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- # This data file is generated by 'makedefs'. Do not edit.
- 0000169a
- aclys
- aklys
- 0,2
- aleax
- 124,2
- amaterasu omikami
- 214,6
- *amnesia
- Maud
- 522,19
- angel*
- 1124,12
- anhur
- 1828,7
- ankh-morpork
- 2259,9
- anshar
- 2761,5
- ant
- * ant
- 3059,4
- anu
- 3271,5
- *ape
- 3540,15
- archon
- 4317,4
- ashikaga takauji
- 4510,9
- asmodeus
- 5016,4
- athame
- 5211,5
- athen*
- 5468,4
- atlatl
- 5705,3
- axolotl
- 5844,1
- b*lzebub
- 5878,7
- balrog
- 6281,9
- baluchitherium
- titanothere
- 6794,9
- barbarian
- 7311,12
- barbed devil
- 7970,2
- *bat
- 8062,9
- *bee
- 8566,6
- *beetle
- 8874,6
- bell of opening
- 9190,14
- blind io
- 9720,9
- * blob
- 10247,1
- bone devil
- 10270,2
- book of the dead
- 10388,9
- brigit
- 10854,11
- bugbear
- 11484,4
- *camaxtli
- 11679,7
- *cat
- kitten
- 12090,4
- *centaur
- 12333,17
- cerberus
- kerberos
- 13353,7
- chameleon
- 13765,11
- charo*n
- 14433,7
- chih*sung*tzu
- 14826,1
- chromatic dragon
- tiamat
- 14848,2
- cockatrice
- 14928,23
- cornuthaum
- 16155,19
- couatl
- 17167,1
- cram*
- 17226,6
- *crocodile
- 17572,5
- croesus
- kroisos
- creosote
- 17838,8
- crom
- 18286,10
- cyclops
- 18777,31
- dark one
- 20063,8
- demogorgon
- 20509,4
- dispater
- 20734,2
- djinn*
- 20815,8
- *dog
- pup*
- 21311,6
- *dragon
- *xoth
- 21641,9
- dwarf*
- 22199,21
- eel
- giant eel
- 23461,9
- elbereth
- 23964,20
- electric eel
- 24727,5
- *elemental
- 25023,5
- ~elf ??m*
- *elf*
- elvenking
- 25331,19
- erinys
- erinyes
- 26412,2
- ettin
- 26541,2
- excalibur
- 26668,14
- eye of the aethiopica
- 27477,8
- floating eye
- 27918,7
- flesh golem
- 28324,21
- fog cloud
- 29493,8
- *fung*
- 29649,21
- *gargoyle
- 30846,14
- geryon
- 31601,3
- ghost
- 31756,10
- *giant
- giant humanoid
- 32338,6
- ~gnome ??m*
- gnome*
- gnomish wizard
- 32695,13
- goblin
- 33441,10
- goblin king
- 33982,9
- gold
- gold piece
- zorkmid
- 34498,9
- ~flesh golem
- *golem
- 34974,18
- gremlin
- 36011,3
- grid bug
- 36182,13
- gunyoki
- 36897,2
- hachi
- 37010,8
- heart of ahriman
- 37496,19
- hell hound*
- 38636,8
- hermes
- 39108,15
- hezrou
- 40035,2
- hobbit
- 40153,10
- hobgoblin
- 40755,23
- hom*nculus
- 42022,13
- horned devil
- 42693,2
- *horsem*
- death
- famine
- pestilence
- war
- hunger
- 42785,22
- huan*ti
- 44196,5
- hu*h*eto*l
- minion of huhetotl
- 44503,6
- humanoid
- 44844,5
- human
- acolyte
- apprentice
- archeologist
- arch priest
- attendant
- cave*man
- chieftain
- guard
- healer
- ninja
- nurse
- page
- *priest*
- ronin
- samurai
- shopkeeper
- student
- thug
- warrior
- *watch*
- wizard
- player
- 45111,7
- ice devil
- 45523,4
- imp
- 45730,13
- incubus
- succubus
- 46390,4
- ishtar
- 46603,7
- issek
- 46976,13
- izchak
- 47739,18
- jabberwock
- vorpal*
- 48933,20
- jackal
- 49573,13
- jaguar
- 50310,4
- juiblex
- jubilex
- 50532,6
- kabuto
- 50880,19
- katana
- 52043,3
- ki-rin
- 52213,4
- king arthur
- *arthur
- 52436,23
- knight
- 53660,10
- ~kobold ??m*
- *kobold*
- 54022,5
- *kop*
- 54296,7
- kos
- 54675,6
- koto
- 54996,1
- kraken
- 55015,8
- *lady
- offler
- 55481,20
- lemure
- 56835,1
- leocrotta
- leu*otta
- 56878,7
- leprechaun
- 57273,18
- *lich
- 58296,7
- * light
- 58734,3
- gecko
- iguana
- lizard
- 58863,9
- loki
- 59399,14
- lord carnarvon
- 60215,8
- lord sato
- 60685,3
- lord surt*
- 60866,9
- lug*
- 61356,8
- lurker*
- 61837,3
- lycanthrope
- *were*
- 61996,17
- magic mirror of merlin
- 63006,3
- mail d*emon
- 63186,2
- ma*annan*
- 63278,7
- manes
- 63650,2
- marduk
- 63727,10
- marilith
- 64303,5
- master assassin
- 64560,19
- master key of thievery
- 65482,5
- master of thieves
- 65770,11
- medusa
- 66405,22
- *mimic
- 67620,6
- mind flayer
- 67970,6
- minotaur
- 68310,9
- mit*ra*
- 68816,16
- *mithril*
- 69680,6
- mitre of holiness
- 70021,4
- mjollnir
- 70271,14
- ~slime mold
- *mold
- 71125,6
- mol?ch
- 71464,16
- mumak*
- 72316,8
- *mummy
- 72780,14
- mummy wrapping
- 73536,15
- *naga*
- *naja*
- 74391,4
- naginata
- 74636,18
- nalfeshnee
- 75600,2
- nalzok
- 75720,7
- neanderthal*
- 76130,3
- newt
- 76312,13
- ninja-to
- 76768,1
- *norn
- 76793,14
- nunchaku
- 77557,1
- *nymph
- 77577,23
- odin
- 78891,22
- ogre*
- 80132,16
- olog-hai
- 81047,13
- *ooze
- *pudding
- 81854,4
- oracle
- delphi
- p*thia
- 82062,9
- orb of detection
- 82550,4
- orb of fate
- 82771,7
- orcrist
- 83178,9
- orcus
- 83689,3
- ~orc ??m*
- *orc*
- uruk*hai
- 83869,15
- osaku
- 84726,1
- owlbear
- 84773,6
- palantir of westernesse
- 85092,5
- *piercer
- 85343,8
- pit fiend
- 85758,4
- platinum yendorian express card
- 85949,7
- poseido*n
- 86341,17
- ptah
- 87282,9
- *purple worm
- 87768,6
- quadruped
- 88105,5
- quantum mechanic
- 88401,2
- quasit
- 88519,2
- quetzalcoatl
- 88641,13
- raiden
- 89443,1
- rat
- * rat
- 89465,2
- rock mole
- 89573,6
- rogue
- 89921,11
- rothe
- 90577,3
- rust monster
- 90722,3
- sake
- 90863,1
- salamander
- 90885,7
- sasquatch
- 91243,4
- sceptre of might
- 91451,6
- scorpio*
- 91770,5
- shad*
- 92049,4
- shaman karnov
- 92246,3
- shan*lai*ching
- 92404,5
- shito
- 92667,1
- skeleton
- 92696,4
- slasher
- 92943,17
- slime mold
- 93938,10
- *snake
- serpent
- water moccasin
- python
- pit viper
- cobra
- 94508,20
- snickersnee
- 95925,6
- *soldier
- sergeant
- lieutenant
- captain
- 96153,8
- solonor thelandira
- 96621,2
- *spider
- 96723,1
- staff of aesculapius
- 96786,5
- statue*
- 97062,11
- sting
- 97693,12
- susano*o
- 98325,6
- tanko
- 98636,1
- tengu
- 98695,7
- thoth
- 99092,19
- thoth*amon
- 100169,5
- tiger
- 100426,6
- titan
- 100773,11
- tourist
- 101378,18
- trapper
- 102359,5
- tripe ration
- 102667,10
- *troll
- 103269,15
- tsurugi of muramasa
- 104107,5
- tsurugi
- 104417,6
- twoflower
- guide
- 104732,23
- tyaa
- 105770,2
- tyr
- 105852,14
- *hulk
- 106675,5
- *unicorn
- unicorn horn
- 106950,23
- valkyrie
- 108386,13
- vampire
- vampire bat
- vampire lord
- 109044,5
- vlad*
- 109321,9
- *vortex
- vortices
- 109875,6
- vrock
- 110222,4
- wakizashi
- 110420,2
- warg
- 110535,17
- *wight
- 111400,9
- wizard of balance
- 111903,5
- wizard of yendor
- 112185,10
- wolf
- *wolf
- 112775,5
- *worm
- long worm tail
- worm tooth
- crysknife
- 113033,6
- wraith
- nazgul
- 113371,17
- wumpus
- 114354,6
- xan
- 114675,12
- xorn
- 115312,5
- ya
- 115582,2
- yeenoghu
- 115695,5
- yeti
- 115965,3
- yugake
- 116146,3
- yumi
- 116334,4
- *zombie
- 116547,5
- zruty
- 116796,2
- .
- 116891,0
- A short studded or spiked club attached to a cord allowing
- it to be drawn back to the wielder after having been thrown.
- Said to be a doppelganger sent to inflict divine punishment
- for alignment violations.
- The Shinto sun goddess, Amaterasu Omikami is the central
- figure of Shintoism and the ancestral deity of the imperial
- house. One of the daughters of the primordial god Izanagi
- and said to be his favourite offspring, she was born from
- his left eye.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- Get thee hence, nor come again,
- Mix not memory with doubt,
- Pass, thou deathlike type of pain,
- Pass and cease to move about!
- 'Tis the blot upon the brain
- That will show itself without.
- ...
- For, Maud, so tender and true,
- As long as my life endures
- I feel I shall owe you a debt,
- That I never can hope to pay;
- And if ever I should forget
- That I owe this debt to you
- And for your sweet sake to yours;
- O then, what then shall I say? -
- If ever I should forget,
- May God make me more wretched
- Than ever I have been yet!
- [ Maud, And Other Poems by Alfred Lord Tennyson ]
- He answered and said unto them, he that soweth the good seed
- is the Son of man; the field is the world, and the good seed
- are the children of the kingdom; but the weeds are the
- children of the wicked one; the enemy that sowed them is the
- devil; the harvest is the end of the world; and the reapers
- are the angels. As therefore the weeds are gathered and
- burned in the fire; so shall it be in the end of this world.
- [...] So shall it be at the end of the world; the angels
- shall come forth, and sever the wicked from among the just,
- and shall cast them into the furnace of fire; there shall be
- wailing and gnashing of teeth.
- [ The Gospel According to Matthew, 13:37-42, 49-50 ]
- An Egyptian god of war and a great hunter, few gods can match
- his fury. Unlike many gods of war, he is a force for good.
- The wrath of Anhur is slow to come, but it is inescapable
- once earned. Anhur is a mighty figure with four arms. He
- is often seen with a powerful lance that requires both of
- his right arms to wield and which is tipped with a fragment
- of the sun. He is married to Mehut, a lion-headed goddess.
- The twin city of Ankh-Morpork, foremost of all the cities
- bounding the Circle Sea, was as a matter of course the home
- of a large number of gangs, thieves' guilds, syndicates and
- similar organisations. This was one of the reasons for its
- wealth. Most of the humbler folk on the widdershin side of
- the river, in Morpork's mazy alleys, supplemented their
- meagre incomes by filling some small role for one or other
- of the competing gangs.
- [ The Colour of Magic by Terry Pratchett ]
- A primordial Babylonian-Akkadian deity, Anshar is mentioned
- in the Babylonian creation epic _Enuma Elish_ as one of a
- pair of offspring (with Kishar) of Lahmu and Lahamu. Anshar
- is linked with heaven while Kishar is identified with earth.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- This giant variety of the ordinary ant will fight just as
- fiercely as its small, distant cousin. Various varieties
- exist, and they are known and feared for their relentless
- persecution of their victims.
- Anu was the Babylonian god of the heavens, the monarch of
- the north star. He was the oldest of the Babylonian gods,
- the father of all gods, and the ruler of heaven and destiny.
- Anu features strongly in the _atiku_ festival in
- Babylon, Uruk and other cities.
- The most highly evolved of all the primates, as shown by
- all their anatomical characters and particularly the
- development of the brain. Both arboreal and terrestrial,
- the apes have the forelimbs much better developed than
- the hind limbs. Tail entirely absent. Growth is slow
- and sexual maturity reached at quite an advanced age.
- [ A Field Guide to the Larger Mammals of Africa by Dorst ]
-
- Aldo the gorilla had a plan. It was a good plan. It was
- right. He knew it. He smacked his lips in anticipation as
- he thought of it. Yes. Apes should be strong. Apes should
- be masters. Apes should be proud. Apes should make the
- Earth shake when they walked. Apes should _rule_ the Earth.
- [ Battle for the Planet of the Apes,
- by David Gerrold ]
- Archons are the predominant inhabitants of the heavens.
- However unusual their appearance, they are not generally
- evil. They are beings at peace with themselves and their
- surroundings.
- Ashikaga Takajui was a daimyo of the Minamoto clan who
- joined forces with the Go-Daigo to defeat the Hojo armies.
- Later when Go-Daigo attempted to reduce the powers of the
- samurai clans he rebelled against him. He defeated Go-
- Daigo and established the emperor Komyo on the throne.
- Go-Daigo eventually escaped and established another
- government in the town of Yoshino. This period of dual
- governments was known as the Nambokucho.
- [ Samurai - The Story of a Warrior Tradition, by Cook ]
- It is said that Asmodeus is the overlord over all of hell.
- His appearance, unlike many other demons and devils, is
- human apart from his horns and tail. He can freeze flesh
- with a touch.
- The consecrated ritual knife of a Wiccan initiate (one of
- four basic tools, together with the wand, chalice and
- pentacle). Traditionally, the athame is a double-edged,
- black-handled, cross-hilted dagger of between six and
- eighteen inches length.
- Athene was the offspring of Zeus, and without a mother. She
- sprang forth from his head completely armed. Her favourite
- bird was the owl, and the plant sacred to her is the olive.
- [ Bulfinch's Mythology by Thomas Bulfinch ]
- A device used to throw spears for longer distances. A short
- staff with a handle at one end and a cradle for the spear at
- the other.
- A mundane salamander, harmless.
- The "lord of the flies" is a translation of the Hebrew
- Ba'alzevuv (Beelzebub in Greek). It has been suggested that
- it was a mistranslation of a mistransliterated word which
- gave us this pungent and suggestive name of the Devil, a
- devil whose name suggests that he is devoted to decay,
- destruction, demoralization, hysteria and panic...
- [ Notes on _Lord of the Flies_, by E. L. Epstein ]
- ... It came to the edge of the fire and the light faded as
- if a cloud had bent over it. Then with a rush it leaped
- the fissure. The flames roared up to greet it, and wreathed
- about it; and a black smoke swirled in the air. Its streaming
- mane kindled, and blazed behind it. In its right hand
- was a blade like a stabbing tongue of fire; in its left it
- held a whip of many thongs.
- 'Ai, ai!' wailed Legolas. 'A Balrog! A Balrog is come!'
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- Extinct rhinos include a variety of forms, the most
- spectacular being _Baluchitherium_ from the Oligocene of
- Asia, which is the largest known land mammal. Its body, 18
- feet high at the shoulder and carried on massive limbs,
- allowed the 4-foot-long head to browse on the higher branches
- of trees. Though not as enormous, the titanotheres of the
- early Tertiary were also large perissodactyls, _Brontotherium_
- of the Oligocene being 8 feet high at the shoulder.
- [Prehistoric Animals, by Barry Cox ]
- They dressed alike -- in buckskin boots, leathern breeks and
- deerskin shirts, with broad girdles that held axes and short
- swords; and they were all gaunt and scarred and hard-eyed;
- sinewy and taciturn.
- They were wild men, of a sort, yet there was still a wide
- gulf between them and the Cimmerian. They were sons of
- civilization, reverted to a semi-barbarism. He was a
- barbarian of a thousand generations of barbarians. They had
- acquired stealth and craft, but he had been born to these
- things. He excelled them even in lithe economy of motion.
- They were wolves, but he was a tiger.
- [ Conan - The Warrior, by Robert E. Howard ]
- Barbed devils lack any real special abilities, though they
- are quite difficult to kill.
- A bat, flitting in the darkness outside, took the wrong turn
- as it made its nightly rounds and came in through the window
- which had been left healthfully open. It then proceeded to
- circle the room in the aimless fat-headed fashion habitual
- with bats, who are notoriously among the less intellectually
- gifted of God's creatures. Show me a bat, says the old
- proverb, and I will show you something that ought to be in
- some kind of a home.
- [ A Pelican at Blandings, by P. G. Wodehouse ]
- This giant variety of its useful normal cousin normally
- appears in small groups, looking for raw material to produce
- the royal jelly needed to feed their queen. On rare
- occasions, one may stumble upon a bee-hive, in which the
- queen bee is being well provided for, and guarded against
- intruders.
- The common name for the insects with wings shaped like
- shields (_Coleoptera_), one of the ten sub-species into
- which the insects are divided. They are characterized by
- the shields (the front pair of wings) under which the back
- wings are folded.
- [ Van Dale's Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal ]
- "A bell, book and candle job."
- The Bursar sighed. "We tried that, Archchancellor."
- The Archchancellor leaned towards him.
- "Eh?" he said.
- "I _said_, we tried that Archchancellor," said the Bursar loudly,
- directing his voice at the old man's ear. "After dinner, you
- remember? We used Humptemper's _Names of the Ants_ and rang Old
- Tom."*
- "Did we, indeed. Worked, did it?"
- "_No_, Archchancellor."
-
- * Old Tom was the single cracked bronze bell in the University
- bell tower.
- [ Eric, by Terry Pratchett ]
- On this particular day Blind Io, by dint of constant vigilance
- the chief of the gods, sat with his chin on his hand
- and looked at the gaming board on the red marble table in
- front of him. Blind Io had got his name because, where his
- eye sockets should have been, there were nothing but two
- areas of blank skin. His eyes, of which he had an impressively
- large number, led a semi-independent life of their
- own. Several were currently hovering above the table.
- [ The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett ]
- Animated protoplasm.
- Bone devils attack with weapons and with a great hooked tail
- which causes a loss of strength to those they sting.
- Faustus: Come on Mephistopheles. What shall we do?
- Mephistopheles: Nay, I know not. We shall be cursed with bell,
- book, and candle.
- Faustus: How? Bell, book, and candle, candle, book, and bell,
- Forward and backward, to curse Faustus to hell.
- Anon you shall hear a hog grunt, a calf bleat, and an ass bray,
- Because it is Saint Peter's holy day.
- (Enter all the Friars to sing the dirge)
- [ Doctor Faustus and Other Plays, by Christopher Marlowe ]
- Brigit (Brigid, Bride, Banfile), which means the Exalted One,
- was the Celtic (continental European and Irish) fertility
- goddess. She was originally celebrated on February first in
- the festival of Imbolc, which coincided with the beginning
- of lactation in ewes and was regarded in Scotland as the date
- on which Brigit deposed the blue-faced hag of winter. The
- Christian calendar adopted the same date for the Feast of St.
- Brigit. There is no record that a Christian saint ever
- actually existed, but in Irish mythology she became the
- midwife to the Virgin Mary.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- Bugbears are relatives of goblins, although they tend to be
- larger and more hairy. They are aggressive carnivores and
- sometimes kill just for the treasure their victims may be
- carrying.
- A classical Mesoamerican Aztec god, also known as Mixcoatl-
- Camaxtli (the Cloud Serpent), Camaxtli is the god of war. He
- is also a diety of hunting and fire who received human
- sacrifice of captured prisoners. According to tradition, the
- sun god Tezcatlipoca transformed himself into Mixcoatl-Camaxtli
- to make fire by twirling the sacred fire sticks.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- Well-known quadruped domestic animal from the family of
- predatory felines (_Felis ochreata domestica_), with a thick,
- soft pelt; often kept as a pet. Various folklores have the
- cat associated with magic and the gods of ancient Egypt.
- Of all the monsters put together by the Greek imagination
- the Centaurs (Kentauroi) constituted a class in themselves.
- Despite a strong streak of sensuality, in their make-up,
- their normal behaviour was moral, and they took a kindly
- thought of man's welfare. The attempted outrage of Nessos on
- Deianeira, and that of the whole tribe of Centaurs on the
- Lapith women, are more than offset by the hospitality of
- Pholos and by the wisdom of Cheiron, physician, prophet,
- lyrist, and the instructor of Achilles. Further, the
- Centaurs were peculiar in that their nature, which united the
- body of a horse with the trunk and head of a man, involved
- an unthinkable duplication of vital organs and important
- members. So grotesque a combination seems almost un-Greek.
- These strange creatures were said to live in the caves and
- clefts of the mountains, myths associating them especially
- with the hills of Thessaly and the range of Erymanthos.
- [ Mythology of all races, Vol. 1, pp. 270-271 ]
- Cerberus, (or Kerberos in Greek), was the three-headed dog
- that guarded the Gates of Hell. He allowed any dead to enter,
- and likewise prevented them all from ever leaving. He was
- bested only twice: once when Orpheus put him to sleep by
- playing bewitching music on his lyre, and the other time when
- Hercules confronted him and took him to the world of the
- living (as his twelfth and last labor).
- Name of a family (_Chameleonidae_) and race (_Chameleo_) of
- scaly lizards, especially the _Chameleo vulgaris_ species,
- with a short neck, claws, a grasping tail, a long, extendible
- tongue and mutually independent moving eyes. When it is
- scared or angry, it inflates itself and its transparent skin
- shows its blood: the skin first appears greenish, then
- gradually changes color until it is a spotted red. The final
- color depends on the background color as well, hence the
- (figurative) implication of unreliability. [Capitalized:]
- a constellation of the southern hemisphere (Chameleo).
- [ Van Dale's Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal ]
- When an ancient Greek died, his soul went to the nether world:
- the Hades. To reach the nether world, the souls had to cross
- the river Styx, the river that separated the living from the
- dead. The Styx could be crossed by ferry, whose shabby ferry-
- man, advanced in age, was called Charon. The deceased's next-
- of-kin would place a coin under his tongue, to pay the ferry-
- man.
- A Chinese rain god.
- Tiamat is said to be the mother of evil dragonkind. She is
- extremely vain.
- Once in a great while, when the positions of the stars are
- just right, a seven-year-old rooster will lay an egg. Then,
- along will come a snake, to coil around the egg, or a toad,
- to squat upon the egg, keeping it warm and helping it to
- hatch. When it hatches, out comes a creature called basilisk,
- or cockatrice, the most deadly of all creatures. A single
- glance from its yellow, piercing toad's eyes will kill both
- man and beast. Its power of destruction is said to be so
- great that sometimes simply to hear its hiss can prove fatal.
- Its breath is so venomous that it causes all vegetation
- to wither.
-
- There is, however, one creature which can withstand the
- basilisk's deadly gaze, and this is the weasel. No one knows
- why this is so, but although the fierce weasel can slay the
- basilisk, it will itself be killed in the struggle. Perhaps
- the weasel knows the basilisk's fatal weakness: if it ever
- sees its own reflection in a mirror it will perish instantly.
- But even a dead basilisk is dangerous, for it is said that
- merely touching its lifeless body can cause a person to
- sicken and die.
- [ Mythical Beasts by Deirdre Headon (The Leprechaun Library)
- and other sources ]
- He was dressed in a flowing gown with fur tippets which had
- the signs of the zodiac embroidered over it, with various
- cabalistic signs, such as triangles with eyes in them, queer
- crosses, leaves of trees, bones of birds and animals, and a
- planetarium whose stars shone like bits of looking-glass with
- the sun on them. He had a pointed hat like a dunce's cap, or
- like the headgear worn by ladies of that time, except that
- the ladies were accustomed to have a bit of veil floating
- from the top of it.
- [ The Once and Future King, by T.H. White ]
-
- "A wizard!" Dooley exclaimed, astounded.
- "At your service, sirs," said the wizard. "How
- perceptive of you to notice. I suppose my hat rather gives me
- away. Something of a beacon, I don't doubt." His hat was
- pretty much that, tall and cone-shaped with stars and crescent
- moons all over it. All in all, it couldn't have been more
- wizardish.
- [ The Elfin Ship, James P. Blaylock ]
- A mythical feathered serpent. The couatl are very rare.
- If you want to know what cram is, I can only say that I don't
- know the recipe; but it is biscuitish, keeps good indefinitely,
- is supposed to be sustaining, and is certainly not entertaining,
- being in fact very uninteresting except as a chewing
- exercise. It was made by the Lake-men for long journeys.
- [The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien]
- A big animal with the appearance of a lizard, constituting
- an order of the reptiles (_Loricata_ or _Crocodylia_), the
- crocodile is a large, dangerous predator native to tropical
- and subtropical climes. It spends most of its time in large
- bodies of water.
- Croesus (in Greek: Kroisos), the wealthy last king of Lydia;
- his empire was destroyed when he attacked Cyrus in 549, after
- the Oracle of Delphi (q.v.) had told him: "if you attack the
- Persians, you will destroy a mighty empire". Herodotus
- relates of his legendary conversation with Solon of Athens,
- who impressed upon him that being rich does not imply being
- happy and that no one should be considered fortunate before
- his death.
- Warily Conan scanned his surroundings, all of his senses alert
- for signs of possible danger. Off in the distance, he could
- see the familiar shapes of the Camp of the Duali tribe.
- Suddenly, the hairs on his neck stand on end as he detects the
- aura of evil magic in the air. Without thought, he readies
- his weapon, and mutters under his breath:
- "By Crom, there will be blood spilt today."
-
- [ Conan the Avenger by Robert E. Howard, Bjorn Nyberg, and
- L. Sprague de Camp ]
- And after he had milked his cattle swiftly,
- he again took hold of two of my men
- and had them as his supper.
- Then I went, with a tub of red wine,
- to stand before the Cyclops, saying:
- "A drop of wine after all this human meat,
- so you can taste the delicious wine
- that is stored in our ship, Cyclops."
- He took the tub and emptied it.
- He appreciated the priceless wine that much
- that he promptly asked me for a second tub.
- "Give it", he said, "and give me your name as well".
- ...
- Thrice I filled the tub,
- and after the wine had clouded his mind,
- I said to him, in a tone as sweet as honey:
- "You have asked my name, Cyclops? Well,
- my name is very well known. I'll give it to you,
- if you give me the gift you promised me as a guest.
- My name is Nobody. All call me thus:
- my father and my mother and my friends."
- Ruthlessly he answered to this:
- "Nobody, I will eat you last of all;
- your host of friends will completely precede you.
- That will be my present to you, my friend."
- And after these words he fell down backwards,
- restrained by the all-restrainer Hupnos.
- His monstrous neck slid into the dust;
- the red wine squirted from his throat;
- the drunk vomited lumps of human flesh.
- [ The Odyssey, (chapter Epsilon), by Homer ]
- ... But he ruled rather by force and fear, if they might
- avail; and those who perceived his shadow spreading over the
- world called him the Dark Lord and named him the Enemy; and
- he gathered again under his government all the evil things of
- the days of Morgoth that remained on earth or beneath it,
- and the Orcs were at his command and multiplied like flies.
- Thus the Black Years began ...
- [ The Silmarillion, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- Demogorgon, the prince of demons, wallows in filth and can
- spread a quickly fatal illness to his victims while rending
- them. He is a mighty spellcaster, and he can drain the life
- of mortals with a touch of his tail.
- Dispater is an arch-devil who rules the city of Dis. He is
- a powerful mage.
- The djinn are genies from the elemental plane of Air. There,
- among their kind, they have their own societies. They are
- sometimes encountered on earth and may even be summoned here
- to perform some service for powerful wizards. The wizards
- often leave them about for later service, safely tucked away
- in a flask or lamp. Once in a while, such a tool is found by
- a lucky rogue, and some djinn are known to be so grateful
- when released that they might grant their rescuer a wish.
- A domestic animal, the _tame dog_ (_Canis familiaris_), of
- which numerous breeds exist. The male is called a dog,
- while the female is called a bitch. Because of its known
- loyalty to man and gentleness with children, it is the
- world's most popular domestic animal. It can easily be
- trained to perform various tasks.
- In the West the dragon was the natural enemy of man. Although
- preferring to live in bleak and desolate regions, whenever it
- was seen among men it left in its wake a trail of destruction
- and disease. Yet any attempt to slay this beast was a perilous
- undertaking. For the dragon's assailant had to contend
- not only with clouds of sulphurous fumes pouring from its fire
- breathing nostrils, but also with the thrashings of its tail,
- the most deadly part of its serpent-like body.
- [Mythical Beasts by Deirdre Headon (The Leprechaun Library)]
- Dwarfs have faces like men (ugly men, with wrinkled, leathery
- skins), but are generally either flat-footed, duck-footed, or
- have feet pointing backwards. They are of the earth, earthy,
- living in the darkest of caverns and venturing forth only
- with the cloaks by which they can make themselves invisible,
- and others disguised as toads. Miners often come across them,
- and sometimes establish reasonably close relations with them.
- ... The miners of Cornwall were always delighted to hear a
- bucca busily mining away, for all dwarfs have an infallible
- nose for precious metals.
- Among other things, dwarfs are rightly valued for their skill
- as blacksmiths and jewellers: they made Odin his famous spear
- Gungnir, and Thor his hammer; for Freya they designed a
- magnificent necklace, and for Frey a golden boar. And in their
- spare time they are excellent bakers. Ironically, despite
- their odd feet, they are particularly fond of dancing. They
- can also see into the future, and consequently are excellent
- meteorologists. They can be free with presents to people
- they like, and a dwarvish gift is likely to turn to gold in
- the hand. But on the whole they are a snappish lot.
- [ The Immortals, by Derek and Julia Parker ]
- The behaviour of eels in fresh water extends the air of
- mystery surrounding them. They move freely into muddy, silty
- bottoms of lakes, lying buried in the daylight hours in summer.
- [...] Eels are voracious carnivores, feeding mainly at
- night and consuming a wide variety of fishes and invertebrate
- creatures. Contrary to earlier thinking, eels seek living
- rather than dead creatures and are not habitual eaters of
- carrion.
- [ Freshwater Fishes of Canada, by Scott and Crossman ]
- ... Even as they stepped over the threshold a single clear
- voice rose in song.
-
- A Elbereth Gilthoniel,
- silivren penna miriel
- o menel aglar elenath!
- Na-chaered palen-diriel
- o galadhremmin ennorath,
- Fanuilos, le linnathon
- nef aear, si nef aearon!
-
- Frodo halted for a moment, looking back. Elrond was in his
- chair and the fire was on his face like summer-light upon the
- trees. Near him sat the Lady Arwen. [...]
- He stood still enchanted, while the sweet syllables of the
- elvish song fell like clear jewels of blended word and melody.
- "It is a song to Elbereth," said Bilbo. "They will sing that,
- and other songs of the Blessed Realm, many times tonight.
- Come on!"
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- South-American fish (_Gymnotus electricus_), living in fresh
- water. Shaped like a serpent, it can grow up to 2 metres.
- This eel is known for its electrical organ which enables it
- to paralyse creatures up to the size of a horse.
- [ Van Dale's Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal ]
- Elementals are manifestations of the basic nature of the
- universe. There are four known forms of elementals: air, fire,
- water, and earth. Some mystics have postulated the necessity
- for a fifth type, the spirit elemental, but none have ever
- been encountered, at least on this plane of existence.
- The Elves sat round the fire upon the grass or upon the sawn
- rings of old trunks. Some went to and fro bearing cups and
- pouring drinks; others brought food on heaped plates and
- dishes.
- "This is poor fare," they said to the hobbits; "for we are
- lodging in the greenwood far from our halls. If ever you are
- our guests at home, we will treat you better."
- "It seems to me good enough for a birthday-party," said Frodo.
- Pippin afterwards recalled little of either food or drink, for
- his mind was filled with the light upon the elf-faces, and the
- sound of voices so various and so beautiful that he felt in a
- waking dream. [...]
- Sam could never describe in words, nor picture clearly to
- himself, what he felt or thought that night, though it remained
- in his memory as one of the chief events of his life. The
- nearest he ever got was to say: "Well, sir, if I could grow
- apples like that, I would call myself a gardener. But it was
- the singing that went to my heart, if you know what I mean."
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- These female-seeming devils named after the Furies of mythology
- attack hand to hand and poison their unwary victims as well.
- The two-headed giant, or ettin, is a vicious and unpredictable
- hunter that stalks by night and eats any meat it can catch.
- At first only its tip was visible, but then it rose, straight,
- proud, all that was noble and great and wondrous. The tip of
- the blade pointed toward the moon, as if it would cleave it
- in two. The blade itself gleamed like a beacon in the night.
- There was no light source for the sword to be reflecting
- from, for the moon had darted behind a cloud in fear. The
- sword was glowing from the intensity of its strength and
- power and knowledge that it was justice incarnate, and that
- after a slumber of uncounted years its time had again come.
- After the blade broke the surface, the hilt was visible, and
- holding the sword was a single strong, yet feminine hand,
- wearing several rings that bore jewels sparkling with the
- blue-green color of the ocean.
- [ Knight Life, by Peter David ]
- This is a powerful amulet of ESP. In addition to its standard
- powers, it regenerates the energy of anyone who carries
- it, allowing them to cast spells more often. It also reduces
- any spell damage to the person who carries it by half, and
- protects from magic missiles. Finally, when invoked it has
- the power to instantly open a portal to any other area of the
- dungeon, allowing its invoker to travel quickly between
- areas.
- Floating eyes, not surprisingly, are large, floating eyeballs
- which drift about the dungeon. Though not dangerous in and
- of themselves, their power to paralyse those who gaze at
- their large eye in combat is widely feared. Many are the
- tales of those who struck a floating eye, were paralysed by
- its mystic powers, and then nibbled to death by some other
- creature that lurked around nearby.
- With an anxiety that almost amounted to agony, I collected
- the instruments of life around me, that I might infuse a spark
- of being into the lifeless thing that lay at my feet. It was
- already one in the morning; the rain pattered dismally against
- the panes, and my candle was nearly burnt out, when, by the
- glimmer of the half-extinguished light, I saw the dull yellow
- eye of the creature open; it breathed hard, and a convulsive
- motion agitated its limbs.
-
- How can I describe my emotions at this catastrophe, or how
- delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pains and care I
- had endeavoured to form? His limbs were in proportion, and I
- had selected his features as beautiful. Beautiful!--Great God!
- His yellow skin scarcely covered the work of muscles and
- arteries beneath; his hair was of a lustrous black, and
- flowing; his teeth of a pearly whiteness; but these luxuriances
- only formed a more horrid contrast with his watery eyes, that
- seemed almost of the same colour as the dun white sockets in
- which they were set, his shrivelled complexion and straight
- black lips.
- [ Frankenstein, by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley ]
- The fog comes
- on little cat feet.
-
- It sits looking
- over harbor and city
- on silent haunches
- and then moves on.
- [ Fog, by Carl Sandburg ]
- Fungi, division of simple plants that lack chlorophyll, true
- stems, roots, and leaves. Unlike algae, fungi cannot
- photosynthesize, and live as parasites or saprophytes. The
- division comprises the slime molds and true fungi. True
- fungi are multicellular (with the exception of yeasts); the
- body of most true fungi consists of slender cottony
- filaments, or hyphae. All fungi are capable of asexual
- reproduction by cell division, budding, fragmentation, or
- spores. Those that reproduce sexually alternate a sexual
- generation (gametophyte) with a spore-producing one. The
- four classes of true fungi are the algaelike fungi (e.g.,
- black bread mold and downy mildew), sac fungi (e.g., yeasts,
- powdery mildews, truffles, and blue and green molds such as
- Penicillium), basidium fungi (e.g., mushrooms and puffballs)
- and imperfect fungi (e.g., species that cause athlete's foot
- and ringworm). Fungi help decompose organic matter (important
- in soil renewal); are valuable as a source of antibiotics,
- vitamins, and various chemicals; and for their role in
- fermentation, e.g., in bread and alcoholic beverage
- production.
- [ The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia ]
- And so it came to pass that while Man ruled on Earth, the
- gargoyles waited, lurking, hidden from the light. Reborn
- every 600 years in Man's reckoning of time, the gargoyles
- joined battle against Man to gain dominion over the Earth.
-
- In each coming, the gargoyles were nearly destroyed by Men
- who flourished in greater numbers. Now it has been so many
- hundreds of years that it seems the ancient statues and
- paintings of gargoyles are just products of Man's
- imagination. In this year, with Man's thoughts turned toward
- the many ills he has brought among himself, Man has forgotten
- his most ancient adversary, the gargoyles.
- [ Excerpt from the opening narration to the movie
- _Gargoyles_, written by Stephen and Elinor Karpf ]
- Geryon is an arch-devil sometimes called the Wild Beast,
- attacking with his claws and poison sting. His ranking in
- Hell is rumored to be quite low.
- And now the souls of the dead who had gone below came swarming
- up from Erebus -- fresh brides, unmarried youths, old men
- with life's long suffering behind them, tender young girls
- still nursing this first anguish in their hearts, and a great
- throng of warriors killed in battle, their spear-wounds gaping
- yet and all their armour stained with blood. From this
- multitude of souls, as they fluttered to and fro by the
- trench, there came a moaning that was horrible to hear.
- Panic drained the blood from my cheeks.
- [ The Odyssey, (chapter Lambda), by Homer ]
- Giants have always walked the earth, though they are rare in
- these times. They range in size from little over nine feet
- to a towering twenty feet or more. The larger ones use huge
- boulders as weapons, hurling them over large distances. All
- types of giants share a love for men - roasted, boiled, or
- fried. Their table manners are legendary.
- ... And then a gnome came by, carrying a bundle, an old
- fellow three times as large as an imp and wearing clothes of
- a sort, especially a hat. And he was clearly just as frightened
- as the imps though he could not go so fast. Ramon Alonzo
- saw that there must be some great trouble that was vexing
- magical things; and, since gnomes speak the language of men, and
- will answer if spoken to gently, he raised his hat, and asked
- of the gnome his name. The gnome did not stop his hasty
- shuffle a moment as he answered 'Alaraba' and grabbed the rim
- of his hat but forgot to doff it.
- 'What is the trouble, Alaraba?' said Ramon Alonzo.
- 'White magic. Run!' said the gnome ..
- [ The Charwoman's Shadow, by Lord Dunsany ]
- Now goblins are cruel, wicked, and bad-hearted. They make
- no beautiful things, but they make many clever ones. They
- can tunnel and mine as well as any but the most skilled
- dwarves, when they take the trouble, though they are usually
- untidy and dirty. Hammers, axes, swords, daggers, pickaxes,
- tongs, and also instruments of torture, they make very well,
- or get other people to make to their design, prisoners and
- slaves that have to work till they die for want of air and
- light.
- [ The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- The Great Goblin gave a truly awful howl of rage when he
- looked at it, and all his soldiers gnashed their teeth,
- clashed their shields, and stamped. They knew the sword at
- once. It had killed hundreds of goblins in its time, when
- the fair elves of Gondolin hunted them in the hills or did
- battle before their walls. They had called it Orcrist,
- Goblin-cleaver, but the goblins called it simply Biter. They
- hated it and hated worse any one that carried it.
- [ The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- A metal of characteristic yellow colour, the most precious
- metal used as a common commercial medium of exchange. Symbol,
- Au; at. no. 79; at. wt. 197.2. It is the most malleable
- and ductile of all metals, and very heavy (sp. gr., 19.3).
- It is quite unalterable by heat, moisture, and most
- corrosive agents, and therefore well suited for its use in
- coin and jewelry.
- [ Webster's New International Dictionary
- of the English Language, Second Edition ]
- "The original story harks back, so they say, to the sixteenth
- century. Using long-lost formulas from the Kabbala, a rabbi is
- said to have made an artificial man -- the so-called Golem -- to
- help ring the bells in the Synagogue and for all kinds of other
- menial work.
- "But he hadn't made a full man, and it was animated by some sort
- of vegetable half-life. What life it had, too, so the story
- runs, was only derived from the magic charm placed behind its
- teeth each day, that drew down to itself what was known as the
- `free sidereal strength of the universe.'
- "One evening, before evening prayers, the rabbi forgot to take
- the charm out of the Golem's mouth, and it fell into a frenzy.
- It raged through the dark streets, smashing everything in its
- path, until the rabbi caught up with it, removed the charm, and
- destroyed it. Then the Golem collapsed, lifeless. All that was
- left of it was a small clay image, which you can still see in
- the Old Synagogue." ...
- [ The Golem, by Gustav Meyrink ]
- The gremlin is a highly intelligent and completely evil
- creature. It lives to torment other creatures and will go
- to great lengths to inflict pain or cause injury.
- These electronically based creatures are not native to this
- universe. They appear to come from a world whose laws of
- motion are radically different from ours.
-
- Tron looked to his mate and pilot. "I'm going to check on
- the beam connection, Yori. You two can keep a watch out for
- grid bugs." Tron paced forward along the slender catwalk
- that still seemed awfully insubstantial to Flynn, though he
- knew it to be amazingly sturdy. He gazed after Tron, asking
- himself what in the world a grid bug was, and hoping that the
- beam connection -- to which he'd given no thought whatsoever
- until this moment -- was healthy and sound."
- [ Tron, novel by Brian Daley, story by Steven Lisberger ]
- The samurai's last meal before battle. It was usually made
- up of cooked chestnuts, dried seaweed, and sake.
- Hachi was a dog that went with his master, a professor, to
- the Shibuya train station every morning. In the afternoon,
- when his master was to return from work Hachi would be there
- waiting. One day his master died at the office, and did not
- return. For over ten years Hachi returned to the station
- every afternoon to wait for his master. When Hachi died a
- statue was erected on the station platform in his honor. It
- is said to bring you luck if you touch his statue.
- The other three drew in their breath sharply, and the dark,
- powerful man who stood at the head of the sarcophagus whispered:
- "The Heart of Ahriman!" The other lifted a quick hand
- for silence. Somewhere a dog began howling dolefully, and a
- stealthy step padded outside the barred and bolted door. ...
- But none looked aside from the mummy case over which the man
- in the ermine-trimmed robe was now moving the great flaming
- jewel, while he muttered an incantation that was old when
- Atlantis sank. The glare of the gem dazzled their eyes, so
- that they could not be sure what they saw; but with a
- splintering crash, the carven lid of the sarcophagus burst
- outward as if from some irresistible pressure applied from
- within and the four men, bending eagerly forward, saw the
- occupant -- a huddled, withered, wizened shape, with dried
- brown limbs like dead wood showing through moldering bandages.
- "Bring that thing back?" muttered the small dark man who
- stood on the right, with a short, sardonic laugh. "It is
- ready to crumble at a touch. We are fools ---"
- [ Conan The Conqueror, by Robert E. Howard ]
- Hell hounds are fire-breathing canines from another plane of
- existence brought here in the service of evil beings. A hell
- hound resembles a large hound with rust-red or red-brown fur,
- and red, glowing eyes. The markings, teeth, and tongue are
- soot black. It stands two to three feet high at the shoulder
- and has a distinct odour of smoke and sulphur. The baying
- sounds it makes have an eerie, hollow tone that sends a shiver
- through any who hear them.
- Messenger and herald of the Olympians. Being required to do
- a great deal of travelling and speaking in public, he became
- the god of eloquence, travellers, merchants, and thieves. He
- was one of the most energetic of the Greek gods, a
- Machiavellian character full of trickery and sexual vigour.
- Like other Greek gods, he is endowed with not-inconsiderable
- sexual prowess which he directs towards countryside nymphs.
- He is a god of boundaries, guardian of graves and patron deity
- of shepherds. He is usually depicted as a handsome young
- man wearing winged golden sandals and holding a magical
- herald's staff consisting of intertwined serpents, the
- kerykeion. He is reputedly the only being able to find his way
- to the underworld ferry of Charon and back again. He is said
- to have invented, among other things, the lyre, Pan's Pipes,
- numbers, the alphabet, weights and measures, and sacrificing.
- "Hezrou" is the common name for the type II demon. It is
- among the weaker of demons, but still quite formidable.
- Hobbits are an unobtrusive but very ancient people, more
- numerous formerly than they are today; for they love peace
- and quiet and good tilled earth: a well-ordered and well-
- farmed countryside was their favourite haunt. They do not
- and did not understand or like machines more complicated
- than a forge-bellows, a water-mill, or a handloom, although
- they were skillful with tools. Even in ancient days they
- were, as a rule, shy of "the Big Folk", as they call us, and
- now they avoid us with dismay and are becoming hard to find.
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- Hobgoblin. Used by the Puritans and in later times for
- wicked goblin spirits, as in Bunyan's "Hobgoblin nor foul
- friend", but its more correct use is for the friendly spirits
- of the brownie type. In "A midsummer night's dream" a
- fairy says to Shakespeare's Puck:
- Those that Hobgoblin call you, and sweet Puck,
- You do their work, and they shall have good luck:
- Are you not he?
- and obviously Puck would not wish to be called a hobgoblin
- if that was an ill-omened word.
- Hobgoblins are on the whole, good-humoured and ready to be
- helpful, but fond of practical joking, and like most of the
- fairies rather nasty people to annoy. Boggarts hover on the
- verge of hobgoblindom. Bogles are just over the edge.
- One Hob mentioned by Henderson, was Hob Headless who haunted
- the road between Hurworth and Neasham, but could not cross
- the little river Kent, which flowed into the Tess. He was
- exorcised and laid under a large stone by the roadside for
- ninety-nine years and a day. If anyone was so unwary as to
- sit on that stone, he would be unable to quit it for ever.
- The ninety-nine years is nearly up, so trouble may soon be
- heard of on the road between Hurworth and Neasham.
- [ Katharine Briggs, A dictionary of Fairies ]
- A homunculus is a creature summoned by a mage to perform some
- particular task. They are particularly good at spying. They
- are smallish creatures, but very agile. They can put their
- victims to sleep with a venomous bite, but due to their size,
- the effect does not last long on humans.
-
- "Tothapis cut him off. 'Be still and hearken. You will travel
- aboard the sacred wingboat. Of it you may not have heard; but
- it will bear you thither in a night and a day and a night.
- With you will go a homunculus that can relay your words to me,
- and mine to you, across the leagues between at the speed of
- thought.'"
- [ Conan the Rebel, by Poul Anderson]
- Horned devils lack any real special abilities, though they
- are quite difficult to kill.
- [Pestilence:] And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals, and I heard, as
- it were the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts saying, Come and see. And
- I saw, and behold a white horse: and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown
- was given unto him: and he went forth conquering, and to conquer.
-
- [War:] And when he had opened the second seal, I heard the second beast say,
- Come and see. And there went out another horse that was red: and power was
- given to him that sat thereon to take peace from the earth, and that they
- should kill one another: and there was given unto him a great sword.
-
- [Famine:] And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say,
- Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him had
- a pair of balances in his hand. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four
- beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a
- penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine.
-
- [Death:] And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the
- fourth beast say, Come and see. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his
- name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was
- given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with
- hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth.
- [ Revelations of John, 6:1-8 ]
- The first of five mythical Chinese emperors, Huan Ti is known
- as the yellow emperor. He rules the _moving_ heavens, as
- opposed to the _dark_ heavens. He is an inventor, said to
- have given mankind among other things, the wheel, armour, and
- the compass. He is the god of fortune telling and war.
- Huehuetotl, or Huhetotl, which means Old God, was the Aztec
- (classical Mesoamerican) god of fire. He is generally
- associated with paternalism and one of the group classed
- as the Xiuhtecuhtli complex. He is known to send his
- minions to reek havoc upon ordinary humans.
- [ after the Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- Humanoids are all approximately the size of a human, and may
- be mistaken for one at a distance. They are usually of a
- tribal nature, and will fiercely defend their lairs. Usually
- hostile, they may even band together to raid and pillage
- human settlements.
- These strange creatures live mostly on the surface of the
- earth, gathering together in societies of various forms, but
- occasionally a stray will descend into the depths and commit
- mayhem among the dungeon residents who, naturally, often
- resent the intrusion of such beasts. They are capable of
- using weapons and magic, and it is even rumored that the
- Wizard of Yendor is a member of this species.
- Ice devils are large semi-insectoid creatures, who are
- equally at home in the fires of Hell and the cold of Limbo,
- and who can cause the traveller to feel the latter with just
- a touch of their tail.
- ... imps ... little creatures of two feet high that could
- gambol and jump prodigiously; ...
- [ The Charwoman's Shadow, by Lord Dunsany ]
-
- An 'imp' is an off-shoot or cutting. Thus an 'ymp tree' was
- a grafted tree, or one grown from a cutting, not from seed.
- 'Imp' properly means a small devil, an off-shoot of Satan,
- but the distinction between goblins or bogles and imps from
- hell is hard to make, and many in the Celtic countries as
- well as the English Puritans regarded all fairies as devils.
- The fairies of tradition often hover uneasily between the
- ghostly and the diabolic state.
- [ Katharine Briggs, A Dictionary of Fairies ]
- The incubus and succubus are male and female versions of the
- same demon, one who lies with a human for its own purposes,
- usually to the detriment of the mortals who are unwise in
- their dealings with them.
- Ishtar (the star of heaven) is the Mesopotamian goddess of
- fertility and war. She is usually depicted with wings and
- weapon cases at her shoulders, carrying a ceremonial double-
- headed mace-scimitar embellished with lion heads, frequently
- being accompanied by a lion. She is symbolized by an eight-
- pointed star.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan]
- Now Issek of the Jug, whom Fafhrd chose to serve, was once
- of the most lowly and unsuccessful of the gods, godlets
- rather, in Lankhmar. He had dwelt there for about thirteen
- years, during which time he had traveled only two squares up
- the Street of the Gods and was now back again, ready for
- oblivion. He is not to be confused with Issek the Armless,
- Issek of the Burnt Legs, Flayed Issek, or any other of the
- numerous and colorfully mutilated divinities of that name.
- Indeed, his unpopularity may have been due in part to the
- fact that the manner of his death -- racking -- was not
- deemed particularly spectacular. ... However, after Fafhrd
- became his acolyte, things somehow began to change.
- [ Swords In The Mist, by Fritz Leiber ]
- The shopkeeper of the lighting shop in the town level of the
- gnomish mines is a tribute to Izchak Miller, a founding member
- of the NetHack development team and a personal friend of a large
- number of us. Izchak contributed greatly to the game, coding a
- large amount of the shopkeep logic (hence the nature of the tribute)
- as well as a good part of the alignment system, the prayer code and
- the rewrite of "hell" in the 3.1 release. Izchak was a professor
- of Philosophy, who taught at many respected institutions, including
- MIT and Stanford, and who also worked, for a period of time, at
- Xerox PARC. Izchak was the first "librarian" of the NetHack project,
- and was a founding member of the DevTeam, joining in 1986 while he
- was working at the University of Pennsylvania (hence our mailing
- list address). Until the 3.1.3 release, Izchak carefully kept all
- of the code synchronized and arbitrated disputes between members of
- the development teams. Izchak Miller passed away at the age of 58,
- in the early morning hours of April 1, 1994 from complications due
- to cancer. We dedicate NetHack 3.2 in his memory.
- [ Mike Stephenson, for the NetHack DevTeam ]
- "Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
- The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
- Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun
- The frumious Bandersnatch!"
-
- He took his vorpal sword in hand;
- Long time the manxome foe he sought --
- So rested he by the Tumtum tree,
- And stood awhile in thought.
-
- And, as in uffish thought he stood,
- The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame,
- Came whiffling through the tulgey wood,
- And burbled as it came!
-
- One, two! One, two! And through and through
- The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!
- He left it dead, and with its head
- He went galumphing back.
- [ Jabberwocky, by Lewis Carroll ]
- In Asiatic folktale, jackal provides for the lion; he scares
- up game, which the lion kills and eats, and receives what is
- left as reward. In stories from northern India he is
- sometimes termed "minister to the king," i.e. to the lion.
- From the legend that he does not kill his own food has arisen
- the legend of his cowardice. Jackal's heart must never be
- eaten, for instance, in the belief of peoples indigenous to
- the regions where the jackal abounds. ... In Hausa Negro
- folktale Jackal plays the role of sagacious judge and is
- called "O Learned One of the Forest." The Bushmen say that
- Jackal goes around behaving the way he does "because he is
- Jackal".
- [ Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary of Folklore ]
- Large, flesh-eating animal of the cat family, of Central and
- South America. This feline predator (_Panthera onca_) is
- sometimes incorrectly called a panther.
- [ Van Dale's Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal ]
- Little is known about the Faceless Lord, even the correct
- spelling of his name. He does not have a physical form as
- we know it, and those who have peered into his realm claim
- he is a slime-like creature who swallows other creatures
- alive, spits acidic secretions, and causes disease in his
- victims which can be almost instantly fatal.
- The kabuto is the helmet worn by the samurai. It was
- characterized by a prominent beaked front which jutted out over
- the brow to protect the wearer's face; a feature that gives
- rise to their modern Japanese name of 'shokaku tsuki kabuto'
- (battering-ram helmet). Their main constructional element
- was an oval plate, the shokaku bo, slightly domed for the
- head with a narrow prolongation in front that curved forwards
- and downwards where it developed a pronounced central
- fold. Two horizontal strips encircling the head were riveted
- to this frontal strip: the lower one, the koshimaki (hip
- wrap), formed the lower edge of the helmet bowl; the other,
- the do maki (body wrap), was set at about the level of the
- temples. Filling the gaps between these strips and the shokaku
- bo were small plates, sometimes triangular but more commonly
- rectangular in shape. Because the front projected so
- far from the head, the triangular gap beneath was filled by
- a small plate, the shoshaku tei ita, whose rear edge bent
- downwards into a flange that rested against the forehead.
- [ Arms & Armour of the Samurai, by Bottomley & Hopson ]
- The katana is a long, single-edged samurai sword with a
- slightly curved blade. Its long handle is designed to allow
- it to be wielded with either one or two hands.
- The ki-rin is a strange-looking flying creature. It has
- scales, a mane like a lion, a tail, hooves, and a horn. It
- is brightly colored, and can usually be found flying in the
- sky looking for good deeds to reward.
- Ector took both his sons to the church before which the
- anvil had been placed. There, standing before the anvil, he
- commanded Kay: "Put the sword back into the steel if you
- really think the throne is yours!" But the sword glanced
- off the steel. "Now it is your turn", Ector said facing
- Arthur.
- The young man lifted the sword and thrust with both arms; the
- blade whizzed through the air with a flash and drilled the
- metal as if it were mere butter. Ector and Kay dropped to
- their knees before Arthur.
- "Why, father and brother, do you bow before me?", Arthur asked
- with wonder in his voice.
- "Because now I know for sure that you are the king, not only
- by birth but also by law", Ector said. "You are no son of
- mine nor are you Kay's brother. Immediately after your birth,
- Merlin the Wise brought you to me to be raised safely. And
- though it was me that named you Arthur when you were baptized,
- you are really the son of brave king Uther Pendragon and queen
- Igraine..."
- And after these words, the lord rose and went to see the arch-
- bishop to impart to him what had passed.
- [ Van Gouden Tijden Zingen de Harpen, by Vladimir Hulpach,
- Emanuel Frynta, and Vackav Cibula ]
- Here lies the noble fearless knight,
- Whose valour rose to such a height;
- When Death at last had struck him down,
- His was the victory and renown.
- He reck'd the world of little prize,
- And was a bugbear in men's eyes;
- But had the fortune in his age
- To live a fool and die a sage.
- [ Don Quixote of La Mancha by Miquel de
- Cervantes Saavedra ]
- The race of kobolds are reputed to be an artificial creation
- of a master wizard (demi-god?). They are about 3' tall with
- a vaguely dog-like face. They bear a violent dislike of the
- Elven race, and will go out of their way to cause trouble
- for Elves at any time.
- The typical policeman of 1920's movies, the Keystone Kop was
- modeled like the English "bobby", with a long brass-buttoned
- overcoat, carrying long nightsticks that he (more often than
- not) whapped himself with, rather than anyone else. The
- Keystone Kops were very slapstick-like, relying on speed and
- numbers to achieve their comedy, rather than sophisticated
- wit.
- "I am not a coward!" he cried. "I'll dare Thieves' House
- and fetch you Krovas' head and toss it with blood a-drip at
- Vlana's feet. I swear that, witness me, Kos the god of
- dooms, by the brown bones of Nalgron my father and by his
- sword Graywand here at my side!"
- [ Swords and Deviltry, by Fritz Leiber ]
- A Japanese harp.
- Out from the water a long sinuous tentacle had crawled; it
- was pale-green and luminous and wet. Its fingered end had
- hold of Frodo's foot, and was dragging him into the water.
- Sam on his knees was now slashing at it with a knife. The
- arm let go of Frodo, and Sam pulled him away, crying out
- for help. Twenty other arms came rippling out. The dark
- water boiled, and there was a hideous stench.
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- Blind Io took up the dice-box, which was a skull whose various orifices had
- been stoppered with rubies, and with several of his eyes on the Lady he rolled
- three fives. She smiled. This was the nature of the Lady's eyes: they were
- bright green, lacking iris or pupil, and they glowed from within.
- The room was silent as she scrabbled in her box of pieces and, from the
- very bottom, produced a couple that she set down on the board with two de-
- cisive clicks. The rest of the players, as one God, craned forward to peer at
- them.
- "A wenegade wiffard and fome fort of clerk," said Offler the Crocodile
- God, hindered as usual by his tusks. "Well, weally!" With one claw he pushed
- a pile of bone-white tokens into the centre of the table.
- The Lady nodded slightly. She picked up the dice-cup and held it as
- steady as a rock, yet all the Gods could hear the three cubes rattling about
- inside. And then she sent them bouncing across the table.
- A six. A three. A five.
- Something was happening to the five, however. Battered by the chance col-
- lision of several billion molecules, the die flipped onto a point, spun gently
- and came down a seven. Blind Io picked up the cube and counted the sides.
- "Come _on_," he said wearily, "Play fair."
- [ The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett]
- The lowliest of the inhabitants of hell.
- ... the leucrocotta, a wild beast of extraordinary swiftness,
- the size of the wild ass, with the legs of a Stag, the neck,
- tail, and breast of a lion, the head of a badger, a cloven
- hoof, the mouth slit up as far as the ears, and one continuous
- bone instead of teeth; it is said, too, that this animal can
- imitate the human voice.
- [ Curious Creatures in Zoology, by John Ashton ]
- The Irish Leprechaun is the Faeries' shoemaker and is known
- under various names in different parts of Ireland:
- Cluricaune in Cork, Lurican in Kerry, Lurikeen in Kildare
- and Lurigadaun in Tipperary. Although he works for the
- Faeries, the Leprechaun is not of the same species. He is
- small, has dark skin and wears strange clothes. His nature
- has something of the manic-depressive about it: first he
- is quite happy, whistling merrily as he nails a sole on to a
- shoe; a few minutes later, he is sullen and morose, drunk
- on his home-made heather ale. The Leprechaun's two great
- loves are tobacco and whiskey, and he is a first-rate con-man,
- impossible to out-fox. No one, no matter how clever, has ever
- managed to cheat him out of his hidden pot of gold or his
- magic shilling. At the last minute he always thinks of some
- way to divert his captor's attention and vanishes in the
- twinkling of an eye.
- [ A Field Guide to the Little People
- by Nancy Arrowsmith & George Moorse ]
- Once in a great while, an evil master wizard or priest will
- manage through use of great magics to extend his or her life
- far beyond the normal span of a human. The usual effect of
- this is to transform the human, over time, into an undead of
- great magical power. A Lich hates life in any form; even a
- touch from one of these creatures will cause a numbing cold
- in the victim. They all possess the capability to use magic.
- Strange creatures formed from energy rather than matter,
- lights are given to self-destructive behavior when battling
- foes.
- Lizards, snakes and the burrowing amphisbaenids make up the
- order Squamata, meaning the scaly ones. The elongate, slim,
- long-tailed bodies of lizards have become modified to enable
- them to live in a wide range of habitats. Lizards can be
- expert burrowers, runners, swimmers and climbers, and a few
- can manage crude, short-distance gliding on rib-supported
- "wings". Most are carnivores, feeding on invertebrate and
- small vertebrate prey, but others feed on vegetation.
- [ Macmillan Illustrated Animal Encyclopedia ]
- Loki, or Lopt, is described in Snorri's _Edda_ as being
- "pleasing and handsome in appearance, evil in character, and
- very capricious in behaviour". He is the son of the giant
- Farbauti and of Laufey.
- Loki is the Norse god of cunning, evil, thieves, and fire.
- He hated the other gods and wanted to ruin them and overthrow
- the universe. He committed many murders. As a thief, he
- stole Freyja's necklace, Thor's belt and gauntlets of power,
- and the apples of youth. Able to shapechange at will, he is
- said to have impersonated at various times a mare, flea, fly,
- falcon, seal, and an old crone. As a mare he gave birth to
- Odin's horse Sleipnir. He also allegedly sired the serpent
- Midgard, the mistress of the netherworld, Hel, and the wolf
- Fenrir, who will devour the sun at Ragnarok.
- Lord Carnarvon was a personality who could have been produced
- nowhere but in England, a mixture of sportsman and collector,
- gentleman and world traveler, a realist in action and a
- romantic in feeling. ... In 1903 he went for the first time
- to Egypt in search of a mild climate and while there visited
- the excavation sites of several archaeological expeditions.
- ... In 1906 he began his own excavations.
- [ Gods, Graves, and Scholars, by C. W. Ceram ]
- Lord Sato was the family head of the Taro Clan, and a mighty
- daimyo. He is a loyal servant of the Emperor, and will do
- everything in his power to further the imperial cause.
- Yet first was the world in the southern region, which was
- named Muspell; it is light and hot; that region is glowing
- and burning, and impassable to such as are outlanders and
- have not their holdings there. He who sits there at the
- land's-end, to defend the land, is called Surtr; he brandishes
- a flaming sword, and at the end of the world he shall go forth
- and harry, and overcome all the gods, and burn all the
- world with fire.
- [ The Prose Edda, by Snorri Sturluson ]
- Lugh, or Lug, was the sun god of the Irish Celts. One of his
- weapons was a rod-sling which worshippers sometimes saw in
- the sky as a rainbow. As a tribal god, he was particularly
- skilled in the use of his massive, invincible spear, which
- fought on its own accord. One of his epithets is _lamfhada_
- (of the long arm). He was a young and apparently more
- attractive deity than Dagda, the father of the gods. Being
- able to shapeshift, his name translates as lynx.
- These dungeon scavengers are very adept at blending into the
- surrounding walls and ceilings of the dungeon due to the
- stone-like coloring of their skin.
- In 1573, the Parliament of Dole published a decree, permitting
- the inhabitants of the Franche-Comte to pursue and kill a
- were-wolf or loup-garou, which infested that province,
- "notwithstanding the existing laws concerning the chase."
- The people were empowered to "assemble with javelins,
- halberds, pikes, arquebuses and clubs, to hunt and pursue the
- said were-wolf in all places where they could find it, and to
- take, burn, and kill it, without incurring any fine or other
- penalty." The hunt seems to have been successful, if we may
- judge from the fact that the same tribunal in the following
- year condemned to be burned a man named Giles Garnier, who
- ran on all fours in the forest and fields and devoured little
- children, "even on Friday." The poor lycanthrope, it appears,
- had as slight respect for ecclesiastical feasts as the French
- pig, which was not restrained by any feeling of piety from
- eating infants on a fast day.
- [ The History of Vampires, by Dudley Wright ]
- This powerful mirror was created by Merlin, the druid, in ages
- past, when trees sang and rocks danced. It protects all who
- carry it from magic missiles, and gives them ESP.
- It is rumoured that these strange creatures can be harmed by
- domesticated canines only.
- Normally called Manannan, Ler's son was the patron of
- merchants and sailors. Manannan had a sword which never
- failed to slay, a boat which propelled itself wherever its
- owner wished, a horse which was swifter than the wind, and
- magic armour which no sword could pierce. He later became
- god of the sea, beneath which he lived in Tir na nOc, the
- underworld.
- The gnats of the dungeon, these swarming monsters are rarely
- seen alone.
- First insisting on recognition as supreme commander, Marduk
- defeated the Dragon, cut her body in two, and from it created
- heaven and earth, peopling the world with human beings who not
- unnaturally showed intense gratitude for their lives. The
- gods were also properly grateful, invested him with many
- titles, and eventually permitted themselves to be embodied in
- him, so that he became supreme god, plotting the whole course
- of known life from the paths of the planets to the daily
- events in the lives of men.
- [ The Immortals, by Derek and Julia Parker ]
- The marilith has a torso shaped like that of a human female,
- and the lower body of a great snake. It has multiple arms,
- and can freely attack with all of them. Since it is
- intelligent enough to use weapons, this means it can cause
- great damage.
- He strolled down the stairs, followed by a number of assassins.
- When he was directly in front of Ymor he said: "I've come for
- the tourist." ...
- "One step more and you'll leave here with fewer eyeballs than
- you came with," said the thiefmaster. "So sit down and have
- a drink, Zlorf, and let's talk about this sensibly. _I_
- thought we had an agreement. You don't rob -- I don't kill.
- Not for payment, that is," he added after a pause.
- Zlorf took the proffered beer.
- "So?" he said. "I'll kill him. Then you rob him. Is he that
- funny looking one over there?"
- "Yes."
- Zlorf stared at Twoflower, who grinned at him. He shrugged.
- He seldom wasted time wondering why people wanted other people
- dead. It was just a living.
- "Who is your client, may I ask?" said Ymor.
- Zlorf held up a hand. "Please!" he protested. "Professional
- etiquette."
- [ The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett ]
- This skeleton key was fashioned in ages past and imbued with
- a powerful magic which allows it to open any lock. When
- carried, it grants its owner warning, teleport control, and
- reduces all physical damage by half. Finally, when invoked,
- it has the ability to disarm any trap.
- There was a flutter of wings at the window. Ymor shifted his
- bulk out of the chair and crossed the room, coming back with
- a large raven. After he'd unfastened the message capsule from
- its leg it flew up to join its fellows lurking among the
- rafters. Withel regarded it without love. Ymor's ravens were
- notoriously loyal to their master, to the extent that Withel's
- one attempt to promote himself to the rank of greatest thief
- in Ankh-Morpork had cost their master's right hand man his
- left eye. But not his life, however. Ymor never grudged a
- man his ambitions.
- [ The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett ]
- Medusa, one of the three Gorgons or Graeae, is the only one
- of her sisters to have assumed mortal form and inhabited the
- dungeon world.
-
- When Perseus was grown up Polydectes sent him to attempt the
- conquest of Medusa, a terrible monster who had laid waste the
- country. She was once a beautiful maiden whose hair was her
- chief glory, but as she dared to vie in beauty with Minerva,
- the goddess deprived her of her charms and changed her
- beautiful ringlets into hissing serpents. She became a cruel
- monster of so frightful an aspect that no living thing could
- behold her without being turned into stone. All around the
- cavern where she dwelt might be seen the stony figures of men
- and animals which had chanced to catch a glimpse of her and
- had been petrified with the sight. Perseus, favoured by
- Minerva and Mercury, the former of whom lent him her shield
- and the latter his winged shoes, approached Medusa while she
- slept and taking care not to look directly at her, but guided
- by her image reflected in the bright shield which he bore, he
- cut off her head and gave it to Minerva, who fixed it in the
- middle of her Aegis.
- [ Bulfinch's Mythology, by Thomas Bulfinch ]
- The ancestors of the modern day chameleon, these creatures can
- assume the form of anything in their surroundings. They may
- assume the shape of objects or dungeon features. Unlike the
- chameleon though, which assumes the shape of another creature
- and goes in hunt of food, the mimic waits patiently for its
- meals to come in search of it.
- This creature has a humanoid body, tentacles around its
- covered mouth, and three long fingers on each hand. Mind
- flayers are telepathic, and love to devour intelligent beings,
- especially humans. If they hit their victim with a tentacle,
- the mind flayer will slowly drain it of all intelligence,
- eventually killing its victim.
- The Minotaur was a monster, half bull, half human, the
- offspring of Minos' wife Pasiphae and a wonderfully beautiful
- bull. ... When the Minotaur was born Minos did not kill him.
- He had Daedalus, a great architect and inventor, construct a
- place of confinement for him from which escape was impossible.
- Daedalus built the Labyrinth, famous throughout the world.
- Once inside, one would go endlessly along its twisting paths
- without ever finding the exit.
- [ Mythology, by Edith Hamilton ]
- Originating in India (Mitra), Mithra is a god of light who
- was translated into the attendant of the god Ahura Mazda in
- the light religion of Persia; from this he was adopted as
- the Roman deity Mithras. He is not generally regarded as a
- sky god but a personification of the fertilizing power of
- warm, light air. According to the _Avesta_, he possesses
- 10,000 eyes and ears and rides in a chariot drawn by white
- horses. Mithra, according to Zarathustra, is concerned with
- the endless battle between light and dark forces: he
- represents truth. He is responsible for the keeping of oaths
- and contracts. He is attributed with the creation of both
- plants and animals. His chief adversary is Ahriman, the
- power of darkness.
- [ The Encyclopaedia of Myths and Legends of All
- Nations, by Herbert Spencer Robinson and
- Knox Wilson ]
- _Mithril_! All folk desired it. It could be beaten like
- copper, and polished like glass; and the Dwarves could make
- of it a metal, light and yet harder than tempered steel.
- Its beauty was like to that of common silver, but the beauty
- of _mithril_ did not tarnish or grow dim.
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- This helm of brilliance performs all of the normal functions
- of a helm of brilliance, but also has the ability to protect
- anyone who carries it from fire. When invoked, it boosts
- the energy of the invoker, allowing them to cast more spells.
- Forged by the dwarves Eitri and Brokk, in response to Loki's
- challenge, Mjollnir is an indestructible war hammer. It has
- two magical properties: when thrown it always returned to
- Thor's hand; and it could be made to shrink in size until it
- could fit inside Thor's shirt. Its only flaw is that it has
- a short handle. The other gods judged Mjollnir the winner of
- the contest because, of all the treasures created, it alone had
- the power to protect them from the giants. As the legends
- surrounding Mjollnir grew, it began to take on the quality of
- "vigja", or consecration. Thor used it to consecrate births,
- weddings, and even to raise his goats from the dead. In the
- Norse mythologies Mjollnir is considered to represent Thor's
- governance over the entire cycle of life - fertility, birth,
- destruction, and resurrection.
- Mold, multicellular organism of the division Fungi, typified
- by plant bodies composed of a network of cottony filaments.
- The colors of molds are due to spores borne on the filaments.
- Most molds are saprophytes. Some species (e.g., penicillium)
- are used in making cheese and antibiotics.
- [ The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia ]
- And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying,
- Again, thou shalt say to the children of Israel, Whosoever
- he be of the children of Israel, or of the strangers that
- sojourn in Israel, that giveth any of his seed unto Molech;
- he shall surely be put to death: the people of the land shall
- stone him with stones.
- And I will set my face against that man, and will cut him off
- from among his people; because he hath given of his seed unto
- Molech, to defile my sanctuary, and to profane my holy name.
- And if the people of the land do any ways hide their eyes
- from the man, when he giveth of his seed unto Molech, and kill
- him not:
- Then I will set my face against that man, and against his
- family, and will cut him off, and all that go a whoring after
- him, to commit whoredom with Molech, from among their people.
- [ Leviticus 20:1-5 ]
- ... the Mumak of Harad was indeed a beast of vast bulk, and
- the like of him does not walk now in Middle-Earth; his kin
- that live still in latter days are but memories of his girth
- and majesty. On he came, ... his great legs like trees,
- enormous sail-like ears spread out, long snout upraised like
- a huge serpent about to strike, his small red eyes raging.
- His upturned hornlike tusks ... dripped with blood.
- [ The Two Towers, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- But for an account of the manner in which the body was
- bandaged, and a list of the unguents and other materials
- employed in the process, and the words of power which were
- spoken as each bandage was laid in its place, we must have
- recourse to a very interesting papyrus which has been edited
- and translated by M. Maspero under the title of Le Rituel de
- l'Embaumement. ...
- Everything that could be done to preserve the body was now
- done, and every member of it was, by means of the words of
- power which changed perishable substances into imperishable,
- protected to all eternity; when the final covering of purple
- or white linen had been fastened upon it, the body was ready
- for the tomb.
- [ Egyptian Magic, by E.A. Wallis Budge ]
- He held a white cloth -- it was a serviette he had brought
- with him -- over the lower part of his face, so that his
- mouth and jaws were completely hidden, and that was the
- reason for his muffled voice. But it was not that which
- startled Mrs. Hall. It was the fact that all his forehead
- above his blue glasses was covered by a white bandage, and
- that another covered his ears, leaving not a scrap of his
- face exposed excepting only his pink, peaked nose. It was
- bright, pink, and shiny just as it had been at first. He
- wore a dark-brown velvet jacket with a high, black, linen-
- lined collar turned up about his neck. The thick black
- hair, escaping as it could below and between the cross
- bandages, project in curious tails and horns, giving him
- the strangest appearance conceivable.
- [ The Invisible Man, by H.G. Wells ]
- The naga is a mystical creature with the body of a snake and
- the head of a man or woman. They will fiercely protect the
- territory they consider their own. Some nagas can be forced
- to serve as guardians by a spellcaster of great power.
- A Japanese pole-arm, fitted with a curved single-edged blade.
- The blades ranged in length from two to four feet, mounted on
- shafts about four to five feet long. The naginata were cut
- with a series of short grooves near to the tang, above which
- the back edge was thinned, but not sharpened, so that the
- greater part of the blade was a flattened diamond shape in
- section. Seen in profile, the curve is slight or non-
- existent near the tang, becoming more pronounced towards the
- point.
-
- "With his naginata he killed five, but with the sixth it
- snapped asunder in the midst and, flinging it away, he drew
- his sword, wielding it in the zigzag style, the interlacing,
- cross, reversed dragonfly, waterwheel, and eight-sides-at-
- once styles of fencing and cutting down eight men; but as he
- brought down the ninth with a mighty blow on the helmet, the
- blade snapped at the hilt."
- [Story of Tsutsui no Jomio Meishu from Tales of Heike]
- Not only do these demons do physical damage with their claws
- and bite, but they are capable of using magic as well.
- Nalzok is Moloch's cunning and unfailingly loyal battle
- lieutenant, to whom he trusts the command of warfare when he
- does not wish to exercise it himself. Nalzok is a major
- demon, known to command the undead. He is hungry for power,
- and secretly covets Moloch's position. Moloch doesn't trust
- him, but, trusting his own power enough, chooses to allow
- Nalzok his position because he is useful.
- 1. Valley between Duesseldorf and Elberfeld in Germany,
- where an ancient skull of a prehistoric ancestor to modern
- man was found. 2. Human(oid) of the race mentioned above.
- (kinds of) small animal, like a lizard, which spends most of
- its time in the water.
- [ Oxford's Student's Dictionary of Current English ]
-
- "Fillet of a fenny snake,
- In the cauldron boil and bake;
- Eye of newt and toe of frog,
- Wool of bat and tongue of dog,
- Adder's fork and blind-worm's sting,
- Lizard's leg and howlet's wing,
- For a charm of powerful trouble,
- Like a hell-broth boil and bubble."
- [ Macbeth, by William Shakespeare ]
- A Japanese broadsword.
- The Norns were the three Norse Fates, or the goddesses of fate.
- Female giants, they brought the wonderful Golden Age to an end.
- They cast lots over the cradle of every child that was born,
- and placed gifts in the cradle. Their names were Urda,
- Verdandi, and Skuld, representing the past, the present, and
- the future. Urda and Verdandi were kindly disposed, but Skuld
- was cruel and savage. Their tasks were to sew the web of
- fate, to water the sacred ash, Yggdrasil, and to keep it in
- good condition by placing fresh earth around it daily. In her
- fury, Skuld often spoiled the work of her sisters by tearing
- the web to shreds.
- [ The Encyclopedia of Myths and Legends of All
- Nations by Herbert Spencer Robinson and Knox
- Wilson ]
- A Japanese flail.
- A female creature from Roman and Greek mythology, the nymph
- occupied rivers, forests, ponds, etc. A nymph's beauty is
- beyond words: an ever-young woman with sleek figure and
- long, thick hair, radiant skin and perfect teeth, full lips
- and gentle eyes. A nymph's scent is delightful, and her
- long robe glows, hemmed with golden threads and embroidered
- with rainbow hues of unearthly magnificence. A nymph's
- demeanour is graceful and charming, her mind quick and witty.
-
- "Theseus felt her voice pulling him down into fathoms of
- sleep. The song was the skeleton of his dream, and the dream
- was full of terror. Demon girls were after him, and a bull-
- man was goring him. Everywhere there was blood. There was
- pain. There was fear. But his head was in the nymph's lap
- and her musk was about him, her voice weaving the dream. He
- knew then that she had been sent to tell him of something
- dreadful that was to happen to him later. Her song was a
- warning. But she had brought him a new kind of joy, one that
- made him see everything differently. The boy, who was to
- become a hero, suddenly knew then what most heroes learn
- later -- and some too late -- that joy blots suffering and
- that the road to nymphs is beset by monsters."
- [ The Minotaur by Bernard Evslin ]
- Also called Sigtyr (god of Victory), Val-father (father of
- the slain), One-Eyed, Hanga-god (god of the hanged), Farma-
- god (god of cargoes), Hapta-god (god of prisoners), and
- Othin. He is the prime god of the Norsemen: god of war and
- victory, wisdom and prophecy, poetry, the dead, air and wind,
- hospitality, and magic.
- As the god of war and victory, Odin is ruler of the Valkyries,
- warrior-maidens who lived in the halls of Valhalla in Asgard,
- the hall of dead heroes where he held his court.
- These chosen ones will defend the realm of the gods against
- the Frost Giants on the final day of reckoning, Ragnarok.
- As god of the wind, Odin rides through the air on his eight-
- footed horse, Sleipnir, wielding Gungner, his spear, normally
- accompanied by his ravens, Hugin and Munin, who he would also
- use as his spies.
- As a god of hospitality, he enjoys visiting the earth in
- disguise to see how people were behaving and to see how they
- would treat him, not knowing who he was.
- Odin is usually represented as a one-eyed wise old man with a
- long white beard and a wide-brimmed hat (he gave one of his
- eyes to Mimir, the guardian of the well of wisdom in Hel, in
- exchange for a draught of knowledge).
- Anyone who has met a gluttonous, nude, angry ogre, will not
- easily forget this encounter -- if he survives it at all.
- Both male and female ogres can easily grow as tall as three
- metres. Build and facial expressions would remind one of a
- Neanderthal. Its small, pointy, keen teeth are striking.
- Since ogres avoid direct sunlight, their ragged, unfurry
- skin is as white as a sheet. They enjoy coating their body
- with lard and usually wear nothing but a loin-cloth. An elf
- would smell its rancid stench at ten metres distance.
- Ogres are solitary creatures: very rarely one may encounter
- a female with two or three young. They are the only real
- carnivores among the humanoids, and its favourite meal is --
- not surprisingly -- human flesh. They sometimes ally with
- orcs or goblins, but only when they anticipate a good meaty
- meal.
- [ het Boek van de Regels; Het Oog des Meesters ]
- But at the end of the Third Age a troll-race not before seen
- appeared in southern Mirkwood and in the mountain borders of
- Mordor. Olog-hai they were called in the Black Speech. That
- Sauron bred them none doubted, though from what stock was not
- known. Some held that they were not Trolls but giant Orcs;
- but the Olog-hai were in fashion of body and mind quite unlike
- even the largest of Orc-kind, whom they far surpassed in size
- and power. Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will
- of their master: a fell race, strong, agile, fierce and
- cunning, but harder than stone. Unlike the older race of the
- Twilight they could endure the Sun.... They spoke little,
- and the only tongue they knew was the Black Speech of Barad-dur.
- [ The Return of the King, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- These giant amoeboid creatures look like nothing more than
- puddles of slime, but they both live and move, feeding on
- metal or wood as well as the occasional dungeon explorer to
- supplement their diet.
- Delphi under towering Parnassus, where Apollo's oracle was,
- plays an important part in mythology. Castalia was its
- sacred spring; Cephissus its river. It was held to be the
- center of the world, so many pilgrims came to it, from
- foreign countries as well as Greece. No other shrine rivaled
- it. The answers to the questions asked by the anxious
- seekers for Truth were delivered by a priestess who went into
- a trance before she spoke.
- [ Mythology, by Edith Hamilton ]
- This Orb is a crystal ball of exceptional powers. When
- carried, it grants ESP, limits damage done by spells, and
- protects the carrier from magic missiles. When invoked it
- allows the carrier to become invisible.
- Some say that Odin himself created this ancient crystal ball,
- although others argue that Loki created it and forged Odin's
- signature on the bottom. In any case, it is a powerful
- artifact. Anyone who carries it is granted the gift of
- warning, and damage, both spell and physical, is partially
- absorbed by the orb itself. When invoked it has the power
- to teleport the invoker between levels.
- The Great Goblin gave a truly awful howl of rage when he
- looked at it, and all his soldiers gnashed their teeth,
- clashed their shields, and stamped. They knew the sword at
- once. It had killed hundreds of goblins in its time, when
- the fair elves of Gondolin hunted them in the hills or did
- battle before their walls. They had called it Orcrist,
- Goblin-cleaver, but the goblins called it simply Biter.
- They hated it and hated worse any one that carried it.
- [ The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- Orcus, Prince of the Undead, has a ram's head and a poison
- stinger. He is most feared, though, for his powerful magic
- abilities. His wand causes death to those he chooses.
- Orcs, bipeds with a humanoid appearance, are related to the
- goblins, but much bigger and more dangerous. The average orc
- is only moderately intelligent, has broad, muscled shoulders,
- a short neck, a sloping forehead and a thick, dark fur.
- Their lower eye-teeth are pointing forward, like a boar's.
- Female orcs are more lightly built and bare-chested. Not
- needing any clothing, they do like to dress in variegated
- apparels. Suspicious by nature, orcs live in tribes or
- hordes. They tend to live underground as well as above
- ground (but they dislike sunlight). Orcs can use all weapons,
- tools and armours that are used by men. Since they don't have
- the talent to fashion these themselves, they are constantly
- hunting for them. There is nothing a horde of orcs cannot
- use.
- [ het Boek van de Regels; Het Oog des Meesters ]
- The osaku is a small tool for picking locks.
- Owlbears are probably the crossbreed creation of a demented
- wizard; given the lethal nature of this creation, it is quite
- likely the wizard who created them is no longer alive. As
- the name might already suggest, owlbears are a cross between
- a giant owl and a bear. They are covered with fur and
- feathers.
- The elves of long ago created this powerful crystal ball.
- When carried, it grants ESP, regeneration, and reduces all
- damage caused by spells to one-half of what it would have
- normally been. When invoked, it tames creatures in its
- vicinity.
- Ye Piercer doth look like unto a stalactyte, and hangeth
- from the roofs of caves and caverns. Unto the height of a
- man, and thicker than a man's thigh do they grow, and in
- groups do they hang. If a creature doth pass beneath them,
- they will by its heat and noise perceive it, and fall upon
- it to kill and devour it, though in any other way they move
- but exceeding slow.
- [ the Bestiary of Xygag ]
- Pit fiends are among the more powerful of devils, capable of
- attacking twice with weapons as well as grabbing and crushing
- the life out of those unwary enough to enter their
- domains.
- This is an ancient artifact made of an unknown material. It
- is rectangular in shape, very thin, and inscribed with
- unreadable ancient runes. When carried, it grants the one
- who carries it ESP, and reduces all physical damage done to
- the carrier by half. It also protects from magic missile
- attacks. Finally, its power is such that when invoked, it
- can charge other objects.
- Poseido(o)n, lord of the seas and father of rivers and
- fountains, was the son of Chronos and Rhea, brother of Zeus,
- Hades, Hera, Hestia and Demeter. His rank of ruler of the
- waves he received by lot at the Council Meeting of the Gods,
- at which Zeus took the upper world for himself and gave
- dominion over the lower world to Hades.
- Poseidon is associated in many ways with horses and thus is
- the god of horses. He taught men how to ride and manage the
- animal he invented and is looked upon as the originator and
- guardian deity of horse races.
- His symbol is the familiar trident or three-pronged spear
- with which he can split rocks, cause or quell storms, and
- shake the earth, a power which makes him the god of
- earthquakes as well. Physically, he is shown as a strong and
- powerful ruler, every inch a king.
- [ The Encyclopedia of Myths and Legends of All
- Nations, by Herbert Robinson and Knox Wilson ]
- Known under various names (Nu, Neph, Cenubis, Amen-Kneph,
- Khery-Bakef), Ptah is the creator god and god of craftsmen.
- He is usually depicted as wearing a closely fitting robe
- with only his hands free. His most distinctive features are
- the invariable skull-cap exposing only his face and ears,
- and the _was_ or rod of domination which he holds,
- consisting of a staff surmounted by the _ankh_ symbol of
- life. He is otherwise symbolized by his sacred animal, the
- bull.
- A gargantuan version of the harmless rain-worm, the purple
- worm poses a huge threat to the ordinary adventurer. It is
- known to swallow whole and digest its victims within only a
- few minutes. These worms are always on guard, sensitive
- to the most minute vibrations in the earth, but may also
- be awakened by a remote shriek.
- The woodlands and other regions are inhabited by multitudes
- of four-legged creatures which cannot be simply classified.
- They might not have fiery breath or deadly stings, but
- adventurers have nevertheless met their end numerous times
- due to the claws, hooves, or bites of such animals.
- These creatures are not native to this universe; they seem
- to have strangely derived powers, and unknown motives.
- Quasits are small, evil creatures, related to imps. Their
- talons release a very toxic poison when used in an attack.
- One of the principal Aztec-Toltec gods was the great and wise
- Quetzalcoatl, who was called Kukumatz in Guatemala, and
- Kukulcan in Yucatan. His image, the plumed serpent, is found
- on both the oldest and the most recent Indian edifices. ...
- The legend tells how the Indian deity Quetzalcoatl came from
- the "Land of the Rising Sun". He wore a long white robe and
- had a beard; he taught the people crafts and customs and laid
- down wise laws. He created an empire in which the ears of
- corn were as long as men are tall, and caused bolls of colored
- cotton to grow on cotton plants. But for some reason or other
- he had to leave his empire. ... But all the legends of
- Quetzalcoatl unanimously agree that he promised to come again.
- [ Gods, Graves, and Scholars, by C. W. Ceram ]
- The god of thunder.
- Rats are long-tailed rodents. They are aggressive,
- omnivorous, and adaptable, often carrying diseases.
- A rock mole is a member of the rodent family. They get their
- name from their ability to tunnel through rock in the same
- fashion that a mole tunnels through earth. They are known to
- eat anything they come across in their diggings, although it
- is still unknown how they convert some of these things into
- something of nutritional value.
- I understand the business, I hear it: to have an open ear, a
- quick eye, and a nimble hand, is necessary for a cut-purse; a
- good nose is requisite also, to smell out work for the other
- senses. I see this is the time that the unjust man doth
- thrive. <...> The prince himself is about a piece of iniquity,
- stealing away from his father with his clog at his heels: if
- I thought it were a piece of honesty to acquaint the king
- withal, I would not do't: I hold it the more knavery to
- conceal it; and therein am I constant to my profession.
- [ Autolycus the Rogue, from The Winter's Tale by
- William Shakespeare ]
- The rothe (pronounced roth-AY) is a musk ox-like creature with
- an aversion to light. It prefers to live underground near
- lichen and moss.
- These strange creatures live on a diet of metals. They can
- turn a suit of armour into so much useless rusted scrap in no
- time at all.
- Japanese rice wine.
- For hundreds of years, many people believed that salamanders
- were magical. In England in the Middle Ages, people thought
- that fire created salamanders. When they set fire to damp
- logs, dozens of the slimy creatures scurried out. The word
- salamander, in fact, comes from a Greek word meaning "fire
- animal".
- [ Salamanders, by Cherie Winner ]
- An ape-like humanoid native to densely forested mountains,
- the sasquatch is also known as "bigfoot". Normally benign
- and rarely seen, this creature is reputed to be a relative
- of the ferocious yeti.
- This quarterstaff was created aeons ago in some unknown cave,
- and has been passed down from generation to generation of
- cavemen. It is a very mighty quarterstaff indeed, and in
- addition will protect anyone who carries it from magic
- missile attacks. When invoked, it causes conflict in the
- area around it.
- A sub-species of the spider (_Scorpionidae_), the scorpion
- distinguishes itself from them by having a lower body that
- ends in a long, jointed tail tapering to a poisonous stinger.
- They have eight legs and pincers.
- [ Van Dale's Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal ]
- Shades are undead creatures. They differ from zombies in
- that a zombie is an undead animation of a corpse, while a
- shade is an undead creature magically created by the use
- of black magic.
- Making his quarters in the Caves of the Ancestors, Shaman
- Karnov unceasingly tries to shield his neanderthal people
- from Tiamat's minions' harassments.
- The Chinese god of Mountains and Seas, also the name of an
- old book (also Shan Hai Tjing), the book of mountains and
- seas - which deals with the monster Kung Kung trying to
- seize power from Yao, the fourth emperor.
- [ Spectrum Atlas van de Mythologie ]
- A Japanese stabbing knife.
- A skeleton is a magically animated undead creature. Unlike
- shades, only a humanoid creature can be used to create a
- skeleton. No one knows why this is true, but it has become
- an accepted fact amongst the practitioners of the black arts.
- "That dog belonged to a settler who tried to build his cabin
- on the bank of the river a few miles south of the fort,"
- grunted Conan. ... "We took him to the fort and dressed his
- wounds, but after he recovered he took to the woods and turned
- wild. -- What now, Slasher, are you hunting the men who
- killed your master?" ... "Let him come," muttered Conan.
- "He can smell the devils before we can see them." ...
- Slasher cleared the timbers with a bound and leaped into the
- bushes. They were violently shaken and then the dog slunk
- back to Balthus' side, his jaws crimson. ... "He was a man,"
- said Conan. "I drink to his shade, and to the shade of the
- dog, who knew no fear." He quaffed part of the wine, then
- emptied the rest upon the floor, with a curious heathen
- gesture, and smashed the goblet. "The heads of ten Picts
- shall pay for this, and seven heads for the dog, who was a
- better warrior than many a man."
- [ Conan The Warrior, by Robert E Howard ]
- Slime mold or slime fungus, organism usually classified with
- the fungi, but showing equal affinity to the protozoa. Slime
- molds have complex life cycles with an animal-like motile
- phase, in which feeding and growth occur, and a plant-like
- immotile reproductive phase. The motile phase, commonly
- found under rotting logs and damp leaves, consists of either
- solitary amoebalike cells or a brightly colored multinucleate
- mass of protoplasm called a plasmodium, which creeps about
- and feeds by amoeboid movement.
- [ The Concise Columbia Encyclopedia ]
- Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which the Lord God
- had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of
- every tree of the garden? And the woman said unto the serpent, We may eat of
- the fruit of the trees of the garden: but of the fruit of the tree which is
- in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither
- shall ye touch it, lest ye die. And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall
- not surely die: for God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your
- eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil. And
- when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant
- to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit
- thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat.
-
- And the Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast done? And
- the woman said, The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat. And the Lord God said
- unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cat-
- tle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and
- dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy life: And I will put enmity between
- thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy
- head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.
- [ Genesis 3:1-6,13-15 ]
- Ah, never shall I forget the cry,
- or the shriek that shrieked he,
- As I gnashed my teeth, and from my sheath
- I drew my Snickersnee!
- --Koko, Lord high executioner of Titipu
- [ The Mikado, by Sir W.S. Gilbert ]
- The soldiers of Yendor are well-trained in the art of war,
- many trained by the Wizard himself. Some say the soldiers
- are explorers who were unfortunate enough to be captured,
- and put under the Wizard's spell. Those who have survived
- encounters with soldiers say they travel together in platoons,
- and are fierce fighters. Because of the load of their combat
- gear, however, one can usually run away from them, and doing
- so is considered a wise thing.
- The elven god of hunting and wilderness skills. His
- followers honor him by excelling at archery.
- Eight legged creature capable of spinning webs to trap pray.
- This staff is considered sacred to all healers, as it truly
- holds the powers of life and death. When wielded, it
- protects its user from all life draining attacks, and
- additionally gives the wielder the power of regeneration.
- When invoked it performs healing magic.
- Then it appeared in Paris at just about the time that Paris
- was full of Carlists who had to get out of Spain. One of
- them must have brought it with him, but, whoever he was, it's
- likely he knew nothing about its real value. It had been --
- no doubt as a precaution during the Carlist trouble in Spain
- -- painted or enameled over to look like nothing more than a
- fairly interesting black statuette. And in that disguise,
- sir, it was, you might say, kicked around Paris for seventy
- years by private owners and dealers too stupid to see what
- it was under the skin.
- [ The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett ]
- There was the usual dim grey light of the forest-day about
- him when he came to his senses. The spider lay dead beside
- him, and his sword-blade was stained black. Somehow the
- killing of the giant spider, all alone and by himself in the
- dark without the help of the wizard or the dwarves or of
- anyone else, made a great difference to Mr. Baggins. He felt
- a different person, and much fiercer and bolder in spite of
- an empty stomach, as he wiped his sword on the grass and put
- it back into its sheath.
- "I will give you a name," he said to it, "and I shall call
- you Sting."
- [ The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- The Shinto chthonic and weather god and brother of the sun
- goddess Amaterasu, he was born from the nose of the
- primordial creator god Izanagi and represents the physical,
- material world. He has been expelled from heaven and taken
- up residence on earth.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- Samurai plate armor of the Yamato period (AD 300 - 710).
- The tengu was the most troublesome creature of Japanese
- legend. Part bird and part man, with red beak for a nose
- and flashing eyes, the tengu was notorious for stirring up
- feuds and prolonging enmity between families. Indeed, the
- belligerent tengus were supposed to have been man's first
- instructors in the use of arms.
- [Mythical Beasts by Deirdre Headon (The Leprechaun Library)]
- The Egyptian god of the moon and wisdom, Thoth is the patron
- deity of scribes and of knowledge, including scientific,
- medical and mathematical writing, and is said to have given
- mankind the art of hieroglyphic writing. He is important as
- a mediator and counsellor amongst the gods and is the scribe
- of the Heliopolis Ennead pantheon. According to mythology,
- he was born from the head of the god Seth. He may be
- depicted in human form with the head of an ibis, wholly as an
- ibis, or as a seated baboon sometimes with its torso covered
- in feathers. His attributes include a crown which consists
- of a crescent moon surmounted by a moon disc.
- Thoth is generally regarded as a benign deity. He is also
- scrupulously fair and is responsible not only for entering
- in the record the souls who pass to afterlife, but of
- adjudicating in the Hall of the Two Truths. The Pyramid
- Texts reveal a violent side of his nature by which he
- decapitates the adversaries of truth and wrenches out their
- hearts.
- [ Encyclopedia of Gods, by Michael Jordan ]
- Men say that he [Thutothmes] has opposed Thoth-Amon, who is
- master of all priests of Set, and dwells in Luxor, and that
- Thutothmes seeks hidden power [The Heart of Ahriman] to
- overthrow the Great One.
- [ Conan the Conqueror, by Robert E. Howard ]
- 1. A well-known tropical predator (_Felis tigris_): a
- feline. It has a yellowish skin with darker spots or
- stripes. 2. Figurative: _a paper tiger_, something that is
- meant to scare, but has no really scaring effect whatsoever,
- (after a statement by Mao Ze Dong, August 1946).
- [ Van Dale's Groot Woordenboek der Nederlandse Taal ]
- Gaea, mother earth, arose from the Chaos and gave birth to
- Uranus, heaven, who became her consort. Uranus hated all
- their children, because he feared they might challenge his
- own authority. Those children, the Titans, the Gigantes,
- and the Cyclops, were banished to the nether world. Their
- enraged mother eventually released the youngest titan,
- Chronos (time), and encouraged him to castrate his father and
- rule in his place. Later, he too was challenged by his own
- son, Zeus, and he and his fellow titans were ousted from
- Mount Olympus.
- [ Greek Mythology, by Richard Patrick ]
- The road from Ankh-Morpork to Chrim is high, white and
- winding, a thirty-league stretch of potholes and half-buried
- rocks that spirals around mountains and dips into cool green
- valleys of citrus trees, crosses liana-webbed gorges on
- creaking rope bridges and is generally more picturesque than
- useful.
- Picturesque. That was a new word to Rincewind the wizard
- (BMgc, Unseen University [failed]). It was one of a number
- he had picked up since leaving the charred ruins of
- Ankh-Morpork. Quaint was another one. Picturesque meant --
- he decided after careful observation of the scenery that
- inspired Twoflower to use the word -- that the landscape was
- horribly precipitous. Quaint, when used to describe the
- occasional village through which they passed, meant fever-
- ridden and tumbledown.
- Twoflower was a tourist, the first ever seen on the discworld.
- Tourist, Rincewind had decided, meant "idiot".
- [ The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett ]
- The trapper is a creature which has evolved a chameleon-like
- ability to blend into the dungeon surroundings. It captures
- its prey by remaining very still and blending into the
- surrounding dungeon features, until an unsuspecting creature
- passes by. It wraps itself around its prey and digests it.
- If you start from scratch, cooking tripe is a long-drawn-out
- affair. Fresh whole tripe calls for a minimum of 12 hours of
- cooking, some time-honored recipes demanding as much as 24.
- To prepare fresh tripe, trim if necessary. Wash it thoroughly,
- soaking overnight, and blanch, for 1/2 hour in salted water.
- Wash well again, drain and cut for cooking. When cooked, the
- texture of tripe should be like that of soft gristle. More
- often, alas, because the heat has not been kept low enough,
- it has the consistency of wet shoe leather.
- [ Joy of Cooking, by I Rombauer and M Becker ]
- The troll shambled closer. He was perhaps eight feet tall,
- perhaps more. His forward stoop, with arms dangling past
- thick claw-footed legs to the ground, made it hard to tell.
- The hairless green skin moved upon his body. His head was a
- gash of a mouth, a yard-long nose, and two eyes which drank
- the feeble torchlight and never gave back a gleam.
- [...]
- Like a huge green spider, the troll's severed hand ran on its
- fingers. Across the mounded floor, up onto a log with one
- taloned forefinger to hook it over the bark, down again it
- scrambled, until it found the cut wrist. And there it grew
- fast. The troll's smashed head seethed and knit together.
- He clambered back on his feet and grinned at them. The
- waning faggot cast red light over his fangs.
- [ Three Hearts and Three Lions, by Poul Anderson ]
- This most ancient of swords has been passed down through the
- leadership of the Samurai legions for hundreds of years. It
- is said to grant luck to its wielder, but its main power is
- terrible to behold. It has the capability to cut in half any
- creature it is wielded against, instantly killing them.
- The tsurugi, also known as the long samurai sword, is an
- extremely sharp, two-handed blade favored by the samurai.
- It is made of hardened steel, and is manufactured using a
- special process, causing it to never rust. The tsurugi is
- rumored to be so sharp that it can occasionally cut
- opponents in half!
- "Rincewind!"
- Twoflower sprang off the bed. The wizard jumped back,
- wrenching his features into a smile.
- "My dear chap, right on time! We'll just have lunch, and
- then I'm sure you've got a wonderful programme lined up for
- this afternoon!"
- "Er --"
- "That's great!"
- Rincewind took a deep breath. "Look," he said desperately,
- "let's eat somewhere else. There's been a bit of a fight
- down below."
- "A tavern brawl? Why didn't you wake me up?"
- "Well, you see, I - _what_?"
- "I thought I made myself clear this morning, Rincewind. I
- want to see genuine Morporkian life - the slave market, the
- Whore Pits, the Temple of Small Gods, the Beggar's Guild...
- and a genuine tavern brawl." A faint note of suspicion
- entered Twoflower's voice. "You _do_ have them, don't you?
- You know, people swinging on chandeliers, swordfights over
- the table, the sort of thing Hrun the Barbarian and the
- Weasel are always getting involved in. You know --
- _excitement_."
- [ The Colour of Magic, by Terry Pratchett ]
- An evil goddess, she is able to command all forms of birds
- to do her bidding.
- Yet remains that one of the Aesir who is called Tyr:
- he is most daring, and best in stoutness of heart, and he
- has much authority over victory in battle; it is good for
- men of valor to invoke him. It is a proverb, that he is
- Tyr-valiant, who surpasses other men and does not waver.
- He is wise, so that it is also said, that he that is wisest
- is Tyr-prudent. This is one token of his daring: when the
- Aesir enticed Fenris-Wolf to take upon him the fetter Gleipnir,
- the wolf did not believe them, that they would loose him,
- until they laid Tyr's hand into his mouth as a pledge. But
- when the Aesir would not loose him, then he bit off the hand
- at the place now called 'the wolf's joint;' and Tyr is one-
- handed, and is not called a reconciler of men.
- [ The Prose Edda, by Snorri Sturluson ]
- Umber hulks are powerful subterranean predators whose
- iron-like claws allow them to burrow through solid stone in
- search of prey. They are tremendously strong; muscles bulge
- beneath their thick, scaly hides and their powerful arms and
- legs all end in great claws.
- Men have always sought the elusive unicorn, for the single twisted horn which
- projected from its forehead was thought to be a powerful talisman. It was
- said that the unicorn had simply to dip the tip of its horn in a muddy pool
- for the water to become pure. Men also believed that to drink from this horn
- was a protection against all sickness, and that if the horn was ground to a
- powder it would act as an antidote to all poisons. Less than 200 years ago in
- France, the horn of a unicorn was used in a ceremony to test the royal food
- for poison.
-
- Although only the size of a small horse, the unicorn is a very fierce beast,
- capable of killing an elephant with a single thrust from its horn. Its fleet-
- ness of foot also makes this solitary creature difficult to capture. However,
- it can be tamed and captured by a maiden. Made gentle by the sight of a vir-
- gin, the unicorn can be lured to lay its head in her lap, and in this docile
- mood, the maiden may secure it with a golden rope.
- [Mythical Beasts by Deirdre Headon (The Leprechaun Library)]
-
- Martin took a small sip of beer. "Almost ready," he said. "You hold your
- beer awfully well."
- Tlingel laughed. "A unicorn's horn is a detoxicant. Its possession is a
- universal remedy. I wait until I reach the warm glow stage, then I use my
- horn to burn off any excess and keep me right there."
- [Unicorn Variations by Roger Zelazny]
- The Valkyries were the thirteen choosers of the slain, the
- beautiful warrior-maids of Odin who rode through the air and
- over the sea. They watched the progress of the battle and
- selected the heroes who were to fall fighting. After they
- were dead, the maidens rewarded the heroes by kissing them
- and then led their souls to Valhalla, where the warriors
- lived happily in an ideal existence, drinking and eating
- without restraint and fighting over again the battles in
- which they died and in which they had won their deathless
- fame.
- [ The Encyclopaedia of Myths and Legends of All
- Nations, by Herbert Robinson and Knox
- Wilson ]
- The Oxford English Dictionary is quite unequivocal:
- _vampire_ - "a preternatural being of a malignant nature (in
- the original and usual form of the belief, a reanimated
- corpse), supposed to seek nourishment, or do harm, by sucking
- the blood of sleeping persons. ..."
- Vlad Dracula the Impaler was a 15th-Century monarch of the
- Birgau region of the Carpathian Mountains, in what is now
- Romania. In Romanian history he is best known for two things.
- One was his skilled handling of the Ottoman Turks, which kept
- them from making further inroads into Christian Europe. The
- other was the ruthless manner in which he ran his fiefdom.
- He dealt with perceived challengers to his rule by impaling
- them upright on wooden stakes. Visiting dignitaries who
- failed to doff their hats had them nailed to their head.
- Swirling clouds of pure elemental energies, the vortices are
- thought to be related to the larger elementals. Though the
- vortices do no damage when touched, they are noted for being
- able to envelop unwary travellers. The hapless fool thus
- swallowed by a vortex will soon perish from exposure to the
- element the vortex is composed of.
- The vrock is one of the weaker forms of demon. It resembles
- a cross between a human being and a vulture and does physical
- damage by biting and by using the claws on both its arms and
- feet.
- The samurai warrior traditionally wears two swords; the
- wakizashi is the shorter of the two. See also katana.
- Suddenly Aragorn leapt to his feet. "How the wind howls!"
- he cried. "It is howling with wolf-voices. The Wargs have
- come west of the Mountains!"
- "Need we wait until morning then?" said Gandalf. "It is as I
- said. The hunt is up! Even if we live to see the dawn, who
- now will wish to journey south by night with the wild wolves
- on his trail?"
- "How far is Moria?" asked Boromir.
- "There was a door south-west of Caradhras, some fifteen miles
- as the crow flies, and maybe twenty as the wolf runs,"
- answered Gandalf grimly.
- "Then let us start as soon as it is light tomorrow, if we can,"
- said Boromir. "The wolf that one hears is worse then the orc
- that one fears."
- "True!" said Aragorn, loosening his sword in its sheath. "But
- where the warg howls, there also the orc prowls."
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- When he came to himself again, for a moment he could recall
- nothing except a sense of dread. Then suddenly he knew that
- he was imprisoned, caught hopelessly; he was in a barrow. A
- Barrow-wight had taken him, and he was probably already under
- the dreadful spells of the Barrow-wights about which whispered
- tales spoke. He dared not move, but lay as he found himself:
- flat on his back upon a cold stone with his hands on his
- breast.
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- The Wizard of Balance holds office in his hidden tower, only
- reachable by magical means, where he teaches his apprentices
- the enigmatic skills of occultism. He considers himself a
- guardian of the equilibrium of the universe, and goes out of
- his way to promote stability.
- No one knows how old this mighty wizard is, or from whence he
- came. It is known that, having lived a span far greater than
- any normal man's, he grew weary of lesser mortals; and so,
- spurning all human company, he forsook the dwellings of men
- and went to live in the depths of the Earth. He took with
- him a dreadful artifact, the Book of the Dead, which is said
- to hold great power indeed. Many have sought to find the
- wizard and his treasure, but none have found him and lived to
- tell the tale. Woe be to the incautious adventurer who
- disturbs this mighty sorcerer!
- The ancestors of the modern day domestic dog, wolves are
- powerful muscular animals with bushy tails. Intelligent,
- social animals, wolves live in family groups or packs made
- up of multiple family units. These packs cooperate in hunting
- down prey.
- [The crysknife] is manufactured in two forms from teeth taken
- from dead sandworms. The two forms are "fixed" and "unfixed".
- An unfixed knife requires proximity to a human body's
- electrical field to prevent disintegration. Fixed knives
- are treated for storage. All are about 20 centimeters long.
- [ Dune, by Frank Herbert ]
- Immediately, though everything else remained as before, dim
- and dark, the shapes became terribly clear. He was able to
- see beneath their black wrappings. There were five tall
- figures: two standing on the lip of the dell, three advancing.
- In their white faces burned keen and merciless eyes; under
- their mantles were long grey robes; upon their grey hairs
- were helms of silver; in their haggard hands were swords of
- steel. Their eyes fell on him and pierced him, as they
- rushed towards him. Desperate, he drew his own sword, and
- it seemed to him that it flickered red, as if it was a
- firebrand. Two of the figures halted. The third was taller
- than the others: his hair was long and gleaming and on his
- helm was a crown. In one hand he held a long sword, and in
- the other a knife; both the knife and the hand that held it
- glowed with a pale light. He sprang forward and bore down
- on Frodo.
- [ The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien ]
- The Wumpus, by the way, is not bothered by the hazards since
- he has sucker feet and is too big for a bat to lift. If you
- try to shoot him and miss, there's also a chance that he'll
- up and move himself into another cave, though by nature the
- Wumpus is a sedentary creature.
- [ wump (6) -- "Hunt the Wumpus" ]
- They sent their friend the mosquito [xan] ahead of them to
- find out what lay ahead. "Since you are the one who sucks
- the blood of men walking along paths," they told the mosquito,
- "go and sting the men of Xibalba." The mosquito flew
- down the dark road to the Underworld. Entering the house of
- the Lords of Death, he stung the first person that he saw...
-
- The mosquito stung this man as well, and when he yelled, the
- man next to him asked, "Gathered Blood, what's wrong?" So
- he flew along the row stinging all the seated men until he
- knew the names of all twelve.
- [ Popul Vuh, as translated by Ralph Nelson ]
- A distant cousin of the earth elemental, the xorn has the
- ability to shift the cells of its body around in such a way
- that it becomes porous to inert material. This gives it the
- ability to pass through any obstacle that might be between it
- and its next meal.
- The arrow of choice of the samurai, ya are made of very
- straight bamboo, and are tipped with hardened steel.
- Yeenoghu, the demon lord of gnolls, still exists although
- all his followers have been wiped off the face of the earth.
- He casts magic projectiles at those close to him, and a mere
- gaze into his piercing eyes may hopelessly confuse the
- battle-weary adventurer.
- An ape-like humanoid native to inaccessible mountain tops,
- the yeti is also known as "the abominable snowman". Whether
- or not the title "man" is appropriate remains unknown.
- Japanese leather archery gloves. Gloves made for use while
- practicing had thumbs reinforced with horn. Those worn into
- battle had thumbs reinforced with a double layer of leather.
- The samurai is highly trained with a special type of bow,
- the yumi. Like the ya, the yumi is made of bamboo. With
- the yumi-ya, the bow and arrow, the samurai is an extremely
- accurate and deadly warrior.
- The zombi... is a soulless human corpse, still dead, but
- taken from the grave and endowed by sorcery with a
- mechanical semblance of life, -- it is a dead body which is
- made to walk and act and move as if it were alive.
- [ W. B. Seabrook ]
- The zruty are wild and gigantic beings, living in the
- wildernesses of the Tatra mountains.
-