Second Book of the Orchids
The Second Book of the Orchids Secunda Liber Florae
First Verse
First came the sea on the shore of the world Then came the Mother of All Then Mandorallen with standard unfurled And Ilass, who fell in the fall Last came the Orchids, that sealed the world's fate Long before the first isle e'er rose Which will seal shut the book when they touch and they mate And bring all of our tales to a close
Second Verse
But the close is not yet, and there's much to be said 'Ere the crack of that ultimate doom All the deeds of the heroes, both living and dead - And the words upon Utas's tomb Tie together the stories, and lead to these tales On through chapters, suffus?d with light Doomed to darkness, no doubt, but at least ere it fails It'll put up a heck of a fight
Third Verse
Once again the sun rises, and Tineon's charge Lifts the spirit of Earth with its rays Glowing fiery and red o'er the swamp's misty marge As it's glowed for its millions of days Like a hand, its rays beckon for tales to be told And my mind's full of stories to tell Tales of war and renown in the ages of old That tie into the present, as well
Fourth Verse
Where was I? My course on the river of Time Has always a penchant to stray When one sings of a matter so strange and sublime It can scarcely be fit in a day I believe when I stopped all the gods that remained Unto Calaspir's plane had ascended Having fled from their home when their dominance waned And I now shall begin where I ended:
Fifth Verse
When the last of the gods from their tragic defeat Had discovered the alternate plane In the great hall of Aeon they gather and meet And see who of their number remain With the Timelord presiding, they call on their band Asking each god his presence to show That the size of their loss they might then understand And assess the extend of their woe
Sixth Verse
First Tineon Firelord spoke of his flight From his fiery forge in the sky He departed the world, which was then left in night And to Tirlar besieged hoped to fly But he heard a great cry from that ill-fated land And the voice of his brother call "Flee!" But was ready, when needed, to help make a stand And recapture the lost victory
Seventh Verse
His story was mirrored by the Shaper of Seas And by She who sends clouds through the sky And by Salio Gemsmith, who loudly decrees "I am ready to fight and to die If but I can strike with a well-deserved blow At the horrible sinister heart Who in battle to beautiful Tirlar would go And defile the core of our art!"
Eighth Verse
Thus the Irdia spoke with one voice and propose To return with the cloak of surprise To descend unexpected, and slaughter their foes 'Ere the blood of the last battle dries But Aeon the Timelord here quiets their call And declares that no war will take place 'Ere his census was done, and had knowledge of all Who were left of the heavenly race
Nineth Verse
The Irbegdia now make their company known And the brood of Rianna, the Stars But of those of Laguna, fair Celen alone Has escaped with the gods from the wars Onton and Osik are not to be seen Nor are Annor and Anira found And they mourn for the loss of the line of the Queen And tears, shock, and wailing abound
Tenth Verse
At the thought of Laguna all faces arise But alas! She is not in the hall And Aeon stands up, but does not meet their eyes But he stares at the floor and the wall At last, he reveals "It is not as you fear The Mother of All is not dead But I bear with me news you will not want to hear But I think that it has to be said
Eleventh Verse
Alas! In the chaos and slaughter of war Laguna was pierced through the eye By a razor sharp spear-point, and never before Has the world heard the like of her cry And I cried to her servants: 'Fly! Bear her away! Ere fierce Lest deals a finishing blow!' Here I found her unharmed, but her tale and her way To my fortress I yet do not know."
Twelfth Verse
Thus Aeon the Timelord concluded his speech And far-seeing Ardescit rose "It is I, and one other, he thus did beseech To rescue the god from her foes I am Ardescit Soundsenser, brought here by fate Named Gardexscatilbisc (friends call me Gar) With permission from Aeon, I now will relate How Laguna was brought from afar
Thirteenth Verse
Now two hath Laguna as servants and friends Myself, and a colleague called S?n I hear every sound, to the Earth's very ends He sees all beneath sun, Stars, and moon Now together we brought Her to Ennabruk's side And looked off, at Carama's bright bay When myself and my colleague ('tis strange to confide) Spent hours debating the way
Fourteenth Verse
I was chanting the Spell that would open the Door To the Castle and Keep far away But old S?n dared to question the depth of my lore And corrected each word I would say Every sigil I wrote in the fire-filled air He erased, and a variant drew Every rune that I carved on the stony ground there He would cancel, and carve it anew
Fifteenth Verse
Twice an hour we sat there, debating the path 'Til our charge gave a piteous groan And the sound lit within me a fire of wrath And I knew then what had to be done I looked on my colleague, still scratching the ground And rewriting a well-written rune I know not where the courage to do it I found But I turned, and spoke thusly to S?n:
Sixteenth Verse
"I cast ye from Tirlar! Yea, you and your breed! The Witch and the Child and the rest! You abandoned Laguna in all of her need You are loyal to Ilass and Lest!" Then I summoned my strength and I gave a great shove There, where Tirlar gives way to the skies Down he fell, 'til his screams left my ears far above And his aspect was lost to my eyes
Sevententh Verse
And I trembled, but trembling completed the spell And opened the Door to the Keep And departed with speed from that Heaven turned Hell With Laguna, still fevered in sleep" Thus Ardescit Soundsenser finished his tale And the gods thought the story appalling And some asked to know more, and demanded detail But Aeon went on in his calling
Eighteenth Verse
Now Elwynn was called and (praise be to the Powers!) She was safe in that far away hall By the Timelord snatched up from the City of Towers Next did Mordicc respond to the call Now Carding and Baccostaab made their flight known And others, the friends of the gods Who by Aeon's swift servants had lately been shown The way to his far-off abodes
Nineteenth Verse
But where one of the gods was accustomed to sit There was no god or man to be found And some who were present were baffled by it And thus vainly they looked round and round But the Timelord was sad, and his aspect was grave As he gazed at lost Utas' seat And though all looked untowards him in all the great clave There was no one whose gaze he would meet
Tentieth Verse
Then spoke Carding: "Alas! For that seat nevermore With our brother and friend shall be filled In the clashing of arms and the tumult of war The brave Utas collapsed and was killed And an hour may come when our pain-stricken hearts Have the leisure to sit and to grieve But now I propose to set forth from these parts And make terrible war, given leave
First Verse
And every great god, with a single voice cried "Let us go! Let us go to the wars! Let not our desired revenge be denied Let us go! Ere time closes our scars! Let us go! Let us go in late Utas' name! In the name of the Mother of All! And do deeds, to be ever remembered by Fame Let us go! We can no longer stall!
First Verse
And they all rose at once, and they reached for their arms For their spears and their daggers and swords And their rune-inscribed talismans, magicks, and charms And the standards were raised by the lords But Aeon the Timelord remained in his chair And he beckoned for all to stand tight And he asked for a night and a day to prepare And to get into shape for the fight
First Verse
Now the others were filled with a smoldering rage And they barely obeyed the command And some murmured to leave him there, due to his age And a number continued to stand But the Timelord arose, and he went through a door Rune-inlaid, at the end of the hall 'Twas exceedingly strange - for a moment before There had not been a door there at all
First Verse
And behold, as he entered, the door disappeared And the others were struck with affright At the loss of their lord in a manner so weird And they look for a day and a night Yea, for all of a night and a day did they look Every hall, every room - every stone Every passage and door, every cranny and nook But old Aeon the Timelord was gone
First Verse
Yea, they looked, and in looking despaired, but at last At the hour appointed by fate When a day and night over Calaspir passed Ancient Aeon returned through his gate And his face had the aspect of wizards who gaze Unhealthily long at the sun 'Till their eyes become blinded by Tineon's rays Which most mortals dare not look upon
First Verse
His wrinkled old flesh had an aspect so pale That all wondered what ghosts he had seen His legs, which had always been trembling and frail Were more weak than they ever had been And from all of the gods there assembled there came A wail of impotent despair And their hopes to their powers and towers reclaim Melted down, and dissolved into air
First Verse
Thus their anguish-but wait! From the rune-inlaid gate To wherever old Aeon had been Came a pounding of footsteps (O strange to relate) That made echoes off chambers within And a form high and mighty began to take shape Like to Aeon, but hardly the same And the gods, their eyes wide, and their mouths all agape Stared in awe at the form as it came
First Verse
He was covered in mail, from his head to his toe Neither copper nor iron nor steel But the purest of adamant, forged long ago 'Ere the thoughts of the gods were made real In his right was a sword wrought with infinite care So its sides formed an apex so sharp That the sound that it made when it flew through the air Was like strings softly plucked on a harp
First Verse
In his left was a shield with a blazing device Of a tower set high on a hill And a great bolt of lightning curled round it thrice And a sentence of runes, writ with skill Said "Behold! This is Ennabruk! Look at it shake! As it never has shaken before! Its legitimate master has come to retake Its high towers through terrible war!"
First Verse
And they shook, yea, they shook - and so shook the whole world At a prophecy cast and fulfilled For here stood Mandorallen with standard unfurled After Utas and hope had been killed After powers and towers in fallen from high After cities' and deities' ends Now the Power Undreamed from the Infinite sky At long last its great champion sends
First Verse
Now the armies of Calaspier gather together In a courtyard outside the great hall And they shown with a power divine; I doubt whether Any force could withstand them at all For the Irdia, Faldia, servants, and guards Were assembled, with Elwynn there too For a battle so great that the poets and bards Sing it still - as I now will to you
First Verse
Now the Earth-Goddess Salio forged from the stone A great isle that floated in air And could hold the whole army, and move on it's own In an hour, it flew them all there And it rammed into Ennabruk, making a sound That echoed through infinite space And the hosts disembarked, and prepared to surround The whole town, and encircle the place
First Verse
From the towers within came the armies of Lest And cursed Ilass herself took the lead By her right hand stood Yetal, supporting her crest All alone, shunned by e'en his own breed And the ranks were of demons - from some starless pit They were called by their master - and came And dark creatures from lands that the sun never lit Without shape, without speech, without name
First Verse
As they swarmed from their barracks, exuding with hate Mandorallen broke rank from his host And stood like a mountain, unspeakably great And he called to his rivals this boast "Come one from your number, come any who may Let us settle this quarrel alone Let a combat of champions determine the day And make vanquished and conqueror known"
First Verse
But none from their number would go on ahead And do battle with Aeon's strange son And the ranks of the Dark One first shuddered, then broke And it seemed that the battle was won When out of the tower, a form draped in black Came to answer the champion's call And in terror, the dark armies all slithered back Lest their general punish them all
First Verse
He was shrouded in darkness, from head unto toe Neither fabric, illusion, nor spell But the blackness that came from the Void long ago Ling'ring still in the dark pits of Hell His right hand held a mace strewn with prickles so cruel That the air fled before them in fright And they clanged as their master came forth to the duel In his raiments of Stygian night
First Verse
But while the Bright Champion awaited his foe And with iron grip clutched to his sword The great Paradox, born from the Void long ago And the Ending that Fate had assured Leapt again to the forestage, and Elwynn leapt out Of the ranks of the armies of light And from all of the warriors came forth a great shout As she ran toward the Child of Night
First Verse
Now the Champion started, and ran toward the child And the armies unraveled in fear And with fear of the Doomsday dread driven wild Massive chaos and tumult appear But at last Mandorallen, as fast as the stars When they fail and fall down from the sky Attained her; and there, in the midst of the wars Stood silent, and held her up high
First Verse
Then Carding, the Loremaster, fastened a spell Out of things he had brought for this need A black powder, ground out of the pillars of Hell Crystal sphere, comet hair, mandrake seed After chants, invocations, and wonderful song On the tip of his wand came a fire Long he sang, and the flames grew unbearably long And so hot, they gleamed blue like sapphire
First Verse
"BY THE POWERS UNDREAMED, LET IT BE!" he then yelled And the fire waxed high and burned bright Then collapsed to a spark, which the wand then expelled Toward the struggling Child of Light With a final convulsion, her struggling form Was engulfed by the radiant power For a second, there thundered the fiery storm Then subsided, revealing a flower
First Verse
Yea - where Elwynn had been, there was naught to be seen But an orchid - the first, long ago Its leaves were a vibrant and pulsating green With one flower in bloom, white as snow Yea - the first of the orchids, to seal the world's fate Although flowery and snowy and pure It would seal shut the book - it would join and would mate And then nothing could hope to endure
First Verse
But her brother was filled with a terrible wrath And he ran through the ranks of his host With his mace and his spells he created a path To respond to his enemy's boast Mandorallen's sharp sword glowed with light like a wand Like a firefly flits through the brake And the cruel mace of Lest, in its haste to respond Made the Earth and the Universe quake
First Verse
Then the battle begun, and I shudder to tell Of the strength and the wrath of the Two Of their frenzy, that nothing but murder could quell Of the blows that their weaponry blew Of the clash their debate sent to Earth down below Of the skill of the warriors' style Of the wonder and fear that the horrible row Made the spectators feel all the while
First Verse
But at last Mandorallen, that newly-born Lord Of the battle and all of its skill With his adamant shell and his adamant sword Gained a hold, and moved in for the kill And he struck the cruel mace from the Dark Child's hands Thus completely disarming his foe And it flew out of Heaven, and fell to the lands Of the desolate Earth, far below
First Verse
Then he held Lest aloft, and he turned to the god Who kept the mysterious Way And Carding, the Loremaster, gave him a nod There was nothing he needed to say For Fate had decreed, 'ere the battle begun What the Mage was determined to do And the spell which a moment before he had done He prepared to accomplish anew
First Verse
Once again through the air shot a fiery line From the wand in the hand of the god Once again a great flame and a radiance divine Spiraled forth from the rune-studded rod Once again, where a god and a child had been There, in front of the gods' highest tower In full baleful bloom grew by all to be seen An unmoving, but dire black flower
First Verse
Then the forces of Lest with a singular groan Fled wherever the vanquished could flee Some fell over the edge and were crushed on hard stone And still others flew into the sea The battalions of monsters, so doleful and proud Just a couple of moments before Had finished the span that their fates had allowed And could trouble the races no more
First Verse
Then the gods in their triumph marched into the town And into the innermost tower And the Champion mounted the high Crystal Throne And all Ennabruk throbbed with his power And the Irdia and Faldia retook their abodes And then gathered together again "Hail the great Mandorallen, the King of the Gods!" They exclaimed. "Powers bless him! Amen!"
First Verse
But alone on his throne the high War-Captain sate Many matters revolved in his mind The traitors, who joined with the Child of Fate And the cowards, remaining behind So he took off his armor, his helmet, his shield Donning robes of a judge in their places And abandoned his weapon, the gavel to wield And prepared to give Law to the races
First Verse
First Anton and Anira before him were called All the gods had been sure they were dead When they learned the real truth, they were yet more appalled They had joined with the Dark One instead Mandorallen judged thus: for the horrible crime Of deserting their land and their birth They were stripped of their minds and their spirits sublime And were sent down below to the Earth
First Verse
Before the throne Onton and Osik were beckoned They had never selected a side But their crime was still great (so the Champion reckoned) For the their failure to rightly decide He banished them Earthward, to never behold Evermore the bright town in the sky And he doomed them to wither away and grow old And 'ere even a century, die
First Verse
But Laguna, the pity-filled Mother of All (Despite all, she continued to trust us) With a kiss, blessed all her children, in spite of their Fall And seasoned with mercy dire justice For she swore that our banishment someday would end And our chains to the Earth would dissever And the soul, after death, would to Tirlar ascend And would dwell with Laguna forever
First Verse
Thus, the blessing and curse of far-fallen mankind Were doled out in equivalent shares Thus our portion was blessed with an undying Mind And was stricken with infinite cares Thus Laguna gave hope to her unworthy brood After Mandorel took it away Thus the Gods temper even their curses with good Whether blessing or curse - who can say?
First Verse
Not I - I've said enough, as I'm sure you'll agree And my voice is beginning to go I'm afraid any more of this singing would be Like the Fall I've just told - cause for woe So I'll leave you to wonder on Heaven and Death And the Wisdom that reigneth above Which can damn us, and then, in the very next breath Can redeem us with heavenly love
FINIS!