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- **********************************************************************
-
- Hi,
-
- This is Ken Kofman, sending out yet another _As The Wheel Turns_
- posting. I suppose I should put some sort of copyright notice
- on this, so here goes:
-
- Copyright, Ken Kofman (c) 1994. All rights reserved except for
- those that Tor and Robert Jordan deserve, and except that anyone
- who wants to copy this material may do so, so long it remains
- unaltered, including this notice, and so long as no fees of
- any kind are charged for its use.
-
- In other words, enjoy it, show it to all your friends, be inspired
- to run your own game, but since I'm not making any money off of
- this, you shouldn't either.
-
- I hope I did that right.
-
- Anyway,
-
- KenK ken@ictv.com
-
- **********************************************************************
-
- Hi,
-
- I was asked about the origin of that most ancient
- song of the Sea Folk, "99 Bottles of Beer on the
- Wall." The following legend is well known amongst
- the Atha'an Miere. Other peoples do not know the
- legend, but the song is universal. It is said
- that even the Trollocs sing it, though their
- version is in the Dark Tongue and they have altered
- the words to fit both their culinary tastes and
- their tendency to have a hard time with numbers
- greater than ten.
-
-
- Hi,
-
- Thanks for the thought, regarding the reason
- behind the traditional song. Unfortunately,
- I had already come up with a reason, which I
- shall share with you.
-
- The song was written about 2,200 years ago by
- a man of the Atha'an Miere who protested the
- loss of 99 of the best Atha'an Miere every ten
- years, sacrificed to uphold a prophecy that
- no one understood. This was the song that he
- wrote in protest, and he did go from ship to
- ship, and he did sail from port to port. And
- in every bar or tavern that the Sea Folk would
- drink did he sing this song. And the people
- stopped, and they listened, and they drank with
- him, one bottle of beer for each number, starting
- with 99.
-
- At first, the poet could hold only ten or twenty
- bottles of beer, which is a bit below average for
- the seagoing Atha'an Miere. Indeed, part of the
- song, part of the protest was the drinking of beer.
- For although 99 people seems like a paltry number,
- insignificant compared to the many Atha'an Miere,
- the number assumes a greater, more personal
- significance when you are drinking a bottle of beer
- for each man and woman sent to certain, terrible
- death. Even the hardiest sea tar could not hold
- more than thirty beers. More than that, he
- implicitly compared their needless deaths to the
- trivial downing of a beer.
-
- And so the custom grew, encouraged by bartenders and
- innkeepers who noticed how their custom increased
- when all the Atha'an Miere tried to drink 99 bottles
- of beer while singing. And the poet, whose name
- has been lost to history, but has at times been called
- Baethe Wa'hiesre, though others say Hai Nakin, he
- did increase his tolerance for beer.
-
- Then, he and his many supporters, for his cause had
- become well known amongst the Sea Folk did protest
- before the Fleetmasters, in the time when they did
- announce the 99 honored chosen. And the Fleetmasters
- did remonstrate with the assembled multititude, but
- for every argument brought forth, the poet did have
- a rejoinder, until finally the Fleetmasters were
- silent, though still they believed in the necessity.
-
- Silence held sway for many a minute. Only the crashing
- waves upon distant rocks and the cries of seagulls could
- be heard amidst the creakings of ships and their tackle
- rising and falling. Until one Fleetmaster broke the
- silence by challenging the poet, not to a duel of weapons,
- for matters had long gone past that, but to a duel using
- the poets own creation. He said that those chosen for
- this decade should stand down, and let the Weave of the
- Pattern itself decide the outcome. Let every one of
- that vast multitude swear by the Light and his hope of
- rebirth, by sea and by sky, to join and sing "Ninety-
- Nine Bottles of Beer on the Wall" together, and drink
- a bottle of beer 99 times, until the song is over, or
- until consciousness leaves. And let the true nature
- of things be known in this implied contest.
-
- Now, the Sea Folk are no more superstitious than other
- people. But if they have a weakness, it is that they
- enjoy contests, especially drinking contests. And this
- was a drinking contest to make all others mere games for
- children. With great enthusiasm did the people endorse
- this choice, and the poet was pleased, for he knew that
- none could complete the song, for the amount of beer was
- too much for any woman or man, and that with all the Sea
- Folk unconscious, the truth of his message would be manifest.
-
- And so it was that all the people there did swear as one.
- Many of the Atha'an Miere were there on that day, but many
- were not. For the Atha'an Miere are a wandering people,
- who know no fixed location but sail wheresoever they will.
- Still, the multitude was vast. And the amount of beer
- consumed that day was enough to float a fleet of ships,
- or so it is said.
-
- But when the singing stopped, the number had reached zero
- bottles of beer on the wall. And the multitude was silent,
- for they were unconscious, save for a small few, staggering
- about, and the poet, he too was amongst them. Then did the
- remaining people come together, and the poet did count them.
- Ninety-nine standing Atha'an Miere did he count, and the
- poet knew that though his cause was just, the Wheel that wove
- the Pattern could not be denied, and so did he accept his
- doom. It is said that the Fleetmaster who proposed this great
- contest also was numbered among those remaining. And the
- people did mourn, for their collective hangover was great.
-
- Yowsas! That was much longer than I expected it to be.
-
- Anyway,
-
- KenK
-