Metrocard and put more than $2.75 on it, and $3 if you buy just a single ride (and getting a new Metrocard will still cost an additional dollar). They have also pulled a sneaky little fast one. The "bonus" that you get for buying a bunch of rides at once on a Metrocard is now 11%. That is higher than it was before, but it's a weird number. When you put some round number of dollars onto your card, like $10 or $20, you are going to have an odd number of dollars and cents left over after you have used up all the $2.75 rides you can get out of it. Eventually, if you decide to discard the card, you will lose those odd pennies and dimes. And so long as you have that odd change left over, the MTA will have money for which, technically, they have not provided service.
Fortunately, our good friends at the Village Voice (that once-radical downtown newspaper that has followed all other Print Media into the Interwebs while leaving its print version mere shadow of its former self) has kindly done the math to figure out exactly how much money to put on your metrocard to wind up with zero cents left over after using up all your $2.75 rides:
Village Voice Rides-Per-Dollar chart
In short, $22.30, $27.75, and $49.55 are the magic numbers that will get you your full compliment of subway and bus rides without any money left over. You can take advantage of this by using the "Another Amount" button when you buy or refill your card at a MTA Metrocard machine.
If you want more info on this whole rate-increase thing, Here is the official MTA web page about the fare increase.
Here is the Transportation Nation web page that answers pretty much every question you could have about the fare increase.
And here is a Brooklyn-centric news site that happens to have a picture of the subway entrance I use every day.
You know, back in the late 1980's/early 1990's I used to go to the public hearing about fare increases and say a few words about how the job of the MTA is to help people enjoy the benefits of our rights. I kind of wish I had heard about this sooner and gone this time around.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
RIP Joe Franklin
RIP Joe Franklin, the "King of Nostalgia."
Joe Franklin was a class act. He was always very generous with his time and his words. he loved hearing from poeple he liked and was always courteous, promising to call them and follow them and see their shows and read their book. I only knew his for a few years and under limited sucrumstaces, but I always got the sense that he appreciated talent, creativity, and uniqueness.
I first met him back when I was working with Jolie Voltaire at a New Years party. He was hosting his radio show at his restaurant and we talked to him about a creative show idea I had. He was impressed and gave me his phone number. I called him and visited him in his office many times over the next few years. He had me on his radio show once, talking about the trend of swords in movies and I got the famous dancer Jacques d'Amboise on his show also. He came to a couple of plays I did as well as the Big Apple comic Convention once. He always bought whatever videos or CD or publications I produced. I don't know if he ever watched, listened to, or read any of them, but he always had a kind word.
It was thanks to him that I got my "Captain Zorikh" moniker. One of the first things I told him was about my "Captain Marvel Culture" project, he started calling me "Captain Marvel" (I suspect he had a hard time remembering my name). I "corrected" him by saying "Captain Zorikh," and the name stuck. since then he always just called me "Captain."
He was especially interested in the wrestling business in which I was involved. Maybe there was just a little bit of the "D.O.M" in him, but let's face it, it always feels good when someone wants to hear about what you are doing.
There was a constant stream of characters visiting him and calling him at his office. He was always kind and generous with them, often buying them lunch and always listening to their stories and introducing them to each other. I get the feeling that he really wanted to connect people and see them succeed and achieve their dreams.
His office was really more like a big cavern stuffed with records, books, magazines, videos, memorabilia, letters, papers, mementos, and piles and piles of nostalgic crap from decades past. He sat surrounded by all this stuff with his two telephones. Calls would come in and he would have his man (Carlos, I think his name was) answer the phone, or else whoever happened t be in his office at the time. He would find out who the caller was and then tell whoever answered whether he would take the call or to take a message.
When I shot my first short film "Combat Twister," he agreed to do an interview to support it. He was a great sport about it, and did brilliantly in talking about the characters and the action in the film, despite never having actually sen it. You can see that interview, edited with scenes and music from the film, here: Joe Franklin Combat Twister Interview
whenever I called him he always said "Oh, Captain, I missed you" and "I love ya, kid" and made sure to get my phone number, saying there would be big things happening. "Big things" never really happened, and eventually I never got around to calling or visiting him again. I did try to visit him a couple of times when I was in the neighborhood of his office, but he wasn't in.
So yes, this ends with another one of those regrets for losing touch and not calling or visiting him more often or recently. An era of popular culture is ending and the world of popular culture will be poorer without him. He was a good person and I will miss him.
Joe Franklin was a class act. He was always very generous with his time and his words. he loved hearing from poeple he liked and was always courteous, promising to call them and follow them and see their shows and read their book. I only knew his for a few years and under limited sucrumstaces, but I always got the sense that he appreciated talent, creativity, and uniqueness.
I first met him back when I was working with Jolie Voltaire at a New Years party. He was hosting his radio show at his restaurant and we talked to him about a creative show idea I had. He was impressed and gave me his phone number. I called him and visited him in his office many times over the next few years. He had me on his radio show once, talking about the trend of swords in movies and I got the famous dancer Jacques d'Amboise on his show also. He came to a couple of plays I did as well as the Big Apple comic Convention once. He always bought whatever videos or CD or publications I produced. I don't know if he ever watched, listened to, or read any of them, but he always had a kind word.
It was thanks to him that I got my "Captain Zorikh" moniker. One of the first things I told him was about my "Captain Marvel Culture" project, he started calling me "Captain Marvel" (I suspect he had a hard time remembering my name). I "corrected" him by saying "Captain Zorikh," and the name stuck. since then he always just called me "Captain."
He was especially interested in the wrestling business in which I was involved. Maybe there was just a little bit of the "D.O.M" in him, but let's face it, it always feels good when someone wants to hear about what you are doing.
There was a constant stream of characters visiting him and calling him at his office. He was always kind and generous with them, often buying them lunch and always listening to their stories and introducing them to each other. I get the feeling that he really wanted to connect people and see them succeed and achieve their dreams.
His office was really more like a big cavern stuffed with records, books, magazines, videos, memorabilia, letters, papers, mementos, and piles and piles of nostalgic crap from decades past. He sat surrounded by all this stuff with his two telephones. Calls would come in and he would have his man (Carlos, I think his name was) answer the phone, or else whoever happened t be in his office at the time. He would find out who the caller was and then tell whoever answered whether he would take the call or to take a message.
When I shot my first short film "Combat Twister," he agreed to do an interview to support it. He was a great sport about it, and did brilliantly in talking about the characters and the action in the film, despite never having actually sen it. You can see that interview, edited with scenes and music from the film, here: Joe Franklin Combat Twister Interview
whenever I called him he always said "Oh, Captain, I missed you" and "I love ya, kid" and made sure to get my phone number, saying there would be big things happening. "Big things" never really happened, and eventually I never got around to calling or visiting him again. I did try to visit him a couple of times when I was in the neighborhood of his office, but he wasn't in.
So yes, this ends with another one of those regrets for losing touch and not calling or visiting him more often or recently. An era of popular culture is ending and the world of popular culture will be poorer without him. He was a good person and I will miss him.
Labels:
combat twister,
filmaking,
films,
Joe Franklin,
nostalgia,
RIP,
youtube
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Happy New Year! Sowrd Class Coming Up!
Hello everyone, and farewell to 2014! As you countdown the last
minutes of the year with your loved ones, your favorite TV
personalities, and those guys who somehow got into the party but you are
not sure who invited them, I hope you take a moment to reflect on your
successes and how to build upon them, your losses and what you learned
from them, and how there is usually a third thing you can add to just
about anything that appears to have only two options, if you just think
outside the box and accept the possibility that it may be so crazy it
JUST...MIGHT...WORK!
Just a reminder to those of you who may be curious about what sort of skills and conditioning you may need to compete in the full-contact medieval armored combat that I do, there will be a seminar in exactly that this Saturday from 3-5 PM at C1 MMA and Crossfit in Brooklyn. Fee is $15. you can pay at the door or in advance, and you can get more details at http://www.newyorkknightscombat.com/class.
So happy New Year everyone! And may it be the best and brightest so far!
Captain Z
zorikh@juno.com
817-865-1214
http://www.captainzorikh.com
Just a reminder to those of you who may be curious about what sort of skills and conditioning you may need to compete in the full-contact medieval armored combat that I do, there will be a seminar in exactly that this Saturday from 3-5 PM at C1 MMA and Crossfit in Brooklyn. Fee is $15. you can pay at the door or in advance, and you can get more details at http://www.newyorkknightscombat.com/class.
So happy New Year everyone! And may it be the best and brightest so far!
Captain Z
zorikh@juno.com
817-865-1214
http://www.captainzorikh.com
Labels:
medieval combat,
new year,
sword class,
swordfighting
Monday, December 22, 2014
A small bit of family history...
In WWII, my uncle, Carl R. Berrier, served as a US Army engineer in the 1st Army, building bridges across France to the border of Germany. He was wounded by one of the first fighter jets. My father, Claude Jean Pierre LaCoudre, was a boy growing up in Brittany at the same time. I don't think they ever met until my mom took my father to visit the family in Florida when I was a baby.
Labels:
claude jean pierre LaCoudre,
father,
uncle,
wwII
Friday, September 12, 2014
A few thoughts about 9-11
Just a few thoughts about 9-11
For those who don't know yet, I took a bunch of pictures from my windo and rooftop of the Twin Towers burning and collapsing on september 11, 2001. You can see them in my Facebook albums.
First off, it was a terrible, horrible
day. More died than at Pearl Harbor, and far fewer people committed
the act. Even more people suffered, physically, emotionally,
psychologically, and financially.
And every day that the incident gets further away, memories of it fade, and more and more mistakes, misinformation, and crackpot ideas find it capable to gain traction. People who were not there, are too young to have been there, who only see what the Interwebs have to show us, are finding it easy to accept things that fit clever conspiracy theories that support agendas.
And every day that the incident gets further away, memories of it fade, and more and more mistakes, misinformation, and crackpot ideas find it capable to gain traction. People who were not there, are too young to have been there, who only see what the Interwebs have to show us, are finding it easy to accept things that fit clever conspiracy theories that support agendas.
Here are a few things I think are true,
based on what I saw that day and what I have read and seen from
reliable sources. I am dispensing with weblinks and things because I
only have so much time in my life to dedicate to this.
Those were commercial airliners that
crashed at all four sites. They were hijacked by terrorists, and the
people on them all died.
The burning airplane fuel was hot
enough to weaken the steel, and the weight of the buildings above the
weak points made them break. That's why one building tilted the way
it did, and the building that was struck higher up collapsed later.
The front of 7 WTC at ground level was
taken out by debris fro the other towers. There were fuel oil tanks
to power the generators for the police command bunker in the building
(which wound up never being used). Those tanks caught fire, weakening
the structure, and it collapsed. The reason the front of the building
went down first was that the front of the structure was taken out, as
I already said.
There was not the time in any security
lapse for anyone to plant as many explosives as would have been
needed for a “controlled demolition” of that magnitude.
He “squibs” in the collapse of the towers are the air, furniture, and debris being blown out the windows as the ceilings collapse, one by one, and the top of the building falls on them.
Those little squibs further down? The whole freakin' building is collapsing. You don;t thing that maybe the ceiling in an office somewhere collapses and blows out the window as a result?
He “squibs” in the collapse of the towers are the air, furniture, and debris being blown out the windows as the ceilings collapse, one by one, and the top of the building falls on them.
Those little squibs further down? The whole freakin' building is collapsing. You don;t thing that maybe the ceiling in an office somewhere collapses and blows out the window as a result?
The reason steel beams and other debris
fell slower than the building is physics. The building was going
straight down, and there was nothing strong enough to stop all that
mass. The building was collapsing from the overall destruction. As
steel beams snapped and other, less massive things bounced off other
things, they went flying wherever there was room to fly, which was
away from the building. The force projecting them outwards combined
with air to slow their trajectory downwards.
The “vibrations” you see in the
building in that new video? That is the shadow of the smoke from the
fires.
The hole in the side of the Pentagon was where the fuselage went through. The slits where the wings went through are hidden behind the pile of debris. There are pieces of the airplane even in a photo on the cover of a French book claiming that there was no plane.
The hole in the side of the Pentagon was where the fuselage went through. The slits where the wings went through are hidden behind the pile of debris. There are pieces of the airplane even in a photo on the cover of a French book claiming that there was no plane.
That was not a bomb on the underside of
the second plane's fuselage. That is a bump that is part of the
plane's design.
That little bulge that comes out of the other side of the tower in that video shot from the helicopter is debris blowing through the building and out the other side. It is absurd to think that the half-dozen pixels that are roughly the same shape as the nose of a plane could be the nose of a plane slipping past the “masking” line in the video. There are plenty of pictures and video of the plane hitting the tower from other angles that show the explosion out the other side.
And you don't see the plane earlier in that video because it was too damn small.
To say that the grainy, low-res video still shows something other than the plane just before it hits the building it is supposed to be because a row of pixels looks like the sun is hitting it at a different angle is ridiculous. Those few pixels of an object in motion can easily look like something they are not.
The “moving bridge” and other background elements are because the cameraperson is trying to keep focused on the towers as the camera moves, not because it is a composite image.
That little bulge that comes out of the other side of the tower in that video shot from the helicopter is debris blowing through the building and out the other side. It is absurd to think that the half-dozen pixels that are roughly the same shape as the nose of a plane could be the nose of a plane slipping past the “masking” line in the video. There are plenty of pictures and video of the plane hitting the tower from other angles that show the explosion out the other side.
And you don't see the plane earlier in that video because it was too damn small.
To say that the grainy, low-res video still shows something other than the plane just before it hits the building it is supposed to be because a row of pixels looks like the sun is hitting it at a different angle is ridiculous. Those few pixels of an object in motion can easily look like something they are not.
The “moving bridge” and other background elements are because the cameraperson is trying to keep focused on the towers as the camera moves, not because it is a composite image.
The slightly out-of-synch timing of the
explosions from second plane strikes from the various networks is
because the network feed to one network might simply be a second
slower than the video feed to another network.
The plane did not disintegrate before it hit the building because 1) the plane had not been going that fast that long, it was accelerating to that speed, and 2) just because industry standards say you should not fly it that fast does not mean that it will not hold together long enough to crash into a building.
The plane did not disintegrate before it hit the building because 1) the plane had not been going that fast that long, it was accelerating to that speed, and 2) just because industry standards say you should not fly it that fast does not mean that it will not hold together long enough to crash into a building.
Those were people jumping out of the
towers. I have friends who were there and saw them.
Those silhouette sculptures were public art.
There are plenty of pictures of plan wreckage at the Twin Towers.
Those silhouette sculptures were public art.
There are plenty of pictures of plan wreckage at the Twin Towers.
There is someone who says that certain
pictures of certain victims used other pictures of those same people
and faked the backgrounds, showing side-by-side comparisons. First
off, why would anyone do that? Secondly, look closer, there are
little differences in the lighting or the angle. Do you think it is
impossible for someone to have more than one picture of themselves
taken under similar lighting conditions at similar angles?
No, there was no message sent out to
all the Jews who worked in the WTC to stay home that day.
No, no one “surfed” down as the building collapsed.
The picture of the man on the roof as the plane is about to hit is a fake. The roof wasn't open, the observation deck was on the other tower, the plan is in much too sharp focus, and the guy is wearing a winter coat and hat on a very warm sunny day.
No, no one “surfed” down as the building collapsed.
The picture of the man on the roof as the plane is about to hit is a fake. The roof wasn't open, the observation deck was on the other tower, the plan is in much too sharp focus, and the guy is wearing a winter coat and hat on a very warm sunny day.
There are no secret camps holding the
passengers, the victims' families were not paid off. Nobody recruited
nearly 3,000 families to pretend that they had relatives that
died.
There is plenty wrong with this country, the administration of George W. Bush, and everything else that led up to the circumstances that inspired and allowed the events of that day to happen, and plenty wrong with the reactions to it and the events that followed it, and there are far more Afghans and Iraqis dead, military, civilian, and “terrorist,” and American military personnel that have died since, than Americans who died that day, for what it's worth.
There is plenty wrong with this country, the administration of George W. Bush, and everything else that led up to the circumstances that inspired and allowed the events of that day to happen, and plenty wrong with the reactions to it and the events that followed it, and there are far more Afghans and Iraqis dead, military, civilian, and “terrorist,” and American military personnel that have died since, than Americans who died that day, for what it's worth.
Those of us who were there saw the
planes, saw the live footage, saw the damage, lost friends and
relatives. To claim that there were no planes, that there was a
government conspiracy, etc, not only cheapens the tragedy, but gets
in the way of finding out why the tragedy really happened, and taking
a sober and responsible look at what has happened in response since
then.
Labels:
9-11,
conspiracy theories,
photos,
politics,
twin towers,
world trade center
Friday, August 22, 2014
The Journal of Frankenstein's Brother, Part 2
EXCERPT FROM THE JOURNAL OF DR. NICHOLAS FRANKENSTEIN
as transcribed by Zorikh Lequidre
(part 2 of 2, continued from yesterday)
When I reached the creatures, I was
able to see them in greater detail, as if they now allowed themselves
to be revealed to me. I was now within their reach and had no
chance of getting away, even if I turned and ran with all my speed (a
course of action, that, upon reflection, a reasonable man should not
have considered unreasonable, but which, for reasons beyond my ken,
was completely outside my realm of consideration). I saw that they
were not quite human, but their eyes revealed an intelligence and
depth of feeling as deep as any man, perhaps even beyond.
My first thought was to introduce them
to my creature. I tried to speak, but found myself incapable of aught but the hoarsest of whispers. With only such a meager attempt at
verbal communication available to me, I decided to forgo words
altogether and gestured to them to follow me, and they did.
When we approached the creature's
cabin, I found him standing in the doorway, as if he was expecting
visitors. My mind now swims with the implications of this. Were my
creature and these beings of the North American woods communicating
on a level of which man was incapable? If so, how long had these
creatures been standing in the clearing, and what had they said to
each other? My mind boggles with the possibilities, but I must get on
with my report of what happened.
Unlike the human inhabitants of this
region, these beings met my creature with solemnity and restraint.
They touched each other on the shoulders. My creature hummed softly,
as if attempting to vocally reflect the sensation that had woken me
up. I started to feel small and insignificant beneath them, as if
this was a moment of great import and significance. To think that such a
small, frail, temporary creature as I, a member of a species only but
recently occupying this land, this planet, this universe could ever accomplish
anything as momentous as this would be an act of great hubris on
my part. I was merely an incidental part of the environment, no more
relevant than a small mammal in the trees, whose only concern for the
creatures now communing was whether they would interfere with his
gathering of nuts for the winter.
But still, beneath all this, I felt a
swelling of pride, for I had created this creature. With my own mind
I interpreted the work of my brother. With my own hands I constructed
the being that now stood before me. With my own initiative I had
brought him to this place. Without me none of this would have
happened, and we humans would have gone on living, concerning
ourselves with our petty squabbles, fighting over our metaphorical
nuts for the winter, never knowing that the secrets of life and
nature lie there before us for discovery, if only we could look past our
confounded prejudices and selfish desires to find them.
The next thing I knew I was back in my
own bed, the sun leaking through the trees, through the window, and into
our cabin. Had I dreamed it all? But the sensation was so real!
Sometimes dreams can be so real we accept them as fact until the
moment of awakening, and then try to deny their ephemerality in the
face of reality. But then they fade from memory like wisps of smoke
or ripples in the water with nothing, literally nothing, to prove
that they were ever there. In fear of this phenomena of
forgetfulness, I immediately sat to write down the experience, which
is the only way I can report it now, for it faded from my mind in
much the same way.
I chose not to share it with my
colleagues. They had come with me this far, had witnessed my success
in the laboratory and were accepting of the premise of the
experiment, but somehow I knew that to reveal this experience to them
would cause them to doubt my sincerity as a scientist. It had been an
experience that was unquantifiable, unverifiable, one that bordered
on the spiritual. I sought out footprints, or any other visible sign
of the incident I had experienced, and found nothing. Was I mad? Were
these creatures in such harmony with nature that they could move
among it without being detected or leaving a sign? Was there more to
the universe than the realm of human experience allows? Are there
truly more things in Heaven and Earth than is dreamt of in our
philosophy?
On the evening of that day the natives
came forth into the clearing by our cabins. It had been less than a
month since we had arrived, and it was the first full moon we would
experience there, and I supposed that this is what the natives were
celebrating. As the sun went down the natives lit a bonfire and
started dancing in a big circle. They played music with primitive
drums and pipes. As we stood and watched we were invited to join the
circle by the natives, and soon we were welcoming the full moon with
all our hearts. We were fed with the most delightful of foods and
drinks, presumably made from the local fruits and vegetables, nuts, roots, grains, and berries. I
thought it curious that there was no meat, particularly considering the animal skins the natives had worn in our previous encounter, but I assumed that these
innocent savages had found a way to live in harmony with the local
fauna, and resigned to pursue the question of the origins of the hides later. In any event, certainly from the taste and volume of the food at this
celebration, they had found epicurean satisfaction in a vegetarian diet.
The festival happened in such a
whirlwind of activity that I did not have the opportunity to invite
my creature to join, although I would have been concerned at
introducing him to so much excitement so soon. But before I was able
to collect my wits I had danced, dined, and drunk so much that I had
to retire to our cabin to recover.
I must have dozed off, for when I awoke
the full moon had risen and the sounds of celebration had died down. I
ventured out the door and saw the mysterious creatures from the
previous night sitting around the dying embers of the fire. The
natives were nowhere to be seen. I approached the creatures with
caution, wary lest any sudden movements or loud noises disturb them.
They now seemed real to me, almost common place, as if this was a
natural way for them to exist in a relaxed state.
I thought this would be a perfect
opportunity to bring forth my creature and see if he would commune
with them as he had the previous night. If that had been a dream, I
thought, what would happen now, in the light of reality? I tried to
whisper to the nearest one, but as in the previous night, my whisper
was so hoarse it could barely be said to be a sound at all.
Yet the nearest creature did hear me, and turned, slowly, to look at
me. I felt that the only other sound I could make than a whisper was
a full-throated shout, but my respect for the mood of the moment did
not allow it. These creatures seemed so large in my presence that the
only way they would be able to understand me was if I shouted, but
what business had I, a mere human, to do that in their presence? As a
scientist, dedicated to observing natural phenomena, how could I do
something so disruptive to the natural state of these strange beings?
But somehow the nearest creature, the
one who had turned to me, understood what I was trying to say. He did
not respond in any obvious, direct manner, but simply turned back to
the fire. Was I being ignored? Thought insignificant? Allowed to
leave? The meaning was inscrutable to me, but at least I was
obviously not a threat. I got up and ran to my creature's cabin. The
path seemed longer and more overgrown than I had thought it to be. I
found myself out of breath when I arrived. I opened the door to find
the plants that had been gathered to fill the cabin had nearly
overgrown it, forming a jungle of almost Amazonian dimensions. The
ceiling seemed higher than it had originally been built. His table
was in the middle of the room, and on it was a plate with a slice of
toasted bread with some form of sauce or preserve spread upon it. I
looked for my creature but saw no trace of him. Perhaps he was hiding
in the undergrowth, The idea that he could have left the cabin did
not occur to me. I picked up the toasted bread and examined it. I noticed
a smell on the spread. It was unfamiliar to me as being of any form
of spread or preserve of which I'd had experience. Then my eye
wandered past the bread, to the table, to the base of a large
plant-pot but a few feet away. I saw an...object. A thing, sticking
out from behind it. The thing was white and had the distinct shape of
a bone, a thighbone, perhaps. I was intrigued by the curiosity of
what sort of thing could have that shape and been brought into this
cabin.
I approached it cautiously, growing
more certain with each step that it was a thighbone, and more
trepidatious about what that might mean. I turned the corner around
the small tree inside the plant-pot and found a sight that will chill
me until the day that I die.
The thigh bone was connected to a hip
bone. The hip bone was connected to a back bone. The back bone was
connected to a skull, and the skull was resting under a pile of bones
higher than my own head.
What have I done?!? What have I
created!?! My blood froze. My body chilled. All the cliches of the
Penny Dreadfuls came alive in that moment of realization of the
abomination that had come forth from my laboratory, from my own
hands!
I retched. I collapsed. I crawled to
the door and ran back to my cabin. I searched for my colleagues to no
avail. I ran out of the cabin and saw the giant creatures of the
forest standing near the remains of the fire, facing me. Amongst
their number, central among them, was my creature. They started
moving towards me. I envisioned my bones on that pile in the cabin.
Grotesque images of my creature's mastication of my flesh flashed
before me. I turned and ran.
I ran through the woods, heedless of
the million bits and pieces, twigs and branches, rocks and stones,
leaves and insects in my path. As I ran I had a thought that was
terrifying in its comfort to me: That as his creator, my creature
wanted me to join them in their abominable, inhuman culture, to be
one of them, feasting of the flesh of lesser men! To imagine that I
would be comforted by being welcomed into such a fellowship! Was my
attachment to humanity, to human virtue so tenuous that I would join
a brotherhood that gained nourishment from consumption of my fellow
human beings, beings as capable of thought, of feeling, of creation
as I?
Sheer exhaustion and the denseness of
the undergrowth slowed my progress, but did not diminish my ardor for
exit from that nightmare, now too real to dismiss. Dawn came. As the sun climbed my flight continued. Fear and desperation overcame hunger and weariness and I continued to plunge forth through field and wood, across river and stream. Somehow I found my
way back to civilization in the form of a fort by a lake manned by soldiers of the
British Empire. I dared not tell them of my plight, my shame, my
horror, and allowed them to believe that I had been captured by
natives and struck dumb by being witness to some inhuman ritual that
I now would have thought tame by comparison to my true experience. I
write this journal in the desperate hope that it will somehow purge
me of these feeling I have, these visions of horror, this realization
of my folly.
My only endeavor now is to seek the undiscovered country from whose borders no man returns. My only hope is that I find a dreamless sleep, an eternal forgetfulness that will wipe clean all memory of what I have done. If however, I face some form of eternal damnation, I pray only that it will be my own to suffer, and that Humanity will not suffer from my hubris in thinking myself capable of achieving that which is only for nature or God to achieve. If would-be Prometheii continue to tamper with forces beyond their control they risk not only the ruination of their souls but the destruction of all we have achieved.
My only endeavor now is to seek the undiscovered country from whose borders no man returns. My only hope is that I find a dreamless sleep, an eternal forgetfulness that will wipe clean all memory of what I have done. If however, I face some form of eternal damnation, I pray only that it will be my own to suffer, and that Humanity will not suffer from my hubris in thinking myself capable of achieving that which is only for nature or God to achieve. If would-be Prometheii continue to tamper with forces beyond their control they risk not only the ruination of their souls but the destruction of all we have achieved.
These were the last words of the
journal of Dr. Nicholas Frankenstein. His body was never found.
On the grounds of a prestigious
university in the British Empire stands a monument to learning and
the pursuit of knowledge. The inscription is poetically worded,
describing how only through the tireless pursuit of knowledge can man
ever hope to improve himself.
Somewhere else is a small headstone on which reads the name DR. N. FRANKENSTEIN.
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FIRST PART
Here are some more versions of the original story to enjoy:
...and just for fun:
Somewhere else is a small headstone on which reads the name DR. N. FRANKENSTEIN.
CLICK HERE TO READ THE FIRST PART
Here are some more versions of the original story to enjoy:
...and just for fun:
Labels:
dreams,
frankenstein,
frankenstein's brother,
stories
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