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in Rerek

       IV. The Bolted Doors

       V. Princess Marescia

       VI. Prospect North from Argyanna

       BOOK TWO: UPRISING OF KING MEZENTIUS

       VII. Zeus Terpsikeraunos

       VIII. The Prince Protector

       IX. Lady Rosma in Acrozayana

       X. Stirring of the Eumenides

       XI. Commodity of Nephews

       XII. Another Fair Moonshiny Night

       BOOK THREE: THE AFFAIR OF REREK

       XIII. The Devil’s Quilted Anvil

       XIV. Lord Emmius Parry

       BOOK FOUR: THE AFFAIR OF MESZRIA

       XV. Queen Rosma

       XVI. Lady of Presence

       XVII. Akkama Brought into the Dowry

       XVIII. The She-Wolf Tamed to Hand

       XIX. The Duchess of Memison

       BOOK FIVE: THE TRIPLE KINGDOM

       XX. Dura Papilla Lupae

       XXI. Anguring Combust

       XXII. Pax Mezentiana

       XXIII. The Two Dukes

       XXIV. Prince Valero

       XXV. Lornra Zombremar

       XXVI. Rebellion in the Marches

       XXVII. Third War with Akkama

       BOOK SIX: LA ROSE NOIRE

       XXVIII. Anadyomene

       XXIX. Astarte

       XXX. Laughter-loving Aphrodite

       XXXI. The Beast of Laimak

       XXXII. Then, Gentle Cheater

       XXXIII. Aphrodite Helikoblepharos

       The Fish Dinner: Transitional Note

       BOOK SEVEN: TO KNOW OR NOT TO KNOW

       XXXIV. The Fish Dinner: First Digestion

       XXXV. Diet a Cause

       XXXVI. Rosa Mundorum

       XXXVII. Testament of Energeia

       XXXVIII. Call of the Night-Raven

       XXXIX. Omega and Alpha in Sestola

       GENEALOGICAL TABLES

       MAP OF THE THREE KINGDOMS

       Footnote

       Also by E. R. Eddison

       About the Publisher

       INTRODUCTION

       BY PAUL EDMUND THOMAS

      THE twelfth chapter of E. R. Eddison’s first novel, The Worm Ouroboros, contains a curious episode extraneous to the main plot. Having spent nearly all their strength in climbing Koshtra Pivrarcha, the highest mountain pinnacle on waterish Mercury, the Lords Juss and Brandoch Daha stand idly enjoying the glory of their singular achievement atop the frozen wind-whipped summit, and they gaze away southward into a mysterious land never before seen:

      Juss looked southward where the blue land stretched in fold upon fold of rolling country, soft and misty, till it melted in the sky. ‘Thou and I,’ said he, ‘first of the children of men, now behold with living eyes the fabled land of Zimiamvia. Is that true, thinkest thou, which philosophers tell us of that fortunate land: that no mortal foot may tread it, but the blessed souls do inhabit it of the dead that be departed, even they that were great upon earth and did great deeds when they were living, that scorned not earth and the delights and the glories thereof, and yet did justly and were not dastards nor yet oppressors?’

      ‘Who knoweth?’ said Brandoch Daha, resting his chin in his hand and gazing south as in a dream. ‘Who shall say he knoweth?’

      The land of Zimiamvia probably held only a fleeting and evanescent place in the minds of Eddison’s readers in 1922, because this, the first and last mentioning of Zimiamvia in Ouroboros, flits quickly past the reader, and though it has a local habitation and a name, it does not have a place in the story. Yet in the author’s mind, the name rooted itself so deeply

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