Monday, September 24, 2007

The Great Warrior Lord of Huayllay (Cerro de Pasco, Peru)








The Great Warrior Lord of Huayllay
((2946 BC) (Stone Forest, near, Cerro de Pasco, Peru))



For those readers interested in the Prolog or Afterward of this account (or version of the creation of the great stone structures at Huayllay, Peru) please review the notes at the end of the story.



1
The Advent

When the siege and the assault had ceased in Huayllay
and the tribes and cave dwellings fell in blaze and ruins,
and when all the wealth was taken, the most noble kindred
whom had escaped from the treachery of the horde
from the lower world, below the great sierras—
that scourge their land, they returned home.
It was Saenea, whom was found by the renowned king;
and when this fair lad was found, by this famous king,
he was drinking the blood of animals to remain alive.
The boy but ten had escaped the siege, his family, did not.
Great pomp and pride, was inside his heart and head,
with sadness and strife, such strange things inside a boy.
He laid his hand upon the breast of the king, swore:
revenge with gladness would not leave his heart.
And he was bred to be a bold man, for battle, and such;
and in his time, as a youth, many marvels had men seen:
but of all that, men heard tell, one day he would be king.

Wherefore a marvel among men he was, and I shell tell
his tale, for he was one of few that held it, no fear of death…
one of the wildest of all men, as it is infixed, brave he was,
thus linked to gods it is told, but he loved only One, but One.

Indeed, the king had fine art drawn throughout his cave,
with many a beastly figures, noble animals, and his kind,
accompanied by much laughter, dancing and drinking,
with disputes full, and blissfully drunken lords over tribes.
For here in this land of stone and meadows, feasts were full
most days and nights, with meats and mirth, and merriment.


2
The Trials

And now as Saenea who was a man, too enjoyed pleasures;
courteous he could be, possessed he was: fair and hard.
Under heaven, all saw him become king with fame,
and a king most high in pride; it would be hard to name,
but a warrior king he was, who had no dread of anything.

In battle he spared no life, be it beast or warrior, --
I say none but one, a woman, who would become his wife.
When he returned from battles, loud clamor and cries
announced anew, his arrival (shouts and hands waving)
Ladies laughed loudly, lost in an insane cheerful joy, as
merriment was served, and manners washed away; and
the loveliest of women there, glanced with eyes of haze.




Prolog or After word (Note on the story): This story takes place approximately, 2946 BC, about 200 to 300 years after the great flood (3246 to 3146 BC). It is fiction, but the author believes it could have been this way, how the great statues of ‘Stone Forest,” near Cerro de Pasco (in an area called, Huayllay (were created). The picture (or drawing by the author is that of a statue in the great stone woods. And I repeat, very likely to have been the Lord of Huayllay. The author feels also, the statues could have been carved with the right amount of people in a hundred years or so, and that the date has to be placed closely after the Great Flood, of the Bible, to accommodate the story. Although there were several floods in the past ten-thousand years that could take it place, yet there are three the author picked from, 1500 BC, 3246 BC, and 9600 BC.

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