Future Floral Font

Odoric (also known as Odoryc, Odorous, Dendric, Dryadic, Floric, and Floral) will be a language of odors used by many races of intelligent tree and a few races of intelligent flower for an indefinite period between 15,000,000 and 20,000,000 years in the future. In its standard form among trees it will be based on odors released from special odorifera (scent-organs) on leaves or branches and wafted from tree to tree by the wind or air-diffusion. Because of the chemical nature of Odoric, a simple exchange of greetings will take several hours in favorable weather, a brief conversation several days, and the recitation of an average tree-saga a year or more.

Odoric will have innumerable and often mutually unintelligible dialects falling into three main families: Coniferous Odoric, as used by conifers; Deciduous Odoric, as used by non-coniferous deciduous trees; and Floral Odoric, as used by flowers. Its native written form will evolve late and be based on chemical markers laid down within leaves and roots as a mnemonic for individual trees. In this form, it cannot be represented directly by a script suitable for human eyes, but Odoric will also be written by a non-plant species: an advanced race of intelligent squirrel that will discover and transcribe the language about 28,000,000 years in the future. This Sciurine (Squirrel) Odoric is presented here in one of its several forms.

As can be seen, the letters, or osmemes, of the script fall into six eight-letter scent-series named after the closest equivalent scent in the present-day plant kingdom. The letters of each series will be distinguished in their wafted (that is, “spoken”) form by subtle chemical variations, although some may be created artificially to complete an incomplete series – eight will apparently have mystical significance for squirrels, perhaps under the influence of a mathematic mysticism among trees. For example, seems to be a homosme of , or to become so in some dialects of Odoric. Each letter is transcribed into Roman using the initial of the scent in the series to which it will belong, plus a subscripted digit indicating its place in the series: the second letter of the Jasmine series, , is therefore J2 and the fifth letter of the Honeysuckle series, , is H5.

There will be only two punctuation marks in this form of Sciurine Odoric: <  >, used like a comma, semi-colon, or colon, and <  >, used like a full stop. It is believed that these marks will have no wafted form and will be used purely for the convenience of the squirrels transcribing a passage of Odoric.

Sample text

Transliteration
L3H1C5L6C6 J6H4J8C2C5S1 L2H7L7C6V8V5 L7C2S6C4L2H7 C6H8J5H3C6J6H4 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L3H1C5L6C6V2, H3C6J6H4J8C2 H4J8C2C5S1J1V5J4 L2H7L7C6V8V5 L7C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L2H7L7C6V8V5 C2L3H1C5L6C6V2V7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L3H1C5L6C6V2, H7L7C6V8V5C5 L7C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L2L7C2H8C6V7S6 L2L7C2H8C6 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L3H1C5L6C6V2, S1J1V5J4L7C2 L7C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 C6V8V5C5C2L3H1C5 L3L2L7C2H8 C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2H8C6 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L3H1C5L6C6V2 C5C2L3H1C5L6 L7C2S6C4L2H7 C2L3H1C5L6C6V2 J4L7C2S6C4L2H7L7. C5S1J1V5J4 L3H1C5L6C6 L7C2S6C4L2H7 C2C5S1J1V5J4L7C2 L3H1C5L6C6V2, J6H4J8C2C5S1 L7C2S6C4L2H7 C2C5S1J1V5J4L7 L3H1C5L6C6V2, L2H7L7C6V8V5 H3C6J6H4J8C2 L7C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 J1V5J4L7C2S6 L3H1C5L6C6V2, L2L7C2H8C6V7S6 H7L7C6V8V5C5 L7C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 J8C2C5S1J1V5J4 L3H1C5L6C6V2, C5C2L3H1C5L6 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 S1J1V5J4L7C2 L7C2S6C4L2H7 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L2L7C2H8C6V7 L2L7C2H8C6 L7C2S6C4L2H7L7C6 L3H1C5L6C6V2 L7C2H8C6V7S6L6 L7C2S6C4L2H7 C2L3H1C5L6C6V2 J4L7C2S6C4L2H7L7.

Literal translation
sun rain with thou bless plural subj, leaf branch with thou plural wind stifle plural subj, root thou plural earth eat plural subj, seed thou plural number adj not be plural subj true thou stand future. but sun thou scorch subj, rain thou drown subj, wind leaf thou plural tear subj, earth root thou plural crush subj, worm plural seed thou plural each eat plural subj false thou stand future.

Idiomatic translation

“May the sun and rain bless thee, thy leaves and branches stifle the wind, thy roots swallow the (whole) earth, thy seeds be innumerable if thou art true. But may the sun scorch thee, the rain drown thee, the wind tear thy leaves, the earth crush thy roots, worms eat all thy seeds if thou art false.” – Traditional Odoric formula used to seal vows and treaties.

© 2005 Simon Whitechapel

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