(The Introduction to Anthropologist of Gor was posted last December and can be found here: Anthropologist of Gor Intro) For reasons of the chronology of Chapter 2, Claudia’s age is now fifty instead of forty-five.
January 1, 2017. New Years Day. Private Gor Expedition Diary of Claudia Skimmerhorn, Professor of Anthrology at Queens College, City University of New York and Head of the Anthropology Dept.
In the next
few days, likely by Wednesday, I will hear if funding has been approved for an
anthropological expedition to Gor, our Earth’s twin planet on the other side of
the sun. Then I will have until the following Sunday, one week from today, to
decide if I will proceed with this dangerous expedition. In light of the gender
ferment roiling our societies for the past few years, it is imperative that a
scientific examination of the structure of Gorean Society be undertaken. On one
hand, we can only make a preliminary study of one City, yet it cannot be denied
that many of the salient structures of Gorean Society are planet-wide. Still
any such expedition constitutes extreme danger to all persons who undertake it,
so I will bear a great responsibility if I decide to proceed.
So I will be
writing in this private diary until either I depart for a year on another world,
or the project is shut down, either by me or by lack of funding. This diary
will only be seen if I fail to return or disaster overwhelms us all. Before leaving
I will leave it in my Safe Deposit Box at my bank. My daughter Clara will
receive instructions from legal counsel on retrieving the diary if I do not
return.
Clara,
dear. This diary will be extremely frank, but you are eighteen now and will be
attending Yale in the fall. I wish it had been Harvard, like your grandfather, or
Princeton, so you would be close to the City, but your love of the Gilmore
Girls led you to chose Yale, though you made me proud by receiving acceptances
from all three. I never considered the Gilmores to have a healthy family
relationship, they were far too entangled in each other’s lives. Still, if I am
gone, you might as well discover things about your mother, including my active
sexual life.
I discovered
a metal box full of materials belonging to Professor John Norman, a retired
Professor of Philosophy here at Queens College. He is also the author of a
notorious series of books, adjusted to be fictional pulp novels, which
destroyed his academic career. In short he was persecuted for writing fiction. Or
what was believed to be fiction. Dr Norman is in his mid-eighties; our time at Queens
over-lapped by only two years. I arrived here in 1995, a twenty-eight-year-old
nearly minted PhD in Anthrology; he was then two years from retirement. He had
resisted all attempts to drive him out, but having reached retirement age, he
could leave honorably. I had met Dr Norman at a faculty tea shortly after I arrived.
I believe he only came to the tea because so many earnestly desired that he would
not. We had a pleasant conversation about nothing; as we parted he stopped me
as I rose from the table and warned be to be careful of academic politics. I thanked
him, politely. I knew a lot about the pettiness of academia from your grandparents.
English literature, as your grandmother may have told you is vicious; sociology
is even worse in my opinion. If you want to hear a discussion as to which is
worse, innocently raise the topic with your grandparents: you will not get a
word in for hours!
It was academic
politics that led me to working clearing out a dusty attic storage room in the
humanities Building. I had just been elected as Head of the Anthropology Department
for a three-year term. But I had not yet taken office, when the outgoing Head,
Maryanne Bankhead assigned me to remove all the old trash from the attic, so it
could be converted to Anthropology Department use. I was assigned because I had
defeated Maryanne in her attempt to be reelected for a third term. That woman
can hold a grudge. She is a vengeful bitch. Incidentally, she is why I am Head
of the department rather than Chair, or Chairman, or Chairwoman, or
Chairperson. Maryanne demanded a gender free term, and at first pushed through
a resolution changing the title to Chairperson. But too many people still
called her a Chairman, or even worse, a Chair. Of course she did not want to be
man, and the problem with Chair, was that the students were distributing funny
cartoons of a Chair issuing foolish political pronouncements. So she became a
Head. After two terms, she lost her bid for a third because of too many documented
instances of bias against male students.
As revenge, I
was assigned to clear the attic personally.
“After all, Ms Skimmerhorn, it needs to be someone senior.
Who knows what might be up there. We can’t have any scandal, can we?”
I hated her sickly-sweet
condescending tone, and of course addressing me as Ms, was a calculated insult.
Especially since my PhD comes from a more prestigious University than hers
does. I did not play her game. You don’t reach fifty, and Head of Department by
taking every piece of bait that is dangled.
“Surely not, Maryanne. Scandal is the last thing anyone
wants. Certainly not coming after all the bias complaints.”
If Bankhead
thought that I was going to labor alone in the attic though, she was stupider
than I suspected. I recruited dear Oliver to give me a hand. Most of stuff in
the attic was trash, mostly broken furniture and discarded files. Oliver and I
went through the files, removing a few for privacy reasons, the rest were
marked for shredding. Behind an old desk, we found a locked metal storage box
marked Dr John Norman. It was heavy but we moved it to beside the door, along
with the broken desks and tables. While we waited for the men from the maintenance
dept to come and clear away the trash, Oliver and I had a little Afternoon
Delight on an old mattress. Luckily we finished before maintenance arrived.
Just finished, as in adjusting our clothes as they walked in! (Sorry Clara,
but if I disappear on Gor, I will not get the opportunity to embarrass you later.
Your father and I are nearly divorced, and anyway your Dad has known about Oliver
for years. Your Dad has had his fun with others the years too.)
The discarded
files were carried away for shredding, the broken furniture to be burned, and
the sensitive files and the locked box were carried to my office. We agreed to
look at the box together the following Tuesday. I locked my office before leaving
for the weekend. I had had an additional lock installed; one that could not be
opened by the Head’s Master Key. You can bet I heard about that! I shut that
down quickly, with,
“As you said, it is necessary to keep a careful lock on
anything that could be embarrassing; besides, why were your trying to get into
my private office?”
I like
confounding Bankhead. She is a snoop and a humorless gender warrior. Theory
about how society should be has no place in Anthropology. It is our job to
describe Societies and Cultures as they are and how they work; not how we think
they should work. Leave that kind of nonsense to Sociology.
The next
Tuesday, Oliver and I tackled the locked box of Prof John Norman. For the Chairman
of the Classics Department, Oliver has a lot of odd and useful skills.
(Between
some practices Oliver has picked up in the byways of the Classics, and some I have
learned from studying many cultures, we get up to lots of fun. Your Dad has
learned some stuff over the years in Abnormal Psych too.)
Once we got
the box open, there were a lot of surprises. Lots of odd coins, ancient
looking, struck by hand dies. Neither Oliver nor I could read the inscriptions,
some were faded and worn, but some were fresh. Most were copper or bronze, but there
were three of silver, and five of gold. The gold coins had a large unidentified
bird on them. Much like an eagle, but different, with a crest on the top of the
head. There was an out of scale man, smaller than the bird, on one of the
coins.
There were
some pages in a language unknown to Oliver, a mass of small artifacts, and the
prize of all: A scroll of vellum parchment.
“I will take this scroll with me to examine more closely if you
don’t mind. It looks modern, nineteenth century. I will give you a receipt.
This seems valuable and Dr Norman may want it back.”
I nodded. I
was distracted by what I found in a purpose-made wooden box. This box was not
locked. I was staring at the contents as Oliver left.
Inside were twenty-eight
cassette tapes. A paper label, pasted on the inside of the box lid said: Gorean
Language Tapes, Beginner and Intermediate.
I was shocked.
I had not thought of Gor for years. What a trove to discover some of Dr Norman’s
original background notes and planning for his novels. This should be either
returned to Dr Norman or in a literary archive! The gold coins with the large,
strange birds made sense now: Tarns – the warbirds of Gor! I did not know that
he had gone to the trouble of having coins made nor that he had gone as far as
he had in figuring out a language for Gor. Outside of a few words and terms,
very little of the Gorean languageagains was in his works. Perhaps he had
worked with a philologist to create the whole language after the cruel backlash
against his fiction had deprived him of the outlet of publishing?
I theorized
that Dr Norman had been dispirited when he retired and had forgotten this trove
of his preparatory writing materials when he left the University. Afterwards I
guessed he had been to proud to ask for the favor of the return of his work. I drafted
and wrote a letter to his last know address explaining what we had found, and
offering its return, I sent it off and left for the day, feeling virtuous.
Nothing
further occurred for the next few weeks. I assumed the Headship of the Department
and occupied myself in moving to my new office and cleaning out some foolish
and burdensome policies of my predecessor. A few of the old crew were chirping
and they roped in their allies of the battleax brigade of frightful women but I
was able to outmaneuver them. One night, Oliver came over to my apartment with
the scroll. He was excited. After dinner, he laid out the scroll on a table. It
was quite long.
“Is it valuable”, I asked.
“It is baffling. It was written in several languages, by several
hands. This is a nineteenth-century copy, I authenticated that by carbon dating.”
I was shocked
by that. I had assumed that all the items had been created by Dr Norman or for
him by craftsmen employed by him.
“There is no mistake, perhaps it was only made to look old,
artificially aged.”
“No mistake. The parchment and the ink are nineteenth century.
Now listen Claudia, this is where it gets weird. It is in several languages and
was purportedly at least, the latest copy of a document first created in
pre-history. The most recent entry claims to be by Aleister Crowley, the
scholar of the occult. The author, if it was Crowley, claims he found the previous
scroll in a deteriorated condition in a cave when mountaineering in Cumberland
during vacation from Cambridge. He copied the whole thing, tracing any old
languages from the decaying copy to the new so nothing would be lost. It seems
to be a religious scroll from Egypt before even the First Kingdon, before
writing in ancient archaic Egyptian.”
This was
unexpected. I had thought it might be something related to Dr Norman’s literary
work.
“What is the original language?”
“That is the thing, Claudia, I don’t know.”
“After the unknown language, the language switches to the
oldest Egyptian, It claims to have traced the original onto papyrus, then added
a translation. It seems to be a religious text relating to the afterlife.
Listen to this:
‘The Priest-Kings, after hiding Gor behind the sun, desired to
populate the new world’ So, obviously the basis of later
Egyptian religion, it goes on:”
‘The Priest-Kings created the crown of power, with six tokens
set with the crown, one for each of the six directions, East, West, Up, North,
Down, and South.’
“Including the underworld and the heavens in the cardinal
directions is clearly a religious indicator, although that is more your field
than mine. Another passage references the boats through the underworld, listen:
‘The Silver Ships could not carry enough, quickly enough,
so the Priest-Kings created this direct path to Gor for large numbers of men
and beasts. When the task as accomplished, the crown was broken into bits, lest
the others find the broad road to Gor. With the instructions on this scroll and
one of the six tokens, it is still possible for the brave to traverse the road
to Gor’
“Then a list of very specific instructions to finding the
road and walking through a shifting maze. Very remarkable. But what is more
remarkable is the number of times the scroll has been written and translated as
the older copies disintergrated.”
“The first was into archaic Egyptian, with the older original
being traced onto the scroll. The copy still tells us when and where it happed
and who did the copying. Each time the scroll was copied, the copier did the
same. Traced what was there and wrote and translated it into the current language
of the copier. Whenever I have been able to compare the old to the new, the translation
is very correct. They scroll is akin to a Rosetta stone!”
I was
astounded. It could not possibly be, could it? The professor was not writing fiction?
“How many languages?” I asked.
The original, archaic Egyptian, three iterations of Hieroglyphs
and demotic Egyptian, then it appears the scroll went travelling. The next iteration
is in Akkadian, then old Aramaic, then back to Egyptian, then Chaldean. For a
time, when the scroll was remade, the new section was in parallel columns of Chaldean
or Biblical Aramaic, and Babylonian characters. The next was in classical Greek
and Aramaic. Then a hiatus, apparently the scroll was copied onto parchment for
the first time. Around the time of the First Crusade it was found again and
copied into Latin, and get this, a parallel column of Norman French, and old
English by none other than Roger Bacon, He relates that Richard I took it as a curiosity
from the Templars. The next copyist and translator was Georgey Chaucer. I have
checked the traced writings ascribed to Bacon and Chaucer against known
examples of their actual writing and they are the same. And another thing: some
of the distinctive markers of their writing comes from parchments discovered long
after Crowley made his copy! If it is a copy of course.”
I needed
more information. I was sure that the scroll was an ingenious fake, made either
by Dr Norman or by Crowley.
“Are you sure that it was created in the nineteenth century?”
“As sure as current science can be.”
“Chaucer was the last creator of the scroll before Crawley?”
“No, Dr Dee, Elizabeth I’s astrologer made a copy. Isaac
Newton did not recopy it, but annotated it, then Crawley made his copy. I don’t
know how Dr Norman got his hands on it.”
“Either this is a very good fake,” I said, “Or an extremely
precious document that must be returned to Dr. Norman.”
“In either case, it must be returned to Dr Norman,” Oliver
agreed. “There is one other possibility that I don’t want to mention until I do
more research.”
Our evening
then turned to more physical and pleasant activities. I wondered if Oliver was thinking of the same
other possibility as I was.
The next
day, my letter to Dr Norman came back, ‘Return to Sender’, I want no
communication with female academics of Queens College’. I could not blame him
for that! Still I had to find a way to contact Dr Norman about returning his
valuable property.
I looked for
other methods of contacting Dr Norman other than physically going to find his
dwelling. Such seemed an improper invasion of privacy. I searched the database
of the Law Society of New York state. I found a listing for a Harrison Smith, who
Dr Norman had claimed in his books was the source of the manuscripts that he turned
into his novels. I am sure that the poor man was weary by now of letters from
people trying to contact Dr Norman. I wasn’t even sure if this was the correct
Harrison Smith if he even existed. Still I had to return the metal box to the
retired professor. I wrote an apologetic letter to Mr Smith, explaining that I
had property belonging to him that was found at Queens. I described the box.
Then I waited.
While I
waited I amused myself by learning Beginners Gorean. I enjoyed the process as a
distraction, and as an anthropologist, the language gave insight into the
culture, as all linguistics does.
Two months
passed. Oliver and I did not speak of the box or the scroll. From drawings on
the scroll that Oliver provided, I was able to identify which item was the
amulet from the Crown that activated the path to the hidden world. I was
itching to try it out; yet I would not misappropriate Dr Norman’s items.
Finally, a letter
arrived from Mr Smith. It was courteous and brief. Dr Norman, it stated, had no
more interest in the box as ‘his manuscripts have resumed arriving by the
original means’. It further stated that I could possess myself of the abandoned
property but warned me against attempting to use it. He continued, it would be foolish
to attempt to use the items in the box, but that Dr Norman expected that I would
be unable to resist exercising my curiosity, which would result in extreme
danger.
I was
already wary of the items in the box, and decided to exercise extreme caution.
For the time being I continued to study the Gorean language.



Very intriguing, Tracker. Well done. You whet our appetite perfectly. I await further chapters with bated breath.
ReplyDeleteTracker:
DeleteI agree with AuntiePArm. Claudia Skimmerhorn and Oliver are intriguing characters. Not that it matters in a fictional universe, but Ted Lange, Jr. (the real world name of John Norman) was born in 1931, had some scholarly books published in the early 2010s and wasn’t described by his publisher as retired until the mid 2010s. UKKink said in a comment to the Saffron vignette how an older woman, with a lifetime of freedom to mourn, adapts to slavery. He should be happy when the inevitable happens …
vyeh
The information I found indicated a birth date of 1933, and a retirement date in 1997 and I adjusted my chronology accordingly. 1997 and 1933 seem to suggest retiring on reaching around 65, so it made sense to me. I will go with that for Dr Lange's fictional counterpart. His loss of a publishing contract and the fact that no one picked him up until after 2000 is unfortunately true, as you know.
DeleteI have made the decision to keep "John Norman" off stage as it where.
When deciding which new story to write next between Anthropologist and ''Leigh of Gor", those who expressed an opinion asked for Anthropologist and Claudia, and the older professors of the Academic world.
Anthropologist is not as far advanced in the 'rough plotting' as was Leigh, so there may be weeks where I throw in a look at how Patrick and some of our old characters are doing.
There will be a variety of younger male and female graduate students as well of course.
vyeh,
ReplyDeleteYes, I am curious and await the inevitable.
Book 1 will be set on Earth and be all about the Preparations, so it will be a while. But collaring and 'youthing' will be coming
DeleteTracker:
DeleteIf Book 1 is on Earth, I hope there will be plenty of words on the funder of the expedition — maybe a government agency aware of the “alien” (Goreans) activities on Earth — and the security personnel for the expedition — since Claudia is aware from Dr. John Norman’s books of both the dangerous sword and crossbow wielding Warriors and the technology restrictions against modern firearms.
vyeh
Fun introductory chapter! Very interested to know if we will learn more about the crown of power, and the broad road of the direct path between Gor and Earth.
ReplyDeleteThe constituent parts of the Crown of Power will also be a plot point McGuffin in Leigh of Gor. And of course, Don Emery stole another part, a different amulet and scroll from the Emerys when he stole Juli from Patrick Masters.
DeleteExcellent chapter Tracker. I await more of this story arc
ReplyDelete