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Edgar Rice Burroughs' Mars And Venus - A
Comparison Of Two Worlds
By Robert Gibson
Apart from Tarzan, Barsoom (Mars) is ERB's most famous creation. His
wonderful portrayal of a dying planet of warring city-states, with
all its detailed and colourful depiction of varied flora, fauna,
races, cultures, religions and customs, has an unsurpassed ease of
touch. Many authors have invented worlds with more realism,
intelligence and consistency of detail, but none with such dreamy
lightness of heart. It is as if it all poured from him in a trance.
His Venus, by contrast, is supposed to have much less "zap". Brian
Aldiss in Trillion Year Spree wittily suggests that this is partly
due to the cloud-wrapped nature of the planet, as though the
author's imagination was likewise befogged. More seriously, one
might also point out that whereas the Barsoom series runs to ten
volumes, Amtor (Venus) has only four, so there wasn't room for so
much development of that world.
Yet much is achieved in those four volumes set on cloudy, mysterious
Amtor. If one were to do a statistical count of cultures and
civilizations described, it might well become apparent that the
Venus books are even richer than the Mars books in varied
discoveries and adventure. And all the cultures are distinctive,
colourful, unforgettable. The super-scientific people of Havatoo;
the living dead of Kormor; the sinister castle of Skor; the
fanatical monarchists of the tree city of Kooaad; the communistic
Thorists; the fascistic Zanis; the Myposan fish-men and many more,
provide the settings for a feast of Venusian adventure.
Paradoxically, in this variation lies the clue as to why Amtor is
less popular or at any rate less renowned among readers, than
Barsoom. For all this variation is a product of isolation. The
cultures of Venus are all cut off from one another. Carson Napier
himself, the man from Earth, is the only factor that links them, as
he sails or flies from one adventurous mishap to thenext. Here we
come to the main difference between the worlds: transportation.
Owing to the availability of transportation, Barsoom, unlike Amtor,
has a world civilization of sorts. Its cities may mostly be hostile
to one another (though there are some alliances), but, mostly, the
red men of Barsoom do trade and communicate and know of each other.
Exceptional cultures may exist in total isolation until they are
stumbled across - such as the spider-like kaldanes in The Chessmen
of Mars, or the white-skinned Orovars in Llana of Gathol. Or one of
the red-man cultures may withdraw from the international community
and plot its destruction, as did the evil Tul Axtar, ruler of Jahar
in A Fighting Man of Mars. And of course the savage green men may
get up to anything; they are beyond the pale. But by and large the
civilized cities are linked.
They are linked because of the special Barsoomian invention, which
occurs nowhere else in ERB's universe: the flier. On Barsoom you can
run out your flier from its shed and climb onto it, to lie prone
while you open the throttle and speed through the thin air of the
dying planet, from city to city, empire to empire, taking your
chances, perhaps as a wandering 'panthan' or soldier of fortune; or
you can indulge your curiosity and simply explore,out over the dead
sea bottoms and the deserted cities of an earlier epoch:
Upon the edges of plateaus that once had marked the shore-line of a
noble continent I passed above the lonely monuments of that ancient
prosperity, the sad, deserted cities of old Barsoom. Even in their
ruins there is a grandeur and magnificence that still have power to
awe a modern man. Down towards the lowerst sea bottoms other ruins
mark the tragic trail that that ancient civilization had followed in
pursuit of the receding waters of its ocean to where the last city
finally succumbed, bereft of commerce, shorn of power, to fall at
last an easy victim to the marauding hordes of fierce, green
tribesmen....
-- A Fighting Man of Mars
The flier is a symbol of freedom that makes even more vivid the
colourful invented sub-reality that is Barsoom. Amtor's isolated
mysteries make it in a sense into several separate worlds; Barsoom
is more united in a global mystery, with global themes.
Robert Gibson is caretaker of the Ooranye Project, creating a
fictional giant planet which can be explored on
www.ooranye.com. The project's aim is to meld the subgenres of
Future History and Planetary Romance, resulting in over a million
years of civilization with its own societies, customs, conflicts,
triumphs and disasters, politics, philosophies, flora and fauna,
empires both human and non-human, and adventures that range over an
area ten times that of the surface of the Earth. Lovers of planetary
adventure are invited to view the history, comment on the progress
of the project, access the tales and keep in touch with the
developing destiny of Ooranye.
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