"Frank Herbert - Dune 2 - Dune Messiah (2)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Herbert Brian & Frank)

file:///F|/rah/Herbert,%20Frank/Dune%202%20-%20Dune%20Messiah.txt

Dune Messiah
Frank Herbert


Copyright 1969


Excerpts from the Death Cell Interview with Bronso of IX

Q: What led you to take your particular approach to a history of Muad'dib?
A: Why should I answer your questions?
Q: Because I will preserve your words.
A: Ahhh! The ultimate appeal to a historian!
Q: Will you cooperate then?
A: Why not? But you'll never understand what inspired my Analysis of History. Never. You Priests
have too much at stake to . . .
Q: Try me.
A: Try you? Well, Again . . . why not? I was caught by the shallowness of the common view of this
planet which arises from its popular name: Dune. Not Arrakis, notice, but Dune. History is
obsessed by Dune as desert, as birthplace of the Fremen. Such history concentrates on the customs
which grew out of water scarcity and the fact that Fremen led semi-nomadic lives in stillsuits
which recovered most of their body's moisture.
Q: Are these things not true, then?
A: They are surface truth. As well ignore what lies beneath that surface as . . . as try to
understand my birthplanet, Ix, without exploring how we derived our name from the fact that we are
the ninth planet of our sun. No . . . no. It is not enough to see Dune as a place of savage
storms. It is not enough to talk about the threat posed by the gigantic sandworms.
Q: But such things are crucial to the Arrakeen character!
A: Crucial? Of course. But they produce a one-view planet in the same way that Dune is a one-crop
planet because it is the sole and exclusive source of the spice, melange.
Q: Yes. Let us hear you expand on the sacred spice.
A: Sacred! As with all things sacred, it gives with one hand and takes with the other. It extends
life and allows the adept to foresee his future, but it ties him to a cruel addiction and marks
his eyes as yours are marked: total blue without any white. Your eyes, your organs of sight,
become one thing without contrast, a single view.
Q: Such heresy brought you to this cell!
A: I was brought to this cell by your Priests. As with all priests, you learned early to call the
truth heresy.
Q: You are here because you dared to say that Paul Atreides lost something essential to his
humanity before he could become Muad'dib.
A: Not to speak of his losing his father here in the Harkonnen war. Nor the death of Duncan Idaho,
who sacrificed himself that Paul and the Lady Jessica could escape.
Q: Your cynicism is duly noted.
A: Cynicism! That, no doubt is a greater crime than heresy. But, you see, I'm not really a cynic.
I'm just an observer and commentator. I saw true nobility in Paul as he fled into the desert with
his pregnant mother. Of course, she was a great asset as well as a burden.
Q: The flaw in your historians is that you'll never leave well enough alone. You see true nobility
in the Holy Muad'dib, but you must append a cynical footnote. It's no wonder that the Bene