FAIRY TALES OPERA CYCLE |
PETER HUEBNER · THE ISLAND OF HAPPINESS |
The Ancient Star Path of Our Ancestors to Cosmic Power |
The Shadow Images of Reality at the Silvery-White Gate to the Transcendence | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The
Two Manifestations of the Workers of Destiny |
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From a far distance Mani now heard a terrible rumble, as if huge rocks were rolled near. The trees around Mani and Sol began to stir. With their large, knotty roots they stepped forth from the ground and began to err about, as if they were looking for better, calmer places to live in. Even the grass and all the bushes followed their example and, leaving
the grip of the ground, ran about in chaos. The halo of the moon trembled, forming a black-white-red shivering wreath, and uttered a shrill tone as it darkened. Now the ground started to shake, and as the roar increased the rocks began to shiver under the forest that was roaming about, and they uttered grumbling noises. Mani saw three huge ugly women trotting along; clad in old rough rags
they threw three rocks, big as mountains, at each other as if they were
playing with balls. But when the rock fell down on the ground because one of the throwers did not catch it, the grass ran away to all sides, worms and bugs crept forth from the earth in panic and fled from the plunging colossus which finally crashed on the earth-covered rocks with a deafening noise and split the ground. Animals of all kinds ran about in panic looking for cover from these
primordial forces. Their eyes sitting oblique in their thickly haired skulls they hardly ever squinted at those who fled in the wildest panic, but were always directed at the immense rocks which they amused themselves with. Sometimes also the one or the other of the giantesses took one of these mountains and put it on her head, or hid it in her apron, so that the three of them threw only one or two rocks, upsetting nature in that way. Also each of the three hags had a big spindle with her, on which she
continuously spun with one hand; the three threads they tied together
into a black-white-red rope. In that manner everything around the giantesses was fastened, fettered and tightly tethered; because they even wove together the many threads that crisscrossed nature. To this purpose they used a big loom which they also carried with them. |
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© A A R E D I T I O N I N T E R N A T I O N A L 1985 |