Inspired
from Neil Gaiman’s novel “Anansi Boys”
In the era of animals, before the homo sapiens had come to exist; there existed a spider. This spider was large and black, and used to make the most geometrically accurate webs. Legend has it that the webs he spun could even capture mammoths and dinosaurs. But, nobody knew when the spider spun his webs. Nobody saw the spider in person. All they did see was the effect; viz. the webs he spun.
The animals
realised they could do nothing about the spider and so they began to tell
stories of the spider around their dens and their lakes and trees. The legend
of the spider grew, almost like a web.
Time passed. Nobody saw the spider, yet
the webs showed up.
Then came
the era of man. The discovery of fire. The wheel’s construction. The webs that
the spider had spun seemed to have vanished. The men did not fear the spider.
They were not even aware of its existence because they did not understand the language
of the birds and the beasts. To them, the animals were food. It was not
necessary to talk to them. Had they listened, perhaps they would also be able
to appreciate the legend of the spider.
The humans
evolved. They started to compile histories. In those histories, webs were
mentioned. Fossils of animals that had been trapped in the webs surfaced. A
group of humans calling themselves archaeologists
and chemists studied these webs. The
webs were strong, spun like gossamer and able to withstand pressure.
And, just
like that our spider was back. People wrote poems about spiders. They wrote
about a young group of boys going into a forest and meeting spiders. People
also introduced giant spiders, who cocooned their enemies and hung them up as
bait. Stories of mutations from spider bites surfaced.
In the coming
era, the archaeologists and chemists were called programmers. They connected and
interconnected large devices called computers.
They created something called the World
Wide Web.
And so, at
night when the children want to hear a story, often their parents look it up on
this World Wide Web.
At the centre
of this web, sits a large spider
The
Bilge Master
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