Hello Phish Phans!
Last week we stepped through the door with Colonel Forbin into Gamehendge where we met Rutherford the Brave. We ended with Rutherford being saved from drowning in the river by some unknown creature:
“But Rutherford and Forbin weren’t alone. And suddenly an unexpected movement caught his eye. On the far side of the river he saw a shaggy creature standing in the weeds who stared across at Forbin with an unrelenting gaze. A gigantic mass of muscles and claws. The hideous beast reared back and hurled himself in the water and swam toward the region where Rutherford lay. And in a flash, the beast was gone, underneath the surface to the frosty depths below while Forbin, bewildered, waited alone. The seconds dragged by in what seemed like hours till finally the colonel felt it all had been a dream. Defeated, he bowed his head then turned to go. Suddenly with a roar, the creature emerged before him and held the brave knight’s body to the sky. And the creature laid the knight upon the shore. And the colonel fell beside his friend in prayer that he’d survive. And Rutherford, brave Rutherford was alive.”
This was the narration at the end of the last newsletter. The narration continues:
“Forbin and the unit monster were crouched over the soggy knight carefully removing his bulky helmet when the colonel heard a sound behind him. He turned around and came face to face with an enormous shaggy horse-like creature covered from head to tail with alternating blotches of brown and white. It was a two-toned multi-beast, and atop the multi-beast sat the most beautiful woman the colonel had ever seen. After fifty-two years of undaunted bachelorhood, the colonel felt a feeling rush over him as he had never felt before.”
That woman is Tela, the subject of the next song which is about Colonel Forbin’s first impressions upon meeting her.
Lyrics:
The sky is burning in this lonely man
And I kneel by the river and I feel the sand and the wind
The wind from beyond the mountain
The wind from beyond the mountain
And she comes to me in this lonely land
And looks down from the multi-beast on which she rides like the wind
The wind from beyond the mountain
The wind from beyond the mountain
Tela was born in a vulgar crooked hut
In the shadow of Wilson’s castle
Venomous scorn from a life of bitter toil
In the shadow of Wilson’s castle
Glory esteem fueled by her hatred it grew
Swelling to the point where it would
Burst at the seems there was nothing she could do
Tela Tela jewel of Wilson’s foul domain
Tela Tela jewel of Wilson’s foul domain
A lullaby the breezes whisper
And I look into her eyes and my frozen heart begins to thaw
And burns, ’til layer after layer melts away into a pool
A sky blue mirror of her eyes
And my soul is made of marble but in her gaze I crumble into dust
And drift away on the wind
The wind from beyond the mountain
The wind from beyond the mountain
Tela grew strong from her struggle to endure
In the shadow of Wilson’s castle
Time touched her wounds and shelter proved the cure
In the shadow of Wilson’s castle
Each passing day seemed to feed the brazen serpent locked inside
And liberate the spirit she’d concealed for so long
There was no place left to hide
Tela Tela jewel of Wilson’s foul domain
Tela Tela jewel of Wilson’s foul domain
A lullaby the breezes whisper
The narration continues: “Tela reached out her hand and helped Forbin on to the back of the multi- beast, and together they rode off into the forest.”
We’ll pick up here next week!