"Dance of the Rings 1 - Ring of Lightning" - читать интересную книгу автора (Fancher Jane S)Ring of Lightning by Jane S. Fancher Excerpt from Darius' History of Rhomatum Reconsidered, by Berul dunSegri, written and published in the year 284 after the Founding and found in the private library of Nikaenor Rhomandi dunMheric, 18th Princeps of Rhomatum. . . . It is frankly naive to accept any written history as abso- lute fact, as all events are filtered at least once through the eyes of the participants and again through the eyes of the recorder. Even if the recorder and participant are one and the same, written history remains a record twice removed from fact, as one must always interpret one's experiences in retrospect, and one is never quite the same before or after the interpretation, much less the events themselves. With regard to the history of Rhomatum, this limitation is particularly evident in the decades surrounding the Founda- tion. We have a paucity of documentary evidence regarding thepresumablydecades of events and thoughts that led to the Darian Exodus from the ancient city of Mauritum and the founding of our own fair city. This dearth of knowl- sources over three centuries and the likelihood that the most interesting sources remain in Mauritum, inaccessible to this conscientious scholar. Yet these are not the only reasons for our ignorance, nor are they the greatest. Darius Rhomandi himself, our city's founder, must be judged the architect of our ignorance. By his own decrees, in the thirty-third year after the Founding, Darius severed his creation from the city which had created him. With a single stroke of his pen, our Founder proclaimed his own recounting of the Founding and his own memories of Mauritum, which he'd set forth in lus three-volume History of Rhomatum were all the past Rhomatum needed for the future. All other substantial evi- dence of Mauritum was henceforth banned in Rhomatum. Books were burntnot just the tomes of interpretive his- tory Rhomatum's first settlers transported into Rhomatum along with their other baggage, but letters, private diaries, and all the other intimate documents of people in their own time, without which the conscientious historian is reduced to evidence scarce removed from rumormongering, hearsay, and gossip. Having excised their Mauritumin past from Rhomatum's collective consciousness, our Founder then signed the second decree of the Reformation, thereby sealing his city's fate of |
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