The Pillars of Eternity by Barrington Bayley [1983]
DAW Books, Inc.
159 pages
Reader Response by Matt H. [v 1.08] from
Reading Odyssey
Rating: Highly recommended
Story and Setting
In the distant future, human descendants have spread to other worlds. Levels of political centralization have risen and fallen. Now it’s a time of weak central control and of relatively ungovernable outpost planets on the fringes of authority. On one such hard-scrabble, back-water planet, Corsair, a humble and unfortunate waif of a child, known derisively as “Mudworm”, is rescued by an impressive stranger. He is a visiting spaceship captain, a Colonnader, who follows a philosophical religion of high ethics. He realizes the unique opportunity presented by the child and makes Mudworm an offer that seems too good to be true.
The child is taken to Theta, the Colonnader home world. His mind is cultivated and his body is modified. He will be the first to have certain super-human capabilities – mental, physical and perhaps meta-physical. He takes for his new name “Joachim Boaz”, words of outsized and portentous meaning. Though Boaz adopts the philosophy of the Colonnaders, he is not content. He leaves Theta. Later Boaz is the victim of a horrific accident involving scientific alchemists. He is burned by Hell fire, and endures agony literally beyond normal human endurance. Later Boaz is partially healed on Theta. However, from then on he must be forever attached to his ship. He can only physically stray a matter of miles from it, otherwise he will die.
Meanwhile, there is word that the wandering planet Meirjain, will be soon reappearing. It is a legendary world that is said to contain artifacts and treasure of inestimable value, including forbidden time-gems. Boaz and a group of allies, Obsoc a hyper-obsessed gem collector, Mace, “a nymph girl” and Romry a specialist in foreseeing the future, manage to find the planet. But a group of frightening inter-stellar criminals have too. They also must be dealt with.
On Meirjain Boaz encounters the 4-dimentional, Ibis-headed aliens with a near divine knowledge of truth. They offer Boaz the chance to actually become a God, the first one to ever exist. But the price is beyond even what a stoic like Boaz can endure. He returns to more familiar settings. In the end though, the issue is forced as the authorities finally swoop in for an assault. There is a conflagration and agony. In being transformed, will Boaz finally free sentient beings to live outside of an endlessly repeating and absolutely deterministic reality? Or will he destroy the very universe itself?
Critical Reader Appraisal
The Pillars of Eternity takes as its scope all of humanity, all of existence, the whole current universe and all possible future universes, truth, perception, determinism, God, altered states of consciousness, the limits of suffering and joy. Sounds a little grandiose, err… perhaps into the tedious? Miraculously and decisively NOT!
All this deep thought is packaged amazingly into a compact story that most strongly engages your wonder. It is a book that sets forth impressive philosophies and then shatters them. Various levels of truth are explored, but the overall impression is not a dry philosophical one, but aesthetic and emotional engagement. The books combines enjoyment and substance, both in massive quantities.
The plot has an almost classical feel – a hero undergoes a series of trials and transformations. A very unique atmosphere is achieved by having a direct and virulent protagonist who is also of exquisitely fine ethics. You see a pretty sick, decadent world through his eyes, but without judgment. He is very much part of this world, but at the same time above it. This is just one aspect of the protagonist that grabs you. His trials are horrible, his origin humble, his aspirations the grandest possible - to become the first true God, to possibly remake the universe.
Colonnaderism, the philosophy and root of ethics in which the protagonist is trained, would seem to have certain similarities with Buddhism and Hinduism. Equanimity and enlightened states of mind are a main feature. In their associations the various electrically stimulated energies Boaz can activate through his synthetic bones sound a bit like “chakras.” But there’s a twist. Re-incarnation per se is not spoken of. Instead we have an endless series of repeating universes (like Buddhist “kalpas”? ) And the emphasis is on the exact repetition of the universe, of every life and experience, even at the atomic level. It’s a high-minded absolute determinism. It is considered proven -that's just nature, there's no way to ever change it. Or
is there? Again, Bayley sets up a highly evolved-sounding philosophy and then shatters it. Later there is another instance of this also. Near the very end a type of “street logic” effectively tears into the philosophy of Boaz. Who the hell
really knows? It’s all irrelevant, mental B.S! Simply enjoy life! But in the final paragraph, this realization too is perhaps superseded. All these reversals and successive truths give the book its very unique, hard-edged, multi-transcending iconoclasm.
Apotheosis through pain, and increasing the pain it is
possible to feel, both are irresistible and original ideas. They are here presented in all their horribly scary potential and effectively dramatized. It is suggested that the same is possible through pleasure too -- both erotic pleasure as well as general happiness and joy. The integration of man and machine is explored, digitally extended consciousness, four-deminsional existence, death-sex, “collector” aliens, remote sensing and scanning, piety, abstinence, erotic ecstasy, and mental augmentation through essentially computerized bones. Tarot cards and future-telling are also in the mix.
Bayley’s prose is blocky at times and I didn’t feel him to be a slick stylist. There is still some vivid scene setting and figurative language too. The world of the Ibis-headed ones was wondrous indeed. But the sometimes blocky feel somehow harmonized with this third person narrative story. Boaz is a blocky character, with his past, with his secretive hard shell and his high, sometimes outmoded ethics. The work is short also, which leaves no space for extensive frills.
With a book like this, that climaxes on the final paragraph, even the final sentence – that final sentence takes enormous strain. I will admit that after reading the very ending, I felt a little of the need to wish it was stated slightly differently. But as is often the case, you see wisdom (a little later) in the writer’s decision. If there was a slight unappeased feeling when I finished it, that feeling was soundly overwhelmed by the overall recollection of this vivid, powerful and meaningful book.