The Rending
of the Veil: Chapter 7 of Robert E. Howard’s The Hour of the Dragon
Reading from
pages 131-140 of the DelRey edition
The illustration of the scowling
Conan sweating on a bench, holding a bucket-sized drinking mug and giving a
surly ear to the wiry and tall wise woman hunched on her stool with her great
wolf yawning behind at her side, forms a stark picture of many an Aryan hero
depicted throughout epic poetry, from Enkidu to Odysseus.
The Rending of the Veil reveals Howard’s conception of folk magic as very similar to that of J. R. R. Tolkien, with a practitioner of dark sorcery using ravens to track the fugitive Conan and a homegrown, rustic witch employing a great wolf and a mighty eagle to foil the dark occult powers of civilization as Conan seeks the succor of the wild lands.
Keeping in
mind that this tale predates The Lord of the Rings and that it was published in
England, one wonders if Tolkien was inspired by it. However, the connection
seems to have been deeper, that Howard utilized some of the same root folk
sources as understood in more ancient form [possibly from primary sources] by
Tolkien.
This scene
also seems to have been the inspiration of the witch scene in the movie Conan
the Barbarian, in which the powerful female reads Conan’s fate cryptically. The
battle scene in which Conan takes on four witch burners is very well done, with
the witch’s rescue preceded by a note on the barbarian’s resolve in the face of
steep odds and couched in terms of Conan’s Western agency, that: “…he was no
son of the Orient to yield passively to what seemed inevitable.”
When Conan
realizes that he is in his own kingdom and that one of his subjects is being
set upon, his lion-like belligerence returns, with him truculently accepting the
witch as a soothsayer. Zeleta, like many of Howard’s female characters,
expresses a keen understanding of human nature, which includes her positive
measure of the masculine:
“…the people of your capital have forfeited the freedom you won for them by sweat and blood; they have sold themselves to the salvers and the butchers. They have shown that they do not trust their destiny.”
She
compliments him on his stubbornness, usually the point at which a male
protagonist is invalidated in most western forms of literature. Howard works
his understanding of the European mass’s slavish and self-negating social
gravity through the wise woman, hinting to the reader that Western Civilization
is nothing without the individual hero and that the true Western king is a father
to his people, more than a brother to the nobility.
Howard’s
depiction of malevolent forces separated from the waking world by a veil
conforms to much of modern paranormal theory as does Gianni’s thematic closing illustration, in which Conan fences in his
mind against a skeletal sword lich holding a shield with a dragon emblazoned
upon it.
Diction of Note
Swale: a low lying, marshy area
(c) 2020 James LaFond
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