“Hoodrazai, who hath found the secret of MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI, and knoweth the wherefore of the making of the gods. They say that Hoodrazai stands all alone in Pegana and speaks to none because he knows what is hidden from the gods.Therefore the gods have made his image in a lonely land as one who thinks and is silent—the eye in the waste. They say that Hoodrazai had heard the murmers of MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI as he muttered to himself, and gleaned the meaning, and knew; and that he was the god of mirth and of abundant joy, but became from the moment of his knowing a mirthless god, even as his image, which regards the deserts beyond the track of man.”
Alias Hoodrazai, the Eye in the Waste |
Real Names/Alt Names ○ |
Characteristics Gods of Pegana, Deity, Prehuman Epoch |
Creators/Key Contributors Lord Dunsany |
First Appearance The Gods of Pegāna (1905) |
First Publisher Elkin Mathews, 1905; Pegana Press, 1937 |
Appearance List Later editions: The Gods of Pegana with S. H. Sime’s photogravure plates (Pegana Press, 1911), The Gods of Pegana with Sime illustrations (1916), The Gods of Pegana (3rd ed., 1919), Beyond the Fields We Know (Ballantine, 1972) ed. Lin Carter. |
Sample Read The Gods of Pegāna (1905) [Internet Archive] |
Description “Hoodrazai, who hath found the secret of MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI, and knoweth the wherefore of the making of the gods. They say that Hoodrazai stands all alone in Pegana and speaks to none because he knows what is hidden from the gods.Therefore the gods have made his image in a lonely land as one who thinks and is silent—the eye in the waste. They say that Hoodrazai had heard the murmers of MANA-YOOD-SUSHAI as he muttered to himself, and gleaned the meaning, and knew; and that he was the god of mirth and of abundant joy, but became from the moment of his knowing a mirthless god, even as his image, which regards the deserts beyond the track of man.” |
Source The Gods of Pegana – Project Gutenberg |