Re: Booze and Age-Ending

From: Sandy Petersen <sandyp_at_idgecko.idsoftware.com>
Date: Wed, 3 Jul 96 10:45:58 -0500


I said that the only Gloranthan folk I could think of who invented distilled liquors were Dwarfs.

Alex Ferguson
>Isn't it Received Wisdom that the Lunars have gin?
>Sartarite whisky is too obvious a cliche' to pass up.

        Is it? Are they? I don't know. Alex mentions Inora's Brandy (apple wine fractionated by freezing), which sounds sensible. I bet the famous Clearwine isn't _just_ fermented grape juice. I really don't know, and part of the reason I wrote the above was an effort to needle the folk like Alex into making suggestions along these lines.

        I have always understood that distilled liquors are a fairly modern invention on Earth, no? On the other hand, MGF may require hard booze in Glorantha. In which case I guess one of the Second Age magicotechnologically advanced civilizations must have invented it.

        Ere now, most of the places that have had real powerful liquor in my own campaigns have done so not by distilling, but by incorporating drugs into their booze.

Alex F.
>age-changes are fairly often seen in fairly independant places.
The three (or >so) different Empires in the 2nd age managed to fall apart pretty much >separately, not as the result of a single Magic Bullet or First Cause.

        Alex, surely you're not claiming that the destruction of Every Single Empire near the end of the Second Age was coincidence? There were more than three -- offhand I can name at least six: The Wyrm's Friends, the Middle Seas, the Eastern Seas, the False Dragon Ring, the Six-Legged, the Errinoru Elfdom.

        I would say that the Shot That Killed Ten Million Men (Sarajevo, 1914), is a fine example of this kind of activity, though it is particularly easy to trace this one to events following that killed people from China to Mesopotamia to Flanders. The Second Age's end was more subtle than 1914's, but this doesn't mean it wasn't connected.

        Compare to the destruction at the end of the Cretaceous -- a huge number of dominant animals died, in every nation, in wide variety -- not only dinosaurs, but pterosaurs, ammonites (a sort of cross between snail and octopus, one of the most common sea animals at this time), and more. Why pterosaurs and not birds? And this wasn't even the biggest extinction Earth has suffered -- at the end of the Permian 96% of all land vertebrate species became extinct!! This destruction can't be coincidence, but it's rather hard to point to relationships between the death of river-dwelling salamanders and mountain-top grazing beasts.

        The Second Age comparisons are apt -- all the empires shared something in common; some feature or trait in the air, or the mythology, that let them form, and that ultimately failed or changed, or detonated so spectacularly.

Sandy P.


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