SPACE The story is situated in a enchanted place where there is a long and circular river with a big luminouse dome on the top.
Behind the river there is a large garden with trees, flowers and different criatures. It is a strange place where you can't find where is the begin and where is the end of the way. You can find a lot of ways to walk and all of them cond.
There are also a lot of walls but they aren't continous and sometimes you can pierce them until you find two large and long stone towers with windows. There are a lot of torches around the way until arriving the castle where the queen lives and where the woman with red clothes plays her lute in the court.
It is a strange world, it's fantastic everything there are. It's like an inmortal place although you can find mortal things and lifes there.
Here you can read a fragment from his hypertext which can explain better something about where the story happens:
First moon of autumn is waning. But still it weaves a path on
the swift and noisy waters. Beyond the river, a strange
luminous dome hangs in the night. Its glittering surface isn't the
work of your own people. But surely it cannot be the crude
work of mortals.The fragrant woodland beckons to you with night secrets. But
none could be more wondrous than the glowing dome across
the river.
You are standing on a floor of many-colored tile. It chills your
bare feet but is very beautiful. An exquisitely carved rail runs
around three sides of the porch. A wall of marble towers above
you; at it's base a broad archway. Torches burn in glittering
stanchions on the rail. Their glow returns like starlight from the
quiet water below. But the sky is absolutely black.
The wall is built of stone, netted with ivy, and overhanging near
the top. You climb easily over the wall and drop down the far
side.The sounds and smells of the night forest are comfortable and
familiar. It is almost like waking from a dream.
Academic year 2002
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
©Garcia Vilaplana, Carolina
Universitat de València Press
garvica@alumni.uv.es