The most important thing, I guess, is to understand the context in which REH
wrote a story or another and to not find some kind of artificial character development which simply is not there. REH was no slouch, so he was consistent with Conan's 'bio' elements from a yarn to another, but it's not with those informations that will help you to predict how he will act in the 'next' story.
Because it all depends of the author's mood.
Red Nails is (among other things) great because Valeria
is Novalyne. And
BtBR is as good because
Balthus is REH and Slaher is Patch. When REH wanted to exalt a 'manly' sexuality, then he creates
Black Colossus with his "bastardly/raping" character who screws the heroine on the altar.
kintire said:
Conan was a tribesman at the start of the books, and develops through it. He has a code of honour throughout: but initially it applies mainly to those he considers his tribe, and not to people he doesn't feel any connection to. By the time of scarlet citadel he has expanded his horizons, and I think his rule probably is Arthurian. The original Arthur, not the hollywood version. If it comes to that, his early years are not dissimilar to Robin Hood, who was after all a bandit!
See Hervé's post. It seems to me (and it's also Patrice Louinet's opinion, IIRC) that the Arthurian/old Celtic kinghood overtones became important
at the time REH wrote
The Hour of the Dragon.
Years after
Phoenix.
And even in his early years, he wasn't completely amoral. He agreed to assassinate Nabonidus, but Nabonidus was a scum, and he knew it.
Being apologetic doesn't change Conan's (a)moral choice.
Khorshemish was a city of Turan, an empire built on brutal conquest and slavery.
What?
A
Turanian city?
Aren't you confusing "Khorshemish" with "Khawarizm"?
The cities he plundered as a pirate were in Argos, Zingara and the Black kingdoms: all nations which sponsored their own pirates and profited from their raids. Most of the people who suffered in these raids would have been innocent, or only indirectly guilty of course.
This one and the previous quote block are beyond me. IF you don't think that ALL Blacks/Ku$hites/Argosseans/Zingarans "deserved it"....
WHY those apologetic words?
I don't know for others, but
I have a hard time with "guilt by association". I guess that this forum is not the best place to talk about it, so I'll stop here.
BTW, where did you find out that
Ku$hites were known for being pirates? Southern Islanders, yes, but this habit doesn't extend to all Black kingdoms, if my memory is correct.
Demetrio said:
Why should assassination be necessarily cruel?
I don't think I used the word "cruel". If you don't believe that accepting to commit a cold-blooded murder is "amoral", it's not worth discussing the character's morality anymore.
kintire said:
Conan was not a white hatted one dimensional Good Guy by a long shot. But he wasn't an amoral villain either, at any point in his career.
Not
totally amoral, perhaps, but a true bastard from time to time.
I agree that he wasn't one dimensional.
True, he took care of his retainers and was willing to put his life in danger for them, even be it only for his sex-slave. A strong pack-leader/"Alpha-male"/tribal mentality. And yes, the Cimmerian was always portrayed as someone couragous. Later, when REH writes
THotD, he adds Arthurian elements to Conan's kingship.
As the
author told it, he was also a mean bastard sometimes...