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<h2>THE REVOLUTIONS OF TIME</h2>
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<h3>By Jonathan Dunn</h3>
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<p style="text-align: center">Note to the reader:</p>
<p>The manuscript for this book was found in a weather-beaten
stone box on an island in the Pacific Ocean. Its contents were
written in an ancient form of Latin, which was translated and
edited by Jonathan Dunn.</p>
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<p style="text-align: center">Dedicated to Bernibus,</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><em>amicus certus in re incerta
cernitur.</em></p>
<p><strong>Table of Contents:</strong></p>
<p>Chapter 1: <SPAN href="#chap01">Past and Present</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 2: <SPAN href="#chap02">Predestined Deja Vu</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 3: <SPAN href="#chap03">Zards and Canitaurs</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 4: <SPAN href="#chap04">Onan, Lord of the Past</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 5: <SPAN href="#chap05">The Treeway</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 6: <SPAN href="#chap06">The Fiery Lake</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 7: <SPAN href="#chap07">Down to Nunami</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 8: <SPAN href="#chap08">The Temple of Time</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 9: <SPAN href="#chap09">Mutually Assured Deception</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 10: <SPAN href="#chap10">Devolution</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 11: <SPAN href="#chap11">The Land Across the Sea</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 12: <SPAN href="#chap12">The White Eagle</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 13: <SPAN href="#chap13">The Big Bang</SPAN></p>
<p>Chapter 14: <SPAN href="#chap14">Past and Future</SPAN></p>
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<p>...The very men who claimed mental superiority because they
were free from superstitions and divine disillusionment were
themselves victims of their own sophism, and while they thought
themselves crowned with enlightenment, it was naught but the
Phrygian caps of their prejudices toward the material state.</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><em>- Jehu, the Kinsman
Redeemer</em></p>
<p>The physical manifestation of the spiritual force is not the
spiritual force at all, only a bland deception. If you only focus
on what you can see directly, than you chase after only the
representation and not the object desired. If a bird is flying
through the sky at noontime, casting a shadow on the ground below
him, and a man comes along, and in the hope of catching the bird
chases after its shadow, it is evident that he will never catch
it, for when he does reach it, he will find that there is nothing
there at all, only the shadow of what it was he desired. So it is
with the spiritual!</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><em>- Onan, Lord of the
Past</em></p>
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<h3><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>Chapter 1: Past and Present</h3>
<p>My name is Jehu. Most probably it sounds foreign and
unfamiliar to you, devoid of the qualities of affection and
personality which give character to a name. It is a harsh name,
cold and inhuman, like something out of the night, an unwelcome
intruder into the warmth of familiarity. It inspires no blissful
memories, nor does it kindle fond feelings in the bosom of the
hearer, instead the heart is hardened to it like the feathers of
a duck to water, repulsing it, leaving it to run off into the
ditches and by-ways of the long forgotten past, to trickle
dejectedly into those stagnant ponds where so many words of
wisdom are imprisoned: out of sight, out of mind, out of heart,
out of history. Yet while history is forgotten and misconstrued,
it is repeated, for what is life without water, which nourishes
and sustains it, and what is life without wisdom, which protects
and cultivates it?</p>
<p>Jehu is my name, though it no longer brings the quickened
pulse and keen anticipation of happiness to the hearts of any,
not even my own. For what deference can be given to a name,
though not in itself a thing of dishonor, which represents the
failure to derail the evitable fate which wrecks the race of man
again and again. Not that I myself embody such a failure, nor
even that I gave birth to the dreaded fate’s latest
momentum, but as is seen time and again throughout history, one
name is brought to represent the tide of change, for better or
worse, the doer of deeds which were done not by him, but by a
mass of independent doers, yet it is written in the annals of
history as the deeds of but one man.</p>
<p>While I had little to do, consciously, with the doom of the
earth, I will always be fingered as the villain, as the ambitious
Napoleon or the barbaric Atilla, the arrogant Augustus or the
fearful Cyrus. Someone has to bear the burden of shame on the
pages of history for the people of his time, and in that sense,
maybe I truly can be called their kinsman redeemer. Perhaps it is
my fate to bear witness to the wrongs of a people, of which even
you are not wholly innocent.</p>
<p>And yet can an individual be blamed for the faults of a
society, can personal responsibility be extended to the members
of an unknown multitude? How the enjoined conscience of one longs
to say no, but in good faith it cannot be said, for in this case
the mask of ignorance cannot supersede the face of guilt. Indeed,
ignorance in this case only adds to the shame of the guilty, this
being a crime not of misdeeds but of negligence, twisted together
with the vices of humanity into a thick and sturdy cord, a rope
that cannot be pulled apart and individually examined, yet must
be taken as a whole. Insularly, the strand of ignorance could be
easily snapped, remedied by but a little education, yet when
woven together by one’s own hands with prides and
prejudices, it forms an unbreakable rope, which is placed about
our neck to hang us: through means of our own doing is our fate
foretold. If but one or two of the strands were omitted, the
result would be a feeble rope, easily broken, and we would live.
But by our own vices is our mortality made manifest, by our own
wrongs are we wronged.</p>
<p>By now you may be beginning to feel the impulses of
indignation arising in your breast, for who am I, the admittedly
despicable Jehu, to group you as my fellow convicts, my
co-conspirators, in a sense? And you are right, for I am not your
judge and neither do I wish to be.</p>
<p>Having said that, I now request of you to put down the book
and discontinue reading.</p>
<p>“Surely,” you say to yourself, “He is
mentally deranged, for what author in his right mind would
encourage his readers to disperse, what writer does not thrive on
the digestion of his words by an eager audience?”</p>
<p>Here I must make a revelation to you: if my manuscript has
indeed been found, then I have long since been dead; and I assure
you that in whatever form my existence takes in the present, I
have little desire for your intrigue or goodwill. Do you think
Melville is consoled in death of his miserable life by the
vainglorious praises of the living? Or do you think that Poe is
comforted by such avid attentions in his present abode? In truth,
Melville’s only rivalry is now within, and Poe’s only
raven that daunting memory of those truths which had escaped him
in life, but which now are opened to you.</p>
<p>More importantly, if this manuscript has been found, it proves
that what is contained herein is the unerring truth. I do not
write this to exonerate myself, however let me say here that I am
more the Andre’ than the Arnold, for I was but the emissary
of history, not the traitor to humanity, and if not me then some
other would have filled the void. Let it be remembered that it
was Andre’ who gave his life for his deeds, and yet it is
Andre’ who is recollected with a sweet sorrow, and though
Arnold lived, he had no peace. Yet while history is vivid and
encyclopedic, in itself a living organism, it can speak only
through the mouths of men, who often misrepresent it for their
own partisan and prejudiced plans. It is strong and steadfast,
though, and in time is always victorious over its menial
opposition, for what is history but the past tense of truth, and
it is justly said that <em>veritas numquam perit</em>, truth
never dies.</p>
<p>Going back to what I said before, namely that at my
manuscript’s discovery my demise will itself be history: I
am assured that such is true, for even now as I write this my
death is near at hand. How wide the abyss of time that separates
us is I cannot tell, but I do know that it is beyond the
reckoning of men, such an unknown barrage of hollow, formless
years. Yet as you read this it is as if I were speaking directly
to you, despite all of the desolation between our times. That is
what makes history an organic being, and by history I mean all of
the past, or all of the future, depending on your viewpoint.</p>
<p>A book is a connection between times and peoples, more so than
any other medium. As I put these words down in writing, it is as
if I am imparting my very self into the pages. And as you read
them, the name Jehu slowly forms into an image, into a
personality, and from the empty word Jehu comes the great well of
affection springing from a personal intimacy. A book is an enigma
in which no time exists, and as it is read it brings the reader
into its eternal being, for while it sits closed on a shelf it is
no more than a forgotten memory, yet when it is opened its
contents come to life and its characters and locations are once
more existent in the same state as when they were written, the
story becomes once more reality.</p>
<p>While I have long been deceased, when you read this I am
brought to life once more, and with my rebirth I tell you my
story, and make known to you the truths contained therein. The
words of this book are a rune gate, a portal to the past, and as
you read them, your present fades away and you are drawn into my
present, this very moment in which I now write. Then you connect
with me intimately, and for a brief time the gulf of mortality is
transcended and the depths of my being are laid open to you. We
commune together and you eat of my flesh and drink of my blood,
merging your existence with mine.</p>
<p>Come to me now, my friend, come to me across the gulf of
mortality, for I await you. Come, and in your spiritual
peregrination meet with me, in this land of the past which is so
foreign and unfamiliar to you, but which will become for a time
your home. Come to me, my friend, and let me tell you my
story.</p>
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