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SINGER: Nile
SONG:In Their Darkened Shrines 4
I knew they were accursed so remote were these nameless desert ruins crumbling and inarticulate the debris of its collapsed walls was nearly hidden by the sands of the uncounted ages it must have been thus before the first stones of memphis were laid and the bricks of babylon unbaked fear spoke from the age worn stones this desolate survivor of the deluge this crumbling antidiluvial ancestor of the eldest pyramid Only the grim brooding desert gods knew what really took place here what indescribable struggles and bloodshed awoke some distant throng of condemned spirits and broke the tomblike silence of these crumbled time ravaged remains these night black ruins of some vanguished and buried temple of belial But as the night wind diad away above the desert rim rose the blazing edge of the morning sun which in my fevered state i swore that from some remote depth there came a great crash of metal like a great bronze gate clanging shut whose reverberations swelled out to hail the rising sun as memnon hails in from the banks of the nile [this four-part epic is a tale very much inspired by h.p. lovecraft, and to a lesser degree, robert e. howard. it tills the story of a rebellions serpent cult who are plotting to overthrow pharonic rule. they are attempting to raise the spirits of the ancient dead, to barness thei arcane knowledge and build an army of undead legions. the story takes place within the subterranean main ch.mber of the crypts of mummified reptiles (true enough, archaeologists have indeed unearthed entire necropolises containing thousand of mummified crocodiles, serpents, ancient nile monitor lizards, and various other animals that were worshiped as personifications of the gods they represented). within these dark and bloodstained halls are not only the remains of three millenia of generations of priests and worshippers, but also the mummified corpses of all manner of glorified reptilian deities. the leader of these rebels is standing in the midst of this vast array of saurian entombment, inciting insurrection and preparing for some sort of violent revolution. their ill-fated sedition comes to naught, however, when their temple is destroyed and they are all slain in a catastrophic violent climax. whether this is perhaps divine intervention and retribution by the sun god, ra, or perhaps military action by the armies of the pharaoh (who is a worshipper of ra) putting down a violent rebellion, or merely the indiscriminate vengeance of the undead that the conspirators were seeking to enslave, is unclear. the passage that tells of the descruction and demise of the rebel fiends is reminiscent of the magickal/religious ceremony in the book of overthrowing apep, in which the terrible monster serpent apep is forever crushed by the sun god, ra, nver to rise up again. in the aftermath, all that is left of the temple, the serpent cult and their subterranean catacombs of the tombs is a mass of rubble and forgotten ruins which are eventually covered over by the sands of time, explainined in a passage that borrows quite literally from the nameless city by h.p. lovecraft.]
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