Exile's Rose

From The Fifth City Wiki

"Plucked from the walls of Hell. How far you'll go to win your intended's favour. Or perhaps an indication of where they ought to go."

"The flower pressed to the paper, its petals flattened like ink. Velvet to the touch and wet with unstolen nectar, the Exile's Rose is redolent of dark promises made at midnight. London's veterans returned from the war on Hell wearing them on their breasts."[1]

Exile's Rose is a mysterious black flower grown in the gardens of Hell.[2][3] It also appears on the Surface, such as in "sacred places from Pontus to Baetica."[4] This flower symbolizes "dark promises made at midnight," and veterans of the Campaign of '68 returned home wearing Exile's Roses on their uniforms.[5] It is also a key ingredient in Zzoup, a popular dish.[6]

A spoonful of honey.
Prisoner's Honey

Lamplighter Bees fed on the nectar of Exile's Rose produce Prisoner's Honey,[7] a drug that temporarily transports imbibers to Parabola.[8] Exile's Rose itself may also be consumed to enter Parabola, but those who do so "do not return."[4] According to the Order Serpentine, the Fingerkings felt lonely being trapped behind the mirror,[9] and asked the "grumpiest bee in both worlds" (who might represent the devils) for help. The bee retrieved Exile's Rose from a "far place,"[10] and used its "property of passage" to concoct Prisoner's Honey and transport dreamers to Parabola.[11] In exchange, the Fingerkings granted the bee one-fifth of all they gained thereafter.[10]

An island city with a field of red flowers.
The Isle of Cats

Exile's Rose may be crossbred with another flower from Hell[12] to produce a red variant called Lion's Rose, also known as the "sinister exile's rose of the Bosphorus."[13][14] When Lamplighter Bees consume the pollen from Lion's Rose, they go mad and extract memories from the minds of those nearby, producing Gaoler's Honey.[15] Leopold Stamford, son of Stamford Raffles, encountered Lion's Rose and was transported into dream.[14] He would later go on to become the Pirate-King of the Isle of Cats.[16]

Historical and Cultural Inspirations

Pontus is part of Anatolia in modern-day Turkey, whereas Baetica was a Roman province on the Iberian peninsula. The Bosphorus is a strait that divides Istanbul, Turkey. This specific regional indication implies that Exile's Rose was inspired by Rhododendron ponticum, whose honey infamously contains a group of neurotoxins that result in cardiac and consciousness-altering effects in humans.[17] Unlike Exile's Rose, this species of rhododendron blooms purple or pink.

References

  1. Send an Unblemished Exile's Rose, Fallen London
  2. Surrender an Unblemished Exile's Rose, Fallen London ""I have seen fairer roses," [...] "But few make so clear a statement. Hell tends its gardens well. Thank you.""
  3. Start with the petals, Fallen London "Exile's rose is black."
  4. 4.0 4.1 What is prisoner's honey?, Fallen London "from the Natural History of Pliny the Elder: "... there is another kind of honey; its effect is attributed to the flowers called exile's rose, which are found in sacred places from Pontus to Baetica. One who consumes these flowers departs and does not return."
  5. Send an Unblemished Exile's Rose, Fallen London "[...] the Exile's Rose is redolent of dark promises made at midnight. London's veterans returned from the war on Hell wearing them on their breasts."
  6. A Recipe for Zzoup, Fallen London "Winewound chanterelles, exile's rose, paprika, pork stock, lament-onions, hanged men's tears, salt."
  7. Drop of Prisoner's Honey, Fallen London "The most delightful secret of the Neath: the honey of lamplighter bees fed exclusively on the Exile's Rose."
  8. Sample prisoner's honey, Fallen London "Prisoner's Honey does not bring dreams to those who sample it. Instead, it physically transports them to dreams. Your body fades from the couch [...] As you vanish from its lair [...] When you mention your dream to the proprietor of the honey-den [...]"
  9. Order Serpentine, Melancholy, Fallen London "The little snake was very lonely, and the only friends he could find behind the mirror [...]"
  10. 10.0 10.1 Order Serpentine, Sorrowful, Fallen London "THE LITTLE SNAKE asked the grumpiest bee in both worlds for help. And the bee said, why should I help? And the snake said, I will give you one-fifth of all I gain thereby. So the bee [...] said, in a far place there grows a rose."
  11. Order Serpentine, Lachrymose, Fallen London "THE ROSE, WHICH IS CALLED EXILE'S ROSE, has a property of passage. So shall I brew a honey from its dusts and pollens, [...] and it shall bring those who taste it, here to your dwelling. And sometimes they shall stay forever. And the little snake was very pleased with all the new friends [...]"
  12. Work out what the hell he's talking about, Fallen London "The petals you brought him are from a rare and deadly flower: something you get when you cross-breed exile's rose with a flower they brought out of Hell."
  13. Start with the petals, Fallen London "The petals look to be from the flower called exile's rose: but they're red."
  14. 14.0 14.1 Sidebar Snippets#Universal, Fallen London ""I have, [...] at last determined the cause of our poor Leopold's [...] disappearance. You will recall that I sent by the Borneo a [...] collection of [illegible] ... identified one variety as the sinister exile's rose of the Bosphorus. Sophia had long admired their colour [illegible] ... gardens here about the Government-house [illegible] ... although here they call it 'lion's rose'. Singapura [...] many tigers. I would not mention this except that when I dream of Leopold, [...] it has always seemed to me that there is a great cat present, the colour of sunset, which is also the colour of the roses [...]"
  15. The Honeyed Tongue, Sunless Sea "When lamplighter bees suck the nectar of the crimson strain of exile's rose, they are driven to madness. They enter the brains of humans and harvest their memories." [...] "Those memories are instilled in red honey. [...]"
  16. Story description, Sunless Sea "What might one expect from Leopold, Pirate-King of the Isle of Cats: [...] Behind him you see a wall of what you think are wine-racks. On closer inspection, the racks hold bottle upon carefully-labelled bottle of red honey."
  17. Grayanotoxin Poisoning: ‘Mad Honey Disease’ and Beyond, National Library of Medicine "Grayanotoxin containing honey, called "mad honey," can cause dramatic effects when ingested [-] as has already been recorded by the Greek warrior-writer Xenophon in 401 BC in his Anabasis "… but the swarms of bees in the neighborhood were numerous, and the soldiers who ate of the honey all went of their heads, and suffered from vomiting and diarrhea, and not one of them could stand up, but those who had eaten a little were like people exceedingly drunk, while those who had eaten a great deal seemed like crazy, or even, in some cases, dying men. So they lay there in great numbers as though the army had suffered a defeat, and great despondency prevailed. On the next day, however, no one had died, and at approximately the same hour as they had eaten the honey they began to come to their senses; and on the third or fourth day they got up, as if from a drugging...""