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---
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id:
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aliases: []
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tags: []
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title: The Book of the New Sun
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---
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# The Book of the New Sun
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This page is for my notes of Gene Wolfe's _The Book of the New Sun_,
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which consists of
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1. [[wolfe_1980_shadow|The Shadow of the Torturer]]
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2. [[wolfe_1981_claw|The Claw of the Conciliator]]
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3. [[wolfe_1981_sword|The Sword of the Lictor]]
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4. [[wolfe_1982_citadel|The Citadel of the Autarch]]
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5. [[wolfe_1987_urth|The Urth of the New Sun]]
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> [!danger]
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> This page contains major spoilers the books listed above.
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> [!info] The Solar Cycle
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> _The Book of the New Sun_ (abbreviated BotNS) is itself
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> part of a trilogy of series called "The Solar Cycle"
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> which consists of
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>
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> 1. _The Book of the New Sun_
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> 2. _The Book of the Long Sun_
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> 3. _The Book of the Short Sun_
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>
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> I have not yet read the latter two series.
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## Characters
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This list is intended to be ordered
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such that entries give necessary context
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to those that follow them.
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### Severian
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Severian is an apprentice of the Order of the Seekers for Truth and Penitence,
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called the Guild of Torturers by outsiders.
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#I - Resurrection and Death]]
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> Of those values that Master Malrubius
|
||||
> (who had been master of apprentices when I was a boy)
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> had tried to teach me,
|
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> and that Master Palaemon still tried to impart,
|
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> I accepted only one: loyalty to the guild.
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|
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#X - The Last Year]]
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> ...though I loved the guild I hated it too---
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> not because of the pain it inflicted on clients
|
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> who must sometimes have been innocent,
|
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> and who must often have been punished
|
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> beyond anything that could be justified by their offences;
|
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> but because it seemed to me inefficient and ineffectual,
|
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> serving a power that was not only ineffectual but remote.
|
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> I do not know how better to express my feelings about it
|
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> than by saying that I hated it for starving and humiliating me
|
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> and loved it because it was my home,
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> hated and loved it because it was the exemplar of old things,
|
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> because it was weak, and because it seemed indestructible.
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>
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> Naturally I expressed none of this to Master Palaemon,
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> though I might have if Master Gurloes had not been present.
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|
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### Chatelaine Thecla
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The title "chatelaine" is borrowed from the French _châtelaine_,
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denoting the mistress of a castle or large household.
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but considering the role Thecla and her peers play
|
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for the Autarch I can't help but note the similarity to "chattel"
|
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(of unrelated etymology).
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|
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#VII - The Traitress]]
|
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> "Most of them have nobody at court---
|
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> can't afford it, or are afraid of it.
|
||||
> Those are the small ones.
|
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> The greater families must:
|
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> the Autarch wants a concubine he can lay hands on if they start misbehaving.
|
||||
> Now the Autarch can't play quadrille with five hundred women.
|
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> There are maybe twenty.
|
||||
|
||||
If the connection does exist, it is not diegetic.
|
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Thea, Thecla's half-sister, claims the title after Thecla's death.
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|
||||
### Masters of the Guild
|
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|
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I suspect the these three form some sort of trinity.
|
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|
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They are all described as aged and not well for it.
|
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|
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### Master Gurloes
|
||||
|
||||
Master Gurloes is the first of the three mentioned.
|
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It seems that where Palaemon is the master of apprentices,
|
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Gurloes handles most everything else.
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Gurloes sends Severian on his errand to fetch Thecla's books,
|
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and administers her torture.
|
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|
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#VII - The Traitress]]
|
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> Gurloes was one of the most complex men I have known,
|
||||
> because he was a complex man trying to be simple.
|
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> Not a simple, but a complex man's idea of simplicity.
|
||||
> Just as a courtier forms himself into something brilliant and involved,
|
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> midway between a dancing master and a diplomacist,
|
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> with a touch of assassin if needed,
|
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> so Master Gurloes had shaped himself to be the dull creature
|
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> a pursuivant or bailiff expected to see when he summoned the head of our guild,
|
||||
> and that is the only thing a real torturer cannot be.
|
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> The strain showed;
|
||||
> though every part of Gurloes was as it should have been, none of the parts fit.
|
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> He drank heavily and suffered from nightmares,
|
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> but he had the nightmares when he had been drinking,
|
||||
> as if the wine, instead of bolting the doors of his mind,
|
||||
> threw them open and left him staggering about in the last hours of the night,
|
||||
> trying to catch a glimpse of a sun that had not yet appeared,
|
||||
> a sun that would banish the phantoms from his big cabin
|
||||
> and permit him to dress and send the journeymen to their business.
|
||||
> Sometimes he went to the top of our tower, above the guns,
|
||||
> and waited there talking to himself,
|
||||
> peering through glass said to be harder than flint for the first beams.
|
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> He was the only one in our guild---Master Palaemon not excepted---
|
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> who was unafraid of the energies there
|
||||
> and the unseen mouths that spoke sometimes to human beings
|
||||
> and sometimes to other mouths in other towers and keeps.
|
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> He loved music, but he thumped the arm of his chair to it and tapped his foot,
|
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> and did so most vigorously to the kind he liked best,
|
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> whose rhythms were too subtle for any regular cadence.
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> He ate too much and too seldom,
|
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> read when he thought no one knew of it,
|
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> and visited certain of our clients, including one on the third level,
|
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> to talk of things none of us eavesdropping in the corridor outside could understand.
|
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> His eyes were refulgent, brighter than any woman's.
|
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> He mispronounced quite common words: urticate, salpinx, bordereau.
|
||||
> I cannot well tell you how bad he looked when I returned to the Citadel recently,
|
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> how bad he looks now.
|
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|
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### Master Palaemon
|
||||
|
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Master Palaemon is master of apprentices
|
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for the latter and larger part of Severian's apprenticeship.
|
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|
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XIII - The Lictor of Thrax]]
|
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> "Severian!" Master Palaemon exclaimed.
|
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> "You are not listening to me.
|
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> You were never an inattentive pupil in our classes."
|
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>
|
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> "I'm sorry. I was thinking about a great many things."
|
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>
|
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> "No doubt." For the first time he really smiled,
|
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> and for an instant looked his old self,
|
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> the Master Palaemon of my boyhood.
|
||||
|
||||
### Master Malrubius
|
||||
|
||||
Malrubius is the most interesting of the three
|
||||
because he is characterized exclusively by Severian's
|
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memory of the man after his death,
|
||||
while Severian himself was a young boy.
|
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|
||||
Of the master torturers of Severian's youth,
|
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Malrubius seems the most sympathetic in his mind
|
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|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1981_claw#XVI - Jonas]]
|
||||
> "It's all right," I told him. "Everything is all right, Jonas."
|
||||
> I despised myself for it,
|
||||
> but I was talking to him as if he were the youngest of apprentices,
|
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> just as, years before, Master Malrubius had spoken to me.
|
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|
||||
Malrubius appears to Severian when he is in peril,
|
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first when he is nearly drowned in the river Gyoll:
|
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|
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#II - Severian]]
|
||||
> Master Malrubius, who had died several years before,
|
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> was waking us by drumming on the bulkhead with a spoon:
|
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> that was the metallic din I heard.
|
||||
> I lay in my cot unable to rise,
|
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> though Drotte and Roche and the younger boys were all up,
|
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> yawning and fumbling for their clothes.
|
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> Master Malrubius's cloak was thrown back;
|
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> I could see the loose skin of his chest and belly
|
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> where the muscle and fat had been destroyed by time.
|
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> There was a triangle of hair there, and it was as gray as mildew.
|
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> I tried to call to him to tell him I was awake, but I could make no sound.
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> He began to walk along the bulkhead, still striking it with his spoon.
|
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> After what seemed a very long time he reached the port, stopped and leaned out.
|
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> I knew he was looking for me in the Old Yard below.
|
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|
||||
Again when he dangerously intoxicated after his raising to journeyman:
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XI - The Feast]]
|
||||
> ...sick though I was, I felt I needed to fear unreality no longer---
|
||||
> I was back in the world of solid objects and plain light.
|
||||
> My door opened a trifle and Master Malrubius looked in
|
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> as though to make certain I was all right.
|
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> I waved to him and he shut the door again.
|
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> It was some time before I recalled that he had died while I was still a boy.
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||||
|
||||
***
|
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|
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> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XXXIII - Five Legs]]
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> I am not sure how old I was when Master Malrubius died.
|
||||
> It was a number of years before I became captain,
|
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> so I must have been quite a small boy.
|
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> I remember very well, however,
|
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> how it was when Master Palaemon succeeded him as master of apprentices;
|
||||
> Master Malrubius had held that position
|
||||
> ever since I had been aware that such a thing existed,
|
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> and for weeks and perhaps months it seemed to me that Master Palaemon
|
||||
> (though I liked him as well or better)
|
||||
> could not be our real master in the sense that Master Malrubius had been.
|
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> The atmosphere of dislocation and unreality
|
||||
> was heightened by the knowledge that Master Malrubius was not dead or even away
|
||||
> ...
|
||||
> that he was, in fact, merely lying in his cabin,
|
||||
> lying in the same bed he had slept in each night
|
||||
> when he was still teaching and disciplining us.
|
||||
> There is a saying that unseen is as good as unbeen;
|
||||
> but in this case it was otherwise---
|
||||
> unseen, Master Malrubius was more palpably present than ever before.
|
||||
> Master Palaemon refused to assert that he would never return,
|
||||
> and so every act was weighed in double scales:
|
||||
> _"Would Master Palaemon permit it?"_ and
|
||||
> _"What would Master Malrubius say?"_
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XXXIII - Five Legs]]
|
||||
> Footfalls reached my ears yet hardly disturbed my rest,
|
||||
> heavy, yet softly pattering;
|
||||
> then the sound of breath, the snuffling of an animal.
|
||||
> If I was awake, my eyes were open;
|
||||
> but I was still so nearly in sleep that I did not turn my head.
|
||||
> The animal approached me and sniffed at my clothes and my face.
|
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> It was Triskele, and Triskele lay down with his spine pressed against my body.
|
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> It did not seem odd then that he had found me,
|
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> though I recall feeling a certain pleasure at seeing him again.
|
||||
>
|
||||
> Once more I heard footsteps,
|
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> now the slow, firm tread of a man;
|
||||
> I knew at once that it was Master Malrubius---
|
||||
> I could recall his step in the corridors under the tower
|
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> on the days when we made the rounds of the cells;
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> the sound was the same.
|
||||
> He came into the circle of my vision.
|
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> His cloak was dusty, as it always was save on the most formal occasions;
|
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> he drew it about him in the old way
|
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> as he seated himself on a box of properties.
|
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> "Severian. Name for me the seven principles of governance."
|
||||
>
|
||||
> It was an effort for me to speak, but I managed
|
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> (in my dream, if it was a dream) to say,
|
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> "I do not recall that we have studied such a thing, Master."
|
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>
|
||||
> "You were always the most careless of my boys,"
|
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> he told me, and fell silent.
|
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>
|
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> A foreboding grew on me;
|
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> I sensed that if I did not reply, some tragedy would occur.
|
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> At last I began weakly, "Anarchy ..."
|
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>
|
||||
> "That is not governance, but the lack of it.
|
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> I taught you that it precedes all governance.
|
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> Now list the seven sorts."
|
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>
|
||||
> "Attachment to the person of the monarch.
|
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> Attachment to a bloodline or other sequence of succession.
|
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> Attachment to the royal state.
|
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> Attachment to a code legitimizing the governing state.
|
||||
> Attachment to the law only.
|
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> Attachment to a greater or lesser board of electors, as framers of the law.
|
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> Attachment to an abstraction conceived as including the body of electors,
|
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> other bodies giving rise to them, and numerous other elements, largely ideal."
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "Tolerable. Of these, which is the earliest form, and which the highest?"
|
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>
|
||||
> "The development is in the order given, Master," I said.
|
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> "But I do not recall that you ever asked before which was highest."
|
||||
>
|
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> Master Malrubius leaned forward,
|
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> his eyes burning brighter than the coals of the fire.
|
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> "Which is highest, Severian?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "The last, Master?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "You mean attachment to an abstraction conceived as including the body of electors,
|
||||
> other bodies giving rise to them, and numerous other elements, largely ideal?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "Yes, Master."
|
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>
|
||||
> "Of what kind, Severian, is your own attachment to the Divine Entity?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> I said nothing. It may have been that I was thinking;
|
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> but if so, my mind was too much filled with sleep to be conscious of its thought.
|
||||
> Instead, I became profoundly aware of my physical surroundings.
|
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> The sky above my face in all its grandeur
|
||||
> seemed to have been made solely for my benefit,
|
||||
> and to be presented for my inspection now.
|
||||
> I lay upon the ground as upon a woman,
|
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> and the very air that surrounded me
|
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> seemed a thing as admirable as crystal and as fluid as wine.
|
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>
|
||||
> "Answer me, Severian."
|
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>
|
||||
> "The first, if I have any."
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "To the person of the monarch?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "Yes, because there is no succession."
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "The animal that rests beside you now would die for you.
|
||||
> Of what kind is his attachment to you?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "The first?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> There was no one there.
|
||||
> I sat up. Malrubius and Triskele had vanished,
|
||||
> yet my side felt faintly warm.
|
||||
|
||||
Severian assumes that the attachment developed most recently
|
||||
must be the "highest",
|
||||
but Malrubius points out that the bond between man and God,
|
||||
or between man and dog must surely be higher.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Lessons
|
||||
|
||||
These are lessons Severian attributes to Malrubius.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XIII - The Lictor of Thrax]]
|
||||
> hope is a psychological mechanism unaffected by external realities.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XXIV - The Flower of Dissolution]]
|
||||
> Urth's fires \[are\] long dead,
|
||||
> ...
|
||||
> it \[is\] more than possible
|
||||
> that they had cooled long before men had risen from the position of the beasts
|
||||
> to cumber her face with their cities.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1981_claw#XXII - Personifications]]
|
||||
> The rain we see in spring
|
||||
> is the same water we saw running the gutters the year before.
|
||||
|
||||
### The Claw of the Conciliator
|
||||
|
||||
It is helpful to analyze the claw as a character
|
||||
since its actions are not understood to be Severian's
|
||||
until very late in the series.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1982_citadel#VIII - The Pelerine]]
|
||||
> "It is a claw---" I began.
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "That was only a flaw at the heart of the jewel.
|
||||
> The Conciliator was a man, Severian the Lictor,
|
||||
> and not a cat or a bird."
|
||||
|
||||
### Agia
|
||||
|
||||
In [[wolfe_1981_claw#VII - The Assassins]]
|
||||
Severian thwarts Agia's attempt at revenge,
|
||||
but spares her life.
|
||||
|
||||
### Dorcas
|
||||
|
||||
In [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XXII - Dorcas]] an unnamed old man
|
||||
is searching for his late wife Cas's body in the Lake of Birds.
|
||||
|
||||
Dorcas herself is not mentioned until she appears
|
||||
(from the water, out of nowhere)
|
||||
in the _next_ chapter.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XXIV - The Flower of Dissolution]]
|
||||
> Dorcas plucked a water hyacinth and put it in her hair.
|
||||
> Except for the vague spot of white on the bank some distance ahead,
|
||||
> it was the first flower I had seen in the Garden of Endless Sleep;
|
||||
> I looked for others, but saw none.
|
||||
|
||||
The hyacinth is a symbol of rebirth.
|
||||
Hyacinthus was a lover of Apollo,
|
||||
whom Apollo accidentally killed.
|
||||
Apollo created the hyacinth flower from the man's blood.
|
||||
|
||||
The biblical Dorcas was resurrected by Saint Peter
|
||||
after dying from illness.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!note] The Appearance of the Water Hyacinth
|
||||
> The previous quote leads immediately into a monologue
|
||||
> where Narrator Severian speculates on the potential for Urth's rebirth.
|
||||
> The lead-in is contrived
|
||||
> and the flower's appearance is terribly convenient,
|
||||
> I suspect some aspect of the telling
|
||||
> has been influenced by artistic license.
|
||||
|
||||
### Baldanders
|
||||
|
||||
### Jonas
|
||||
|
||||
Jonas is a space-faring man
|
||||
|
||||
He has a prosthetic hand,
|
||||
which may be accurately called "bionic"
|
||||
since it's only on close inspection
|
||||
that Severian notices it isn't simply a gauntlet.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1981_claw#XIII - The Claw of the Conciliator]]
|
||||
> "Where is this island?"
|
||||
>
|
||||
> He looked at me curiously.
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "Is it far from the coast?
|
||||
> I've always wanted to see Uroboros,
|
||||
> though I suppose it is dangerous."
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "Very far," Jonas said in a flat voice.
|
||||
> "Very far indeed. Wait a moment."
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1981_claw#XVI - Jonas]]
|
||||
> He stirred and muttered,
|
||||
> "We must get power to the compressors before the air goes bad."
|
||||
|
||||
### Hethor
|
||||
|
||||
Also a spacefarer
|
||||
|
||||
### Ymar
|
||||
|
||||
Severian's predecessor to the autarchy.
|
||||
He takes several forms in Severian's narrative
|
||||
before they meet in truth.
|
||||
|
||||
Proprietor of the House Azure
|
||||
|
||||
## Creatures
|
||||
|
||||
### Khaibits
|
||||
|
||||
Khaibits are clones.
|
||||
|
||||
> [[wolfe_1982_citadel#XXIV - The Flier]]
|
||||
> They're khaibits, of course,
|
||||
> grown from the body cells of exultant women
|
||||
> so an exchange of blood will prolong the exultants' youth.
|
||||
|
||||
### Exultants
|
||||
|
||||
Exultants are people of especially noble houses
|
||||
that are considerably taller than baseline.
|
||||
|
||||
It is almost certain that exultants are baseline humans
|
||||
whose alien features are a result of the youth-extending procedures they undergo.
|
||||
The process as described by [[#Ymar]] has much in common
|
||||
with the one used by [[#Baldanders]]
|
||||
|
||||
## Symbols
|
||||
|
||||
### Teeth
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#VII - The Traitress]]
|
||||
> She had narrow, very white teeth in a wide mouth...
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#X - The Last Year]]
|
||||
> "That is well," Master Gurloes said,
|
||||
> and suddenly they both smiled,
|
||||
> Master Palaemon showing his few old crooked teeth,
|
||||
> and Master Gurloes his square yellow ones,
|
||||
> like the teeth of a dead nag.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1981_claw#XXIII - Jolenta]]
|
||||
> She smiled again, displaying perfect teeth.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1980_shadow#XV - Baldanders]]
|
||||
> ...and so I asked \[Baldanders\] what his dreams had been,
|
||||
> though I was somewhat in awe of him.
|
||||
>
|
||||
> "Of caverns below, where stone teeth dripped blood ...
|
||||
> Of arms dismembered found on sanded paths,
|
||||
> and things that shook chains in the dark."
|
||||
> He sat at the edge of the bed,
|
||||
> cleaning sparse and surprisingly small teeth with one great finger.
|
||||
|
||||
> [!quote] [[wolfe_1987_urth#XLVII - The Sunken City]]
|
||||
> When I looked down again,
|
||||
> a yellowed skull lay at my feet, half-buried in the mud.
|
||||
> I picked it up; the lower jaw was gone,
|
||||
> but otherwise it was whole and showed no injury.
|
||||
> From its size and unworn teeth,
|
||||
> I guessed it to have been a boy's or a young man's.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user