Saturday, June 9, 2007

The Closing of the Floræcarian Worlds
by Jason Campbell

A GATHERING DARKNESS:
A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE CLOSING OF THE FLORÆCARIAN WORLDS

Fourth Edition

PREFACE

The present work draws upon the accounts of my former treatise A Macrohistory of the Floræcarian Worlds (5 vols.), supplemented by my travels post terminus to those worlds, further reading and reflection on the consummation of their histories, and audience with the closing Master Builders. The former volumes grew out of a passion for making known the beautiful and courageous work of the Master Builders and their Guild that our Communion has nearly forgotten in these days of introspection and self-doubt. This passion became a desire to see these accounts laid down according to the best traditions of scholarship. In these latter years of my career, now that the pride of youth and the pleasure of academic accomplishment has given way to seeking a lasting and worthy legacy, I return to this, my life’s work and ask of it critical questions that I believe important for our precarious times.

Let the reader be warned: this most recent work is one of warning and sincere desire to stem the tide of wrongs that is rising in the darkness of the Outlying Worlds. While the general aim of the Builders is well known and their contributions to the vitality of the Communion unequalled, it is not generally known that the Builders are sometimes called upon to close worlds that have fallen into violence and dissolution. While such closings are rare, it is not well known the process by which this takes place or the forces at work which bring a world to such an end. I hope to show in the course of this work that the closing of the Floræcarian worlds represents a breaking of the traditions of the Elder Builders and a dangerous development that may indeed threaten the future of the Communion.

I have no illusions that this work will be well-received by fellow scholars, or by the Builders for that matter. This is no gathering of pleasant facts to sooth the mind of the Communion citizen in these tumultuous times. And while I have tried to make the essential facts accessible to the general reader, the internal machinery of the Prefecture of Building remains a mystery to most, as does much of what takes place beyond the pale of the Communion’s so-called core worlds. Thus, the reader is asked to be patient and to hear the fullness of the account before judgment is rendered. After all, is that not the creed of the Master Builder before she, in her exalted wisdom, is called upon to close a world that is beyond hope of peace?

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