Black Duck Down

S02 — Session 17

1626, Earth Season, Movement Week, around Fire Day to Illusion Week, around Freeze Day


Dramatis Personae

PCs

Berra
Dormal
Mellia
Nala
Rajar
Tiwr
Varanis
Xenofos

NPCs

Lord Kesten Hulta
Many other Humakti
Irillo
A Duck

Events

As before, the log will be recounted with extracts from Berra JarangsdottiHumaktisaga, NalaTiwrSaga and The Death of Rajar. As with last time there will be extracts from the Sonnets to Varanis, Sonnets in Praise of Xenofos and The Sonnets to Mellia, Sweetest of Healers, White Lady of Esrolia. There will be reference to the Accounts of the Travels of Irillo Goldentongue. Editorial commentary will be recorded [thus]. The {“D”} voice appears.

“Ah, good afternoon. As you can see, I have returned, despite any attempts of forces of Gods, man and Nature to the contrary!

I have been reading your essays, and I can say it is none too soon! Let us get started forthwith, with the The Sonnets to Mellia, Sweetest of Healers, White Lady of Esrolia. “

All conspired to thwart her true love’s dream
Both Pirate iron and <two words lost here, presumably 4 syllables> Scheme
Harrek’s kin1 There is no textual evidence that Harrek was a Duck elsewhere, so it must be presumed the kinship is adopted, rather than we should radically re-evaluate our understanding of the Berserker. and obsid’ian blade of down
Preventing nuptual band from reaching town.

With ransom note, sweet Mell’ia felt bereft
For White Priests2 This is clearly for poetic benefit, as Mellia does not appear to have been a priest at this time. gift, with nothing selfish left
To Gen’rous kin, she straightways then appealed
To give their aid, for all the ills she’d healed.

“Does this suggest a White Lady appealed for the application of extreme violence? This seems outside our understanding of both the social mores of the time, and our previous experience of Mellia. What other explanation do we have? A question for your next essays, perhaps? It would appear that her next visit was to the House of Humakt.”

White Woman Walks
Within Warriors hall
D’Vals Dagger dilligent
Dung dispatching

Humble handiwork for Humakt’s
Hardworking Handmaid.
Seeing Sweet Salvor3 Suggesting one who makes ointments, or metaphorically one who ‘smooths things’.
Speaking softly

“Brave Berra, bandits
Bind my bridefolk
Help their hazards and heal
Harm to my Hopes!”

“Now, obviously, here we are seeing what? Yes! That is correct! An inversion in the normal pattern. Mellia suggesting harm and appealing to Berra to heal. This is a trope which is often invoked when the Duck figure is appearing, so at this point could be seen as a prefiguration. A thousand words on the Duck as a precursor to ‘Mystero Buffo’, perhaps? Now, we might also constructively divert a bit at some point on the subject of the Duck, and whether it is meant literally, as a metaphor for a particular type of person, or some figure now lost to our ken.”

“Continuing, after what appears to be a slight gap in the manuscript, we find this discussion in the Lay of Xenofos, a lesser known work, which is often felt to be apocryphal.”


Before the lofty hall of Humakt tiled
With baked clay tablets such that any child
Could walk upon them with @@[[sic]]@@ harm to feet
And look about the Gods most lofty seat

And see the carvings in the antique kind
Which bring’s the works of <text lost> to the mind
And the statues with the gold…


“Actually, I’m going to skip a bit more about the architecture here.”

And thus without hot ire and manner mild
Lord Kesten faced the Sartar swift sword child
Their combat was the sort which tales are told
And those who watch’d recalled when they were old

That never thus was combat fought twixt foe
Who viewed the thought of victory with woe.
And Berra struck the blow that won the day
And thus for angers words did Kesten Pay.

What Really Happened

Session Quotes

  • 1
    There is no textual evidence that Harrek was a Duck elsewhere, so it must be presumed the kinship is adopted, rather than we should radically re-evaluate our understanding of the Berserker.
  • 2
    This is clearly for poetic benefit, as Mellia does not appear to have been a priest at this time.
  • 3
    Suggesting one who makes ointments, or metaphorically one who ‘smooths things’.