It's an intriguing beginning to this Reave the Just and Other Tales short story, for I suspect we've all found dreams mysterious and elusive. And this beginning made me curious to know how Prince Akhmet's excellent recall of these passing subconscious fancies doomed him. I'll grant you, his dreams are quite poignant, thus harder to forget.I have often wondered why there are tyrants, and I have come to the conclusion it is because some men remember their dreams. For what do we know of dreams? What is the truest thing to be said of them? Surely it is that we forget them. And therefore it is also sure that this forgetting must have a purpose. Hungers are conceived in dreams in order to be forgotten, so that the dreamer and his life may go on without them. That is why most men remember nothing--except the sensation of having dreamed.
But men who do not forget are doomed.
Such a man was Prince Akhmet, the only son of the Caliph of Arbin, His Serene Goodness Abdul dar-El Haj.
I found it easy to feel contempt and disgust for Prince Akhmet the spoiled brat-turned-tyrant, especially once it became apparent that he despises his waking world and himself for the perception that it's inferior to his dreams, and takes it out on everybody else (especially women) like it's their fault...."The place was a low valley," he said, showing the angle of the slopes with his hands, "it's sides covered by rich greensward on which the early dew glistened, as bright in the sunshine as a sweep of stars. Down the vale-bottom ran a steram of water so clean and crystal that it appeared as liquid light, dancing and swirling over it's black rocks and white sand. Above the greensward stood fruit trees, apple and peach and cherry, all in blossom, with their flowers like music in the sun, and their trunks wrapped in sweet shade. The air was luminous and utterly deep, transformed from the unfathomable purple of night by the warmth of the sun.
The peace of the place was complete," murmured young Akhmet,"and I would have been content with it as it was, happy to gaze upon it while the dream remained in my mind. But it was not done. For when I gazed upon the running trance of the stream, I saw that the dance of the light was full of the dance of small fish, and as my eyes fell upon the fish I saw that while they danced they became flowers, flowers more lovely than lilies, brighter than japonica, and the flowers floated in profusion away along the water.
Then I gazed from these blooms to the flowers of the trees, and they too, changed. Upon the trees, the flowers appeared to be music, but in moments they became birds, and the birds were music indeed, their flights like arcs of melody, their bodies formed to the shape their song. And the shade among the treetrunks also changed. From the the sweet dark emerged rare beasts, lions and jacols, nilgai deer with fawns among them, oryx fabled mandrill. And the peace of the beasts, too, was complete, so that they brought no fear with them. Instead they gleamed as the greensward and the stream gleamed, and when the lions shook their manes they scattered dropltes of watwer which became chrysoprase and diamonds among the grass. The fawns of the nilgai wore a sheen of finest silver, and from the mouths of the mandrill let fall rubies of enough purity to ransom a world.
I remember it all...
This society, this caliphate of Arbin that Akhmet rules, is decidedly sexist. That influences me to be less inclined to care about what happens to it. Now, it's true that I love "Ser Visal's Tale" in Daughter of Regal & Other Tales despite that story having an aggressive Temple endorsed by its king that is repressive to women who seek roles outside of housekeeper, especially towards those women who devote themselves to healing magic. There I get the feeling that story's kingdom is about to rise up in rebellion, and here I feel the people of Arbin are used to holding women in lesser esteem than men. Which just makes me care less about them than about the people in "Ser Visal's Tale".
After newly-installed Caliph Akhmet revives the barbaric practice of suttee, the requirement that all his father's wives and odalisques be burned alive beside his father's corpse, our narrator states:
Further, our narrator concludes his tale with, "I am a man, and all men dream" rather than "I am a human being, and all of us dream." I dislike the exclusiveness of that tone, its suggestiveness that only men matter, and am inclined to dislike this entire story on that basis.Nevertheless in the eyes of Arbin women were only women. Unthinking people began to believe that perhaps Caliph Akhmet's rule would not prove intolerable.
I did not make that mistake. I readied my arts and waited.
I found no particular value in this tale.
However, I should consider that I didn't catch the meaning in this tale that I was intended to harvest. That's one of the nice things about coming to Kevin's Watch, that I may gain insights from others about points I could have missed. With that in mind, I turn my attention to observations made in the "Unworthy of the Angel" topic thread where author "kastenessen", KW guest "arabisha", and this forum's moderator veered to discussion of this story.
Dragonlily: "...the suggestion that this is a description of the creative mind at work..."
arabisha: "In the end I could hear a 'be careful what you ask for...'"
"Maybe it just comes down to the fact that the wonder of the dreams for him was that he had no control. The fact that everyone placates him only aggravates him more because it shows how much control in life he actually has." "Maybe Akhmet's problem was that he was never satisfied."
kastenessen: "Yes, it was probably so. This is a personal trait. Something which is difficult to alter. And he never did understand himself. This becomes a dangerous combination."
arabisha: "So okay if a lesson from young Akhmet is to be learned it's probably gratefulness, humility, and restraint" (kastenessen agrees).
Well, perhaps. At least there's some potential value in this tale, enough to persuade me to upgrade it from "I dislike it" to "I'm neutral about it". I don't think I'll ever really like it, though.