I couldn't help myself, even if I know it's useless to debate with Kintire.
kintire wrote:
Yes. You are taking one part of REH's writing: his personal letters and exalting them over another part: his published works.
So if I have a different take than Kintire's Interpretation (tm), I'm "engaged in a special pleading" and I diminish the importance of the published works?
If I do not see exactly the same things in the yarns than you, I'm "exalting" REH's correspondance over the stories?
You're insinuating that if someone has a different interpretation than yours, he ignores or misreads the stories. Okay.
I wonder if it feels good to believe in one's own infallibility.
Axrules, the thing in front of you is a MIRROR.
I'm not sure what your complaint is, but it seems to be that I'm not changing my opinion to match yours. Well, you aren't changing your opinion to match mine either. You are then accusing me of believing that what I think is "revealed truth": and the evidence that you are putting forward for that is that I am refusing to agree with you, when what you say is obviously true! The only difference between us is that you are producing extended ad hominems and I'm not!
The difference being that I do not satisfy myself -as you do- only with MY comprehension of the yarns; I have also read some letters by REH and a certain amount of scholarship written by others.
You have read letters by REH. I've read some too. But the letters from REH represent a snapshot of his thinking at one time, and as can be seen from several plot elements that don't make it into the final version, its at an early stage of drafting. I am choosing to take the final stories, which represent months of work and mature consideration, as the basis of understanding what REH meant, and the letters as illuminating how they were written. but not as authority over them.
As for scholarship written by others: I've read some, although not that one. But I am very sceptical of this kind of work. Taking an author's work and deconstructing it is a risky business. C S Lewis has some good stuff on this. He had the advantage of people doing this kind of thing on his own works while he was still alive, and the stuff they came up with was very hit and miss: mostly miss.
If you don't own the texts that REH sent to Farnsworth Wright, that is what was printed in the WS/DR editions, your vision of the character is based on corrupted and toned down stories. Period.
Oh please. He toned down some of the sexy bits for publication, he didn't eviscerate the entire work. Mountain out of molehill.
It also helps to get rid of any 'Spraguish/Rippkean' chronological 'conditioning' when you're able to see how the author's conceptions of the Hyborian Age and of his character evolved from yarn to yarn.
Hah! Spragueish/Rippkean? Have you read any of Rippke's stuff? As far as he's concerned, Sprague de Camp is one garde down from the Antichrist! And who on earth said the author's conception of the character didn't evolve?
It's nice that you don't feel "cornered".
Aren't REH's own words in contradiction with Kintire's Interpretation (tm)?
What do you say?
No, they're not.
Is there a subtle meaning of the words "damnedest bastard" that I'm unable to get because of my limited English skills?
No, but there is a meaning of the word "amoral" that you are not getting, I think. Specifically, it is NOT synonymous with "Immoral" and does NOT mean "wrong".
As in other threads, in this one you seldom used words like "I think", "I believe" or the abbreviations IMO/IMHO. Most of the time, strong affirmations and your opinion put forward as some kind of ultimate truth. You do this often to reply to other posters, not only to my messages.
Hah! So I'm evil because I don't use the codewords? That's called honesty! Let me ask this: all those people who drop these weasel words into their opinions. How often do they actually BEHAVE as if they mean them? Obviously, everything I post is my opinion, and no one else is obliged to agree. I don't feel the need to remind people of that all the time.
Then, when someone contradicts you with consistent posts, you write a sentence several days later to say it was just an opinion.
How handy. And familiar.
Everything I post is an opinion. Everything anyone posts is an opinion. Except, Ironically, the part of my post you chose to quote! Because that was me talking about what I think and do not think, and that's objective fact if anything is. Whether that thought is right or not is another question.
Oh, and by the way, I don't in any way retract that opinion, if that's how you interpreted it.
"the people in it"? EVERY SINGLE woman, child, servant, etc... in town deserved Conan's wrath? Really? Because their Hyrkanian husbands/fathers/masters/etc... were -like most of the people of the Hyborian Age- slavers?
And even worse: every settlement populated by Black people in the Hyborian Age deserved to be plundered by Bêlit and Amra because of the piratical ways of some specific Southern Island tribes?
No they didn't, and I said they didn't. Here:
Someone willing to burn a town to the ground because the people in it had done the same to other people, and thus had no right to complain is not amoral. Amoral means "without any morality" it doesn't mean "morally wrong". Conan is making a moral choice here: he is just getting it wrong. He gets it right later in his career, a point made by Howard himself in Scarlet Citadel.
The problem here is that you don't seem to be capable of accepting any option but the wild extremes. Valeria IS Novalyne Price: Or they have NOTHING to do with each other. Conan is UTTERLY AMORAL: or he is a white hatted saint. REH had NO idea about any structure for Conan's career or development: or he had EVERY part of his character worked out fully in advance. You believe the first of all of these, and because I disagree you seem to be assuming that I belive the opposite.
Well, I don't. I believe that Novalyne Price influenced the character of Valeria, but there is a lot in Valeria that comes from other places too. Most especially, the demands of the story. I believe that Conan has a strong morality, but in early life a limited one and he makes many mistakes, performing many immoral (but not amoral) acts. He is, for much of his career a "red-handed plunderer" (which is the in story way of saying "a bastard") but he is a plunderer with a strong code, that blossoms into full scale heroism later in his career. I think REH had a good idea from the start (well, possibly after Phoenix) of Conan's career and fitted his stories into it, but it was only a general framework, and the character saw considerable development as time went on. IMHO, IMO, I believe, I think, In my opinion, in my HUMBLE opinion, if I may be permitted to express my beliefs, Mr Axerules sir.
Hows that?
Well, obviously there IS a communication problem in the discussion about Conan's morality. You forgot/ignored/misunderstood (make your choice) REH's own words on his character. Or is my English so poor that I can't figure out what "bastard" means?
You can be a bastard without being amoral. It is YOU who are ignoring REH's own words... and in the stories no less. Conan makes decisions to do things because he thinks they are right. That means he is not amoral.
And actually, that's not MHO. That's semantics. Someone who makes moral decisions is, by definition not amoral. Even if he gets several of them very badly wrong.