Slobgollion

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"Are you quite sure you want to know this?"

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"Perhaps you'll never pronounce it quite like a Rubbery Man, but you finally know what 'slobgollion' means. It's the colour that oozes between life and death. Most humans will never perceive it, but for the first time, you're aware when you cross the threshold. Death's Country is always right here, cloaked by a colour that no living mind can fathom."[1]

Slobgollion is the Rubbery name[2] - or the closest approximation, anyway[3] - for a color that is simply unfathomable to humans. Existing just beyond the edge of the Neathbow, it is woven into the "net-of-the-world,"[4] the veil that separates the land of the living from Death's Country; this property renders the latter imperceptible to living creatures, despite the fact that Death's Country shares a physical space with the living world.[5]

Beyond the Visible Spectrum of Forbidden Light

A chunk of dead amber

The fact that Death is strange in the Neath is well-documented. Many of its now-permanent residents have spent some time in a slow boat passing a dark beach on a silent river. What none will tell, however, is the tale of their journey there.[6] This journey cannot be remembered, for it passes through the slobgollion barrier that covers the net-of-the-world, and slobgollion cannot be fathomed by the human mind.[5]

But what about the non-human mind? The Rubbery Men are known to have many organs which science has not yet described nor understood; could this extend to their sensory organs? And could their often-strange behavior be, in part, explained by them seeing things that we can't?

Amber is known to be both impressionable and influential on those who carry it; if, for instance, a Rubbery Man were to pass through this slobgollion veil and perceive it while holding amber, that impression might be stored in it. Perhaps then, a human holding this Dead Amber might be able to perceive this mysterious color.[7] However, this is not an experiment one should attempt, as slobgollion covers more than the net-of-the-world. Things which have known death become tainted with the color, and to perceive it at all is damaging to the human psyche thanks to its eldritch and incomprehensible nature.[8] It is a mercy, then, that the inhabitants of Death's Country do not wish to be perceived by the living, and will confiscate Dead Amber on sight.[9]

Cultural and Scientific Inspirations

The Neathbow, seen through a prism

Since it exists on the edge of the Neathbow "between irrigo and oblivion," slobgollion is comparable to ultraviolet and/or infrared radiation, which exist beyond each edge of the visible (to humans) spectrum of light. The existing artwork of the Neathbow would indicate, when compared to the visible spectrum of light as seen through a prism, that slobgollion lies between irrigo and gant as a lower "frequency" more comparable to infrared.

Some types of snakes and bats can detect infrared radiation, and a few species of fish have been reported to be able to see near-infrared light. Insects and some non-human mammals can see near-ultraviolet light, and butterflies use it to communicate. Birds take this to the next level, as they have an entire fourth color receptor for ultraviolet rays (though only some have proper UV vision). Many birds also have specific patterns in their plumage that are only visible under UV light.

The term "slobgollion" is used in Herman Melville's novel Moby Dick to describe the remains of a sperm whale - hence the Implacable Detective's comment about spermaceti.[3] Legend has it that the term is whaler slang, but the veracity of this statement is unknown. Others propose that Melville meant to refer to (or conflate) "slumgullion," a term for meat stew, and/or "slubberdegullion," a term for a slobbering and unhygienic person.

References

  1. Slobgollion, Fallen London
  2. Slobgollion, Fallen London "Perhaps you'll never pronounce it quite like a Rubbery Man, but you finally know what 'slobgollion' means."
  3. 3.0 3.1 Slobgollion, Fallen London "It sounds like 'slobgollion' to me, but somehow I doubt that our friend is referring to clumps of spermaceti. If that's even the word he's attempting to pronounce, then it must mean something else."
  4. Slobgollion, Fallen London "It's that colour again – that eye-blistering, uncanny colour! Every light-beam bends, stretching into a spectrum: green, viric, blue, apocyan, and all the radiant rest. But there – right there! – somewhere between irrigo and oblivion, another colour floods through the net-of-the-world."
  5. 5.0 5.1 Slobgollion, Fallen London "Most humans will never perceive it, but for the first time, you're aware when you cross the threshold. Death's Country is always right here, cloaked by a colour that no living mind can fathom."
  6. Slobgollion, Fallen London "Do you remember what it's like to die? I don't. Nobody does. We remember Death's Country, but not how we got there, and not how we got here again. The journey itself is a fog."
  7. Slobgollion, Fallen London "Amber is impressionable. That chunk experienced everything that Mr McIntosh did. It won't let you feel exactly what he felt, but your senses should be more... elastic."
  8. Slobgollion, Fallen London "Sometimes you can still see it: before you fall asleep; on a Constable's truncheon; in a devil's grin. It drips from the Flit, and it washes against Wolfstack Docks. They serve it as a sauce at well-regarded restaurants. Every penny, when you look close, has at least one stain. The Shuttered Palace is spotted, and your lodgings are too. It wells up around you everywhere – and the deeper you stare into its eye-blistering abyss, the more you appreciate why it hurts. Just as blue might suggest sorrow; or red, anger; or green, tranquility; so, too, does slobgollion evoke emotions. But they aren't emotions that you're shaped to experience. You lack the synapses, the glands, and the lobes that would translate the pain into something different."
  9. Slobgollion, Fallen London "Bony hands reach over your shoulder. One plucks the Chunk of Dead Amber away. You see it vanish, sucked into the slobgollion, and then the slobgollion vanishes too."