TheBestLinks.com
TheBestLinks.com
Elric, Elric of Melniboné, Blue Öyster Cult, Chaosium, Conan the Barbarian... Print friendly version | Tell a friend
 
Navigation
Search
Toolbox

Elric of Melniboné

From TheBestLinks.com

(Redirected from Elric)

Elric of Melniboné is a fictional character created by Michael Moorcock.

Elric is an albino, introspective, haunted, and treacherous. He's a remarkably vivid iconic figure and a direct parody of Robert E. Howard's Conan, while strongly influenced by the character of Monsieur Zenith created by pulp author Anthony Skene. So, instead of a mighty thewed barbarian warrior who fights his way to a throne, he's a physically weak and sickly but highly cultured emperor who throws his throne away.

Where a conventional fantasy hero rescues fair maidens from evil villains, fights against evil wizards, and saves his home country from invaders, Elric slays his true love, is himself a wizard in league with the demon lord Arioch, and leads invaders to lay waste to Melniboné. He is an intellectual scholar, prone to self-pity and despair, who is compelled to frightful action by his own dark fate rather than through desire for riches or glory.

Elric is hereditary emperor of Melniboné, a servant of the Lords of Chaos, just like his ancestors for countless generations. Melnibonéans are normally elegant but cruel, mostly devoid of sentiment and the gentler passions: alone among them, Elric has modern sensibilities. Melnibonéans are somewhat like elves -- but more like the amoral Ska in Jack Vance's Lyonesse books than J. R. R. Tolkien's majestic peoples -- and "Elric" is a form of the Norse Ælfric which means elf ruler.

Elric is the tool of his evil, sentient sword Stormbringer, which is itself a parody of the normal sword-and-sorcery weapon. In Stormbringer, Elric finds the energy he needs, but at a terrible price – Stormbringer drains the souls of those it slays and gives part of their life force to sustain Elric. Stormbringer is willful: it is by no means Elric’s minion: "This sword here at my side… / Keeps calling me its master, but I feel like its slave" ("Black Blade" by Blue Öyster Cult).

As an embodiment of the Eternal Champion, which mainly takes the form of a champion of law, Elric of Melneiborné is torn between his ancestory and his destiny. As a result, while the saga progresses Elric’s allegiance turns from Chaos towards Law. He eventually comes to represent a balance between these forces as he develops a hatred for all gods, both of Law and Chaos, for their manipulation of mortals. At the end, Elric's hopes for a world without gods to make a misery of human lives results in his death while attempting to bring such a world into being.

Elric's saga is told over many books, which are, according to their internal chronology:

  • Elric of Melniboné (novel)
  • The Fortress of the Pearl (novel)
  • The Sailor on the Seas of Fate (collection)
  • The Weird of the White Wolf (collection)
  • The Vanishing Tower (a.k.a. The Sleeping Sorceress) (novel)
  • The Revenge of the Rose (novel)
  • The Bane of the Black Sword (collection)
  • Stormbringer (collection)

Stormbringer, the first-written volume of the sequence, also terminates it, closing Elric's angst-ridden life as well; all subsequent volumes are prequels or interjections. Most of Moorcock's twentieth-century Elric stories are gathered together in two definitive omnibus editions first published in the UK by Millennium within its The Tale of the Eternal Champion series (and later in the US by White Wolf):

  • Elric of Melniboné (1993; vt Elric: Song of the Black Sword 1997 US);
  • Stormbringer (1993; vt Elric: The Stealer of Souls 1998 US).

White Wolf published an anthology of new Elric stories, Michael Moorcock’s Elric: Tales of the White Wolf, ed. Edward E. Kramer, in the US in 1994, and an anthology of new Eternal Champion stories, Pawns of Chaos: Tales of the Eternal Champion, ed. Edward E. Kramer, which includes four new Elric stories, in the US in 1996.

Apart from contributing an Elric story to the first of these two anthologies, Moorcock himself has begun a new Elric trilogy with The Dreamthief's Daughter (2001). The further volumes will be The Skrayling Tree (previously announced as [The] Silverskin) and Swordsman of Mirenburg (previously announced as Mournblade).

Elric and Stormbringer have been detailed as a role-playing game by the publisher Chaosium and their licensees. Hawkmoon has also been so treated, as has Corum.

Stormbringer (along with creatures and artifacts from many other sources) appears as an artifact in the roguelike computer game Nethack.



ja:エルリック

Related links


Top visited 0 of 0 links

[no links posted yet]

>> place link >>

Discussion

Last posted 0 of 0 messages

[no messages posted yet]

>> post message >>

Watch

You can add this article to your own "watchlist" and receive e-mail notification about all changes in this page.
 
   
Innovate it
This page was last modified 05:12, 9 Sep 2004.
  Content is available under GNU Free Documentation License 1.2.
Powered by MediaWiki