Friday, January 06, 2012

Codex Seraphinianus and the Appillericinians

Contemporary hyperographers often lament Luigi Serafini's poor coverage of the Appillericinians, the culture whose script is displayed on the Rosetta Stone page. Numenal inhabitants of La Arth often consider the French page to be more important, though that is probably ascribable to cosmocentrist undercurrents in most Earthican hyperographers at present.

In the Blovast reckoning, the Appillericinians are twelve orbifolds cantered, one orbifold reduced in distance from the Seraphinian Culture in location, and are removed from them one and a half chronoms timewise. The famous cultural anthropologist Melephio Ausgroyoehe did a survey on early Abolminine era pottery shards from around the Hozt and Calstique settlements along the Euphysme river, when sea trade between earlier Appillericinian and Seraphinian cultures was at its height.

It should be noted that the technology of two-legs, or synthetic bipeds was invented by the Appillericinians but was met with moral outrage upon its release. It is not clear when the method of making two-legs devised by the Appillericinians reached the Seraphinian culture: what is clear is how eagerly the Seraphinian culture took them up, producing viscous slime garbage attendants, umbrellas, gondolier-lanterns, tiger-exploders, and diplomats!

A word on the Appillericinian language ("Sholoque" or "Cortonastry"): whereas Seraphinian ("Coehstyl" or "Slinaqk" depending on which linguist you talk to) is based on the notion of visual arbitrage, that is, emplacing a high amount of semantic currency in the shapes of the filiform letters, Appillericinian is based on the sounds of the letters: the Appillericinians were gifted with the facility of being able to determine the lowest bass note one of their letters would emit if made of metal and struck. It is thus unsurprising that the Codex Appillericinianus is unavailable this far west of the Athalbuq divide.

Famous Appillericinians include Hohotok Kazaregue, Gungustiblimo Thmunturre, Balir Salaquayhil, Talaiq Cshumnete, Barger Yalgril.

No comments: