Varddan ship generator.
3.5 out of 5
Showing posts with label zz the starmen of lyrdis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zz the starmen of lyrdis. Show all posts
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Algol : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
A star.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Hedarin : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
"The lawgivers. The wise men. The speakers of the last word." Parapsychics of Saarga.
3.5 out of 5
3.5 out of 5
Orthist Party : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
Varddan opposition. "Long after Orthis disappeared, one of the life-skiffs of his ship was picked up in space. There was nothing in it but a message, painted in big letters on the walls. It was addressed to his enemies, and it said, 'You have not destroyed me. The peoples of the Galaxy will yet be given the freedom of the stars.' You understand? There was still hope, from the Orthist point of view."
4 out of 5
4 out of 5
Vardda Council : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
Tasked with controlling Varddan bloodlines and rules.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Zaard : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
"That little bluish fellow is a merchant-prince from Zaard, the outermost planet. See his diamond caste-mark?"
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Suumis : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
"See those black-skinned, hawk-nosed chaps with the bronze wings?"
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Vardda : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
"I know it must have, but I don't believe it." Trehearne shook his head. "Of all the incredible…
What were you doing there, Edri? How can you come and go on Earth without anyone knowing? What are the Vardda, besides—well, mutants?"
"Trailers. Merchants. The most commercial race in the galaxy." Edri lifted the cover off a tray on a small table by the bunk. "I brought your breakfast. Go ahead and eat while I gabble. How we come and go is fairly simple. We land at odd intervals, here and there in the waste spaces of which Earth has a number. We do our business, and after a while are picked up again. As I told you before, we're exceedingly careful, and the fact that hardly anyone on Earth would believe the truth if they were told it is a protection. Of course, trading in secret that way, we're limited in what we can take, and Earth exports—the genuine articles and not mere copies —command very high prices. You'd be
amazed at the value of French perfumes, Scotch whiskey, and American films on planets you never heard of."
"Do you trade with them all in secret?"
"Good Lord, no! Most worlds, even the very primitive ones, we can deal with quite openly. They might not like us, but they benefit enormously from our commerce."
"Then why not Earth?"
"Well," said Edri, "I don't like to offend your sensibilities as a native of the place, but Earth is a crazy planet. Oh, it's not the only one. There's a number of them scattered about, and we avoid open contact with all of them. You see, Trehearne, most worlds develop, or remain undeveloped, more or less homogeneously in the matter of civilization. I don't mean they're entirely peaceful, because they're not, but in the long run their populations are more predictable, more stable than on the Earth-type worlds that have grown up all out of joint. You know what I mean—on one side of the world atomic power, on the other the wooden plough and the blowgun. Too big a gap, and it makes trouble
all down the line. Now, a primitive society regards war as a sport and takes an honest pleasure in it. A society in a high state of culture regards it as something outgrown and obsolete as hunting game for food. Everybody knows where they are. But when you get a world with great big overlapping mobs of population, every one of them in a different stage of cultural development and every one of them subject to a constant bombardment of outside stimuli they can't assimilate, you have got a mixture that keeps exploding in all directions. We have a healthy desire not to get blown up, and besides, it's impossible to establish any profitable trade with a world continually torn by wars.
So—does that answer your question?"
"I take it," Trehearne said sourly, "that the Vardda don't think much of Earth."
"It's a good world. It'll settle down some day. Nobody can fight forever. They either knock themselves back into barbarism again, or they grow up."
4 out of 5
What were you doing there, Edri? How can you come and go on Earth without anyone knowing? What are the Vardda, besides—well, mutants?"
"Trailers. Merchants. The most commercial race in the galaxy." Edri lifted the cover off a tray on a small table by the bunk. "I brought your breakfast. Go ahead and eat while I gabble. How we come and go is fairly simple. We land at odd intervals, here and there in the waste spaces of which Earth has a number. We do our business, and after a while are picked up again. As I told you before, we're exceedingly careful, and the fact that hardly anyone on Earth would believe the truth if they were told it is a protection. Of course, trading in secret that way, we're limited in what we can take, and Earth exports—the genuine articles and not mere copies —command very high prices. You'd be
amazed at the value of French perfumes, Scotch whiskey, and American films on planets you never heard of."
"Do you trade with them all in secret?"
"Good Lord, no! Most worlds, even the very primitive ones, we can deal with quite openly. They might not like us, but they benefit enormously from our commerce."
"Then why not Earth?"
"Well," said Edri, "I don't like to offend your sensibilities as a native of the place, but Earth is a crazy planet. Oh, it's not the only one. There's a number of them scattered about, and we avoid open contact with all of them. You see, Trehearne, most worlds develop, or remain undeveloped, more or less homogeneously in the matter of civilization. I don't mean they're entirely peaceful, because they're not, but in the long run their populations are more predictable, more stable than on the Earth-type worlds that have grown up all out of joint. You know what I mean—on one side of the world atomic power, on the other the wooden plough and the blowgun. Too big a gap, and it makes trouble
all down the line. Now, a primitive society regards war as a sport and takes an honest pleasure in it. A society in a high state of culture regards it as something outgrown and obsolete as hunting game for food. Everybody knows where they are. But when you get a world with great big overlapping mobs of population, every one of them in a different stage of cultural development and every one of them subject to a constant bombardment of outside stimuli they can't assimilate, you have got a mixture that keeps exploding in all directions. We have a healthy desire not to get blown up, and besides, it's impossible to establish any profitable trade with a world continually torn by wars.
So—does that answer your question?"
"I take it," Trehearne said sourly, "that the Vardda don't think much of Earth."
"It's a good world. It'll settle down some day. Nobody can fight forever. They either knock themselves back into barbarism again, or they grow up."
4 out of 5
Ristin : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
Varddan Councillor.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Lankar : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
One of the last pursuers of Orthis.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Orthis : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
Varddan rebel original, opposed Varddan monopoly control of spaceflight.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Torin : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
Boy who saves Trehearne, but stows away on the Saarga.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Kurat : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
A hunter with dogs.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
Weizsacker : The Starmen Of Lyrdis - Leigh Brackett
An Earthman with a theory. He advanced the idea that most stars have planets.
3 out of 5
3 out of 5
Labels:
3.0,
z character - minor,
zz the starmen of lyrdis
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