💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › ross-winn-the-archic.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 13:49:45. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: The Archic Author: Ross Winn Date: 1903 Language: en Topics: fiction Source: Retrieved on February 29, 2012 from http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Archic Notes: Originally appearing in Winn’s Firebrand, Vol. II No. 1, January 1903.
Once upon a time, in a kingdom situated between two seas, the people
kept a certain great monster, called an archic. This archic was a most
ferocious beast with great iron claws and a mouth large enough to
swallow a dozen men at a gulp. The people held this frightful monster in
great esteem, altho it was a great burden to them, for it had to be fed
constantly upon the fat of the land, and demanded human flesh and blood,
as well as the choice fruits of the soil, and was always hungry.
This savage beast had to be securely chained, and a vast number of men,
called archons, or officers of the archic, were required to feed and
care for the monster. Every once in a while the archic would break his
chain and do no end of mischief among the people; and at all times he
had to have human blood to satisfy his appetite.
Altho the people feared the archic greatly, they agreed that he was a
necessary evil, and very useful to keep other evil-doers quiet, for when
a man did anything not approved by the people, they gave him to the
archic. It thus happened that, if a man was very wealthy, he could
appease the appetite of the beast with such things as it liked to feed
upon, and thus escape himself; but when a poor man, who had not the
means to appease the monster’s appetite, fell into its clutches he was
apt to fare rather badly.
But the people, tho they agreed that the archic was a useful and
necessary evil, were not satisfied with the manner in which it was kept,
and they were continually devising new methods of feeding it, and of
utilizing its usefulness.
Some wanted to curtail its activity as much as possible, while others
wished to lengthen its chain, and give it more scope and power. But
there were a few individuals who said that the monster ought to be
killed. These persons were called Anarchists; and the vast majority of
the people regarded them as wicked. And especially the archons, or
keepers of the archic, who said that the Anarchists should be given to
the archic as a sacrifice to law and order.
But the Anarchists continued to reason with the people, and at last so
many of them were convinced, that they begun to ignore the archic, and
refused to contribute to its support. The result was that the archic,
deprived of its daily supply of food, sickened and died; and when it was
no more, the people discovered that it had been a great curse, an
unmixed evil that was not in the least necessary to their happiness, but
on the contrary, had made life miserable for all the people without
their knowing the cause. And there was great rejoicing, and everybody
declared that they had always been Anarchists to the third and forth
generation of ancestors.