The Gods of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs (most life changing books .TXT) ๐
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The Gods of Mars is Burroughsโ sequel to A Princess of Mars. After ten long years, John Carter is again transported to Mars to try and determine the fate of his wife Dejah Thoris, but finds himself in the forbidden Valley Dor, from which no man may return. Published serially in five parts between January and May 1913, this sequel appeared a year after the initial serialization of its predecessor. It was eventually published in its full novel form in 1918.
Although the Martian series contains ten books in total, the first threeโof which The Gods of Mars is the secondโare often considered a stand-alone trilogy. Throughout the series, Burroughsโ imagination and sense of adventure shine through, and his extravagant prose and innovative vocabulary raise the works up above run-of-the-mill pulp fiction.
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- Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
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โIt is said that occasionally some deluded victim of Barsoomian superstition will so far escape the clutches of the countless enemies that beset his path from the moment that he emerges from the subterranean passage through which the Iss flows for a thousand miles before it enters the Valley Dor as to reach the very walls of the Temple of Issus; but what fate awaits one there not even the Holy Therns may guess, for who has passed within those gilded walls never has returned to unfold the mysteries they have held since the beginning of time.
โThe Temple of Issus is to the therns what the Valley Dor is imagined by the peoples of the outer world to be to them; it is the ultimate haven of peace, refuge, and happiness to which they pass after this life and wherein an eternity of eternities is spent amidst the delights of the flesh which appeal most strongly to this race of mental giants and moral pygmies.โ
โThe Temple of Issus is, I take it, a heaven within a heaven,โ I said. โLet us hope that there it will be meted to the therns as they have meted it here unto others.โ
โWho knows?โ the girl murmured.
โThe therns, I judge from what you have said, are no less mortal than we; and yet have I always heard them spoken of with the utmost awe and reverence by the people of Barsoom, as one might speak of the gods themselves.โ
โThe therns are mortal,โ she replied. โThey die from the same causes as you or I might: those who do not live their allotted span of life, one thousand years, when by the authority of custom they may take their way in happiness through the long tunnel that leads to Issus.
โThose who die before are supposed to spend the balance of their allotted time in the image of a plant man, and it is for this reason that the plant men are held sacred by the therns, since they believe that each of these hideous creatures was formerly a thern.โ
โAnd should a plant man die?โ I asked.
โShould he die before the expiration of the thousand years from the birth of the thern whose immortality abides within him then the soul passes into a great white ape, but should the ape die short of the exact hour that terminates the thousand years the soul is forever lost and passes for all eternity into the carcass of the slimy and fearsome silians whose wriggling thousands seethe the silent sea beneath the hurtling moons when the sun has gone and strange shapes walk through the Valley Dor.โ
โWe sent several Holy Therns to the silians today, then,โ said Tars Tarkas, laughing.
โAnd so will your death be the more terrible when it comes,โ said the maiden. โAnd come it willโ โyou cannot escape.โ
โOne has escaped, centuries ago,โ I reminded her, โand what has been done may be done again.โ
โIt is useless even to try,โ she answered hopelessly.
โBut try we shall,โ I cried, โand you shall go with us, if you wish.โ
โTo be put to death by mine own people, and render my memory a disgrace to my family and my nation? A Prince of the House of Tardos Mors should know better than to suggest such a thing.โ
Tars Tarkas listened in silence, but I could feel his eyes riveted upon me and I knew that he awaited my answer as one might listen to the reading of his sentence by the foreman of a jury.
What I advised the girl to do would seal our fate as well, since if I bowed to the inevitable decree of age-old superstition we must all remain and meet our fate in some horrible form within this awful abode of horror and cruelty.
โWe have the right to escape if we can,โ I answered. โOur own moral senses will not be offended if we succeed, for we know that the fabled life of love and peace in the blessed Valley of Dor is a rank and wicked deception. We know that the valley is not sacred; we know that the Holy Therns are not holy; that they are a race of cruel and heartless mortals, knowing no more of the real life to come than we do.
โNot only is it our right to bend every effort to escapeโ โit is a solemn duty from which we should not shrink even though we know that we should be reviled and tortured by our own peoples when we returned to them.
โOnly thus may we carry the truth to those without, and though the likelihood of our narrative being given credence is, I grant you, remote, so wedded are mortals to their stupid infatuation for impossible superstitions, we should be craven cowards indeed were we to shirk the plain duty which confronts us.
โAgain there is a chance that with the weight of the testimony of several of us the truth of our statements may be accepted, and at least a compromise effected which will result in the dispatching of an expedition of investigation to this hideous mockery of heaven.โ
Both the girl and the green warrior stood silent in thought for some moments. The former it was who eventually broke the silence.
โNever had I considered the matter in that light before,โ she said. โIndeed would I give my life a thousand times if I could but save a single soul from the awful life that I have led in this cruel place. Yes, you are right, and I will go with you as far as we can go; but I doubt that we ever shall escape.โ
I turned an inquiring glance toward the Thark.
โTo the gates of Issus, or to the bottom of Korus,โ spoke the green warrior; โto the snows to the north or to the snows to the south, Tars Tarkas follows where John Carter leads. I have spoken.โ
โCome, then,โ I cried, โwe must
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