"Dan Parkinson - Dragonlance Tales - Cataclysm" - читать интересную книгу автора (Parkinson Dan)sent the dogs back to Mother soon and traveled alone,
sometimes working for a while at jobs where nobody knew me or thought they knew me, where nobody cared that I never removed my hood. It was a year, six seasons perhaps, before I realized exactly what it was about the song I was searching for. It has long been practice that when a bard travels and sings, his songs are attended, remembered, and copied by those in the regions nearby. If a song is a new one, it carries to still farther regions by word of mouth, from bard to bard, from orator to folksinger to storyteller to bard again. It is a tangled process, and the words change sometimes in the telling, no matter how we try to rightly remember. The old lines from Arion's song I heard in Solamnia as THE PRAYER OF MATHERI MERCIFUL GRAMMAR OF THOUGHT I had heard in the small town of Solace as THE PRAYERS OF MATHERI MERCY, GRANDMOTHER OF THOUGHT and the southern lines made me laugh, distorted like gossip in their passage across the straits. unchangeable. As I traveled, I knew I would come to a place when I would hear those scratched and worried lines of my father's - the lines about Pyrrhus Alecto, about Lightbringer and history and glory - but I would hear them in a different version. And I would know at last what Pyrrhus Orestes had altered. ***** Across the Straits of Schallsea I once stowed away on a ferry. The enraged ferryman discovered me under a pile of badger hides, and he threatened to throw me overboard for evading his fee. He relented when he pushed back my hood and saw the scars from the burning. "Firebringer," he snarled. "Only my fear of Branchala, of the curse upon bard-slayers, stays my hand from your murder." I cherished his greeting. It was the first of many such conversations. Over the grain fields of Abanasinia I wandered, in a journey from summer to summer and threat to threat. Three times I heard "Song of the Rending" - once from a minstrel in Solace, again in the city of Haven from a seedy, unraveled bard who had forgotten entire passages about the |
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