Plan B – Chapter 4

Lytaxin
Approaching Erob

In which Miri Tayzin Robertson meets her family.

I suspect Val Con of conscious irony when he says that Korval has never ruled the world, considering how many people over the centuries have glossed Delm Korval as King of Liad. There’s definitely irony, though unconscious on Miri’s part (but conscious on the part of the authors) in Miri’s reassurance to herself that she’s never going back to Surebleak.

Val Con’s address to the child of Jela’s hope is an example of a literary convention that makes linguists and historians wail and gnash their teeth: the use of “thee” and “thy” to indicate archaic formality. The problem is that “thee” and “thy” are actually archaic informality; to the extent that English has ever had something resembling Liad’s distinction between High Tongue and Low Tongue, “thee” and “thy” were Low Tongue, used when speaking with close friends and family — or, depending on context, to address social inferiors. Not the most appropriate of modes for the most junior servant to use in addressing the utmost authority!

I’m willing to buy that the guest apartment Val Con and Miri are staying in is bigger than Zhena Trelu’s house, but I think the bit about the bathroom the size of Lytaxin spaceport is probably an exaggeration.

Val Con’s recitation of his relatives has two or three notable omissions. Two are easily explained: Shan’s lifemating and Anthora’s children post-date Val Con being taken by the Department, so of course he doesn’t know about them. That explanation doesn’t cover the complete lack of any mention of Line bel’Tarda, but that may be covered by the disclaimer that he’s only touching on the minimum necessary to survive the evening’s social event; perhaps Val Con figured that the odds of anyone of Erob mentioning bel’Tarda at the dinner were low enough that they could safely be left, along with the attendant explanations, for another time.

I wonder what it portends that Emrith Tiazan is Delm Erob but Bendara Tiazan is Thodelm Tiazan. Perhaps just that Erob and Tiazan, unlike Korval and yos’Phelium in their present state, are large enough that one person cannot do both jobs well.

3 thoughts on “Plan B – Chapter 4

  1. Ed8r

    Paul, thanks fr the reminder about “thee” and “thou.” I know this information, but get caught up in the archiac “sound” of it before I am recalled to it.

    PA: the bathroom the size of Lytaxin spaceport is probably an exaggeration

    Possibly not much of one. The authors seem to take a lot of liberty in conflating spaceport/airport and even to a certain extent spaceship/jet airplane. “Somebody” either once took flying lessons here on Earth, or knows someone who did…but I’m jumping ahead to Saltation because I haven’t kept up with my reading speed here. In any case, I can imagine the authors thinking of more than one local airport, where the port consists of one little, multipurpose office. A bathroom in a “palace” could easily approach that size.

    That said, a bit of hyperbole by the narrator on behalf of Miri must have been the intent.

  2. Paul A. Post author

    Oh, well, if it’s just the administration building, I can see that. I was picturing the inclusion of runways and landing pads and so on, which would make a considerable difference to the floor area.

  3. Ed8r

    Ah . . . I see your point. I had not pictured it as including the entire pad, working yards, and outlying buildings.

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