Stephen King's the Dark Tower: The Complete Concordance Revised and Updated (81 page)

BOOK: Stephen King's the Dark Tower: The Complete Concordance Revised and Updated
4.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

MAERLYN’S HOUSE:
According to some
folken
in MID-WORLD, the sorcerer MAERLYN and the evil COVENANT MAN of GILEAD were one and the same person. According to these gossips, the once-good wizard had been turned evil by some of the artifacts of the OLD PEOPLE that he found in the ENDLESS FOREST. These artifacts blackened him to the bottom of his soul. Such folk said that Maerlyn kept a magic house in the forest forever after, and that time stood still there. While staring into the Covenanter’s magic silver pail, Tim saw a vision of Maerlyn’s house. It was a tall building with many gables and many chimneys. However, we can’t be certain whether Maerlyn’s house actually ever existed. When Tim met the wizard, the sorcerer was trapped in the shape of a TYGER and was living in a cage near the NORTH FOREST KINNOCK DOGAN. Later, the wizard hinted that he lived in a cave with nothing but a single table and a pallet. The only thing we can be certain of is that Maerlyn and the Covenanter were not the same person. In fact, they were enemies. W:170, W:183, W:207

ROSS-KELLS STAKE:
BIG JACK ROSS and BIG BERN KELLS had four or five small stakes just off the IRONWOOD TRAIL. At least one of these was the last stub before the FAGONARD swamp. (In fact, the end of the Ironwood Trail was marked by a sign written by Ross: IRONWOOD TRAIL ENDS HERE. BEYOND LIES FAGONARD. TRAVELER, BEWARE!) Ross and Kells cut ironwood on their remote stake, where the trees were big. Unfortunately, it was also on one of these stakes that Big Kells murdered his partner, though he hid the body on a fallow stub of the COSINGTON-MARCHLY STAKE. W:110, W:133, W:182

FARMING VILLAGES OF THE MIDDLES:
The avaricious COVENANT MAN collected taxes in these villages before he visited TREE. W:114

TREE VILLAGE:
The fairy-tale village of Tree was the last town in what was then considered civilized country. It was located on the very edge of NORTH’RD BARONY, nestled close to the ironwood-rich ENDLESS FOREST. There were only two locks in Tree. One was on the JAIL. The other was on GITTY’S SALOON. W:110, W:111–146, W:164–89, W:204, W:206, W:210, W:224, W:228, W:245, W:251, W:252, W:255, W:257–64, W:268

CEMETERY:
W:255

CONSTABLE HOWARD’S HOUSE:
After BERN KELLS beat his wife NELL into blindness, it was impossible to find the constable. Unfortunately for Nell, Kells committed his crime while the COVENANT MAN was in town. Whenever the Covenant Man came to TREE, Constable Howard made himself scarce. W:166–67

COSINGTON COTTAGE:
Before the death of BIG ROSS, the Ross family frequently ate meals at the Cosington Cottage. W:149, W:178

COSINGTON-MARCHLY STORAGE SHED:
W:171–72

DEAF RINCON’S BARN:
The murderer BIG BERN KELLS waited out the STARKBLAST in Deaf Rincon’s barn. W:262, W:263

DESTRY FARM:
Farmer Destry was one of the biggest farmers in Tree. Not long after his father died, TIM ROSS got two weeks work cutting hay on this farm. Destry’s east field sat next to BERN KELLS’s place. Hence, he wanted to buy it. (Kells sold to Baldy Anderson instead.) Destry had a framed picture of a rifle in his parlor. W:116–17, W:120, W:172, W:186

GATHERING HALL:
When TIM ROSS returned home to TREE after his adventures in the Endless Forest, he hoped that one of the local people had rescued his mother from the dangers of the STARKBLAST and had brought her to the village Gathering Hall. Instead, he found his mother in their cottage, where she was being cared for by the good WIDOW SMACK. W:258

GOODVIEW COTTAGE (ROSS COTTAGE):
The Rosses’ cottage, Goodview, sat less than a wheel from the edge of the ENDLESS FOREST. The house was tiny but cozy. (The sitting room was so small that when BIG JACK ROSS stood in the middle and stretched out his arms, he could touch the opposite walls.) After NELL ROSS was widowed and married BIG BERN KELLS, Goodview became the Kellses’ cottage. W:109, W:110, W:112, W:113–24, W:131, W:149, W:153–56, W:164–71, W:173–74, W:175, W:178, W:180, W:181, W:251, W:254, W:255, W:258–64

GITTY’S SALOON:
Gitty’s Saloon was one of only two buildings in Tree Village to have a lock on it. The other was the Tree JAIL. It was at this saloon that the COVENANT MAN discovered that BIG BERN KELLS had slipped the rope with his partner’s widow. At that point, the Covenanter knew that Kells was guilty of murder. All that remained was for him to find the incriminating evidence, namely Ross’s dead body. W:118, W:119, W:127–28, W:129, W:136, W:139
(indirect),
W:141, W:161, W:173

JAIL:
Tree’s jail was one of only two buildings in the village to have a lock. The other was the SALOON. BIG KELLS spent time in both of these buildings.
In his younger days (and especially after his friend BIG JACK ROSS married NELL ROSS), Bern Kells often ended up in jail for his drunken and disorderly behavior. W:118, W:136, W:168

KELLS COTTAGE:
BERN KELLS sold his cottage to BALDY ANDERSON so that he could pay the COVENANT MAN the taxes due for both himself and his new wife, NELL ROSS. (Kells didn’t get a very good price for his old home.) W:117, W:125–26, W:133

MAIN ROAD (TREE ROAD, HIGH STREET):
In order to get to the IRONWOOD TRAIL, Tree’s woodsmen had to travel down Tree’s Main Road, or high street. (Farther from the town, this street was called Tree Road.) W:110, W:126, W:146, W:174, W:175, W:179, W:255

MARCHLY COTTAGE:
Before BIG ROSS’s death, the Ross family frequently ate meals at the Marchly cottage. W:149, W:173

STAPE BROOK:
Stape Brook originated in the clear spring that welled up between the ROSS COTTAGE and barn. W:180, W:257–58

STOKES BURYING PARLOR AND SMITHY:
Stokes Burying Parlor was located behind his smithy. At the back of the parlor was a little room with forest scenes painted on the walls. In the center was an ironwood bier for the dead. This open space represented the clearing at the end of life’s path. W:173, W:176–78, W:255

TOWN STORE (MERCANTILE):
When TIM ROSS cut hay for FARMER DESTRY, he was paid in scrip for the town store. W:120

TREE RIVER:
When the STARKBLAST blasted into Tree, it blew the town sawmill into this river. W:257

TREE SAWMILL:
At his steppa’s insistence, TIM ROSS worked at the Tree Sawmill for a while. The STARKBLAST blew the mill into TREE RIVER. W:111, W:127, W:129, W:130, W:172, W:202, W:206, W:257

WIDOW SMACK’S COTTAGE:
Widow Smack’s cottage doubled as the Tree schoolhouse. It was located at the end of the high street, where the woodland scents were stronger. W:112, W:146, W:164, W:173–75, W:184–89, W:255

NORTHWEST BARONIES

BLAINE’s twin mono PATRICIA headed to the Northwest Baronies. We are not told any of their names.

III:342

O

OAKLEY

CLAY REYNOLDS and CORAL THORIN escaped the carnage of HAMBRY and set off to become outlaws. They became lovers and formed a gang of bank robbers and coach thieves. They were eventually killed by the sheriff of Oakley.

IV:623

OLD CALLA ROAD

See
BORDERLANDS

ONNIE’S FORD

See
MEJIS, BARONY OF

ORACLE OF THE MOUNTAINS

See
STONE CIRCLES
,
in
PORTALS

ORANGE GROVE

See
MEJIS, BARONY OF
: HAMBRY

OUR LADY OF SERENITY

See
BORDERLANDS
: CALLA BRYN STURGIS

OUTER ARC

In
Wizard and Glass,
we learned that geographical terms such as
Outer Arc
were metaphorical rather than literal. During Roland’s youth, backwater baronies such as MEJIS, which existed far from the civilized hub of the IN-WORLD baronies, were known as OUT-WORLD baronies or Outer Arc baronies. These relative terms of
in, out,
and
outer
make sense when you consider them in terms of the metaphysical map of MID-WORLD which Roland drew in
The Waste Lands.
On that map, the DARK TOWER sat at the center of the world-circle, and the PORTALS (watched over by the GUARDIANS) sat at its periphery. If this metaphor of the world-circle is applied to the human world, then In-World, and the In-World baronies such as NEW CANAAN, sit at the center of the map, since they form the hub of civilization. Cultural backwaters, which are both physically and psychically distant from the hub, are considered part of the Outer Arc. In
Wolves of the Calla,
we learn that most of Mid-World’s coffee was grown in the southern reaches of the Outer Arc.

V:89

OUT-WORLD

In
Wizard and Glass,
we learned that, during Roland’s youth, geographical terms such as
Out-World
were more metaphorical than literal. To the IN-WORLD citizens of GILEAD (barony seat of NEW CANAAN), those baronies located far from the hub of civilization were part of Out-World. They existed “out there,” on the OUTER ARC of human culture. In
Wolves of the Calla,
the same metaphorical use of terms applies, but the center, or hub, of the world changes. To the people of CALLA BRYN STURGIS, the Callas of the BORDERLANDS form the hub of the known world. Hence, any people who travel to the borderlands from other parts of MID-WORLD are considered
outworlders.

The terms
In-World
and
Out-World
may also be metaphorical references to the metaphysical map of Mid-World which Roland drew in
The Waste Lands.
According to this map, Mid-World is shaped like a circle, with the DARK TOWER at its center and the BEAMS radiating out from it and terminating in twelve PORTALS. Just as the Tower is the center of the Universe, Gilead and the In-World baronies are the centers of human culture. Backwaters such as MEJIS
are on the Outer Crescent of the “civilized” world.
See also
MID-WORLD
,
listed in this section, and
END-WORLD,
in
PORTALS

During Roland’s youth, the people of Gilead considered the western lands, once served by the WESTERN LINE, to be part of Out-World. By the time Roland won his guns this area was overrun with harriers and roving bands of outlaws who called themselves land-pirates. It was essentially the lawless kingdom of JOHN FARSON, who was himself no more than a glorified land-pirate. The town of DEBARIA sat on the edge of Out-World. In fact, Roland thought of HIGH SHERIFF HUGH PEAVY as the High Sheriff of the Debaria Outers.

IV:213, IV:295, IV:350
(Crescent),
IV:359
(Outer Crescent),
IV:436, IV:447, IV:506, IV:653, V:8, V:312
(outworlders),
V:344
(outworlders),
V:402
(outworlders),
V:418
(outworlders),
VII:176, W:41, W:55, W:237

OUTWORLD, GATEWAY OF

See
DOGAN
: NORTH FOREST KINNOCK DOGAN,
in
PORTALS

P

PASS O’ THE RIVER (TOWN)

A MID-WORLD town whose bar,
FOREST TREES,
had a female bartender.

IV:382

PEABERRY ROAD

See
BORDERLANDS
: CALLA BRYN STURGIS

PENNILTON

Mr. RICHARD STOCKWORTH (ALAIN’s alias in HAMBRY) was supposed to have come from this town.

IV:148, IV:183

PIANO RANCH

See
MEJIS, BARONY OF
: HAMBRY

PORLA

The people of RIVER CROSSING believe that the civil wars of MID-WORLD began in either this land or in GARLAN.

III:242

PORTALS

See
DOORWAYS BETWEEN WORLDS
and
BEAMS, PATH OF THE
,
both in
PORTALS

PRICETOWN

Roland passes through Pricetown on his way to TULL. He buys a mule here.

I:22, I:23, III:42

R

RACEY’S CAFÉ

See
DEBARIA, BARONY OF

RADIUM MINES

See
ELURIA

RAILROAD

SUBWAY:
In
The Gunslinger,
JAKE and Roland were attacked by SLOW MUTANTS in this underground subway system that ran beneath the CYCLOPEAN MOUNTAINS. I:154–58
(following tracks),
I:174–92
(following tracks)

WESTERN LINE:
Once the Western Line ran a thousand wheels or more, from NEW CANAAN to the MOHAINE DESERT. However, in the years before GILEAD fell, it went to DEBARIA and no farther. Beyond there, many tracklines had been destroyed by washouts and ground-shakers. Others had been taken up by harriers and roving bands of outlaws who called themselves land-pirates. Running along the little bit of remaining track was the special two-car train known as SMA’ TOOT. Roland and JAMIE DeCURRY took Sma’Toot all the way to Debaria, where they investigated the SKIN-MAN murders. W:40–44
(Roland, Jamie, and Sma’ Toot)

REDBIRD TWO MINE

See
BORDERLANDS
: CALLA BRYN STURGIS: ARROYO COUNTRY

REDPATH KRA-TEN

See
BORDERLANDS
: CALLA BRYN STURGIS: MANNI CALLA

REDPATH-A-STURGIS

See
BORDERLANDS
: CALLA BRYN STURGIS: MANNI CALLA

RILEA

See
BLAINE’S ROUTE

RIM, THE

See
BORDERLANDS
: GRAND CRESCENT

RIMROCKS

A few days before the final gunslinger battle of JERICHO HILL, Roland’s reinforcements (DEMULLET’S COLUMN) were ambushed and slaughtered here. ALAIN JOHNS heard the news, but when he galloped back to camp after midnight to inform his friends about the disaster, he was accidentally shot. Alain died under Roland and CUTHBERT’s guns.

Other books

For Such a Time by Breslin, Kate
Mirror of Shadows by T. Lynne Tolles
Darkest Dawn by Katlyn Duncan
The Space Between Promises by Jeffers, Rachel L.
The Jaguar Knights by Dave Duncan
Between Now & Never by Laura Johnston
Emily Goes to Exeter by M. C. Beaton