(urth) Faterh Inire Theory cont.
Jerry Friedman
jerry_friedman at yahoo.com
Sun Dec 12 18:21:36 PST 2010
From: Gerry Quinn <gerryq at indigo.ie>
From: "David Stockhoff" <dstockhoff at verizon.net>
> Wooden ships used to be carefully and colorfully painted. And rooms in those
>ships would be opened up for dinner and divided up for sleep, much as larger
>rooms in older buildings have been divided up for cubicles or apartments for
>about 100 years now.
>
> But that's different. And imagine the problems you'd have with painted rooms in
>a starship, even without flaking paint.
> Actually, I can't.
...
Me neither.
>> I like the thought that clouds relate to the Fortunate Cloud. But painted
>>vaulted ceilings tend to
>> have skies painted on them. Such a ceiling could not be more ordinary in a
>>palace.
I agree. Everything we know about the antechamber seems normal for a palace in
which an
underground waiting room was expanded as Jonas describes.
> It would be quite remarkable in a starship.
...
Not so much for the painting, in my opinion, as for the vaulting. If rooms in a
starship have vaulted
ceilings, you get lots of strangely shaped spaces between them and the floor
above. Of course,
those spaces /could/ be just right for the flux capacitors...
> Anyway, I don't want to get into a war over such details. I am defending the
>theory, but as I said I
> am not wedded to it. And our interpretations of BotNS do not stand or fall on
>the question of
> whether the Antechamber was or was not part of Jonas's starship.
No, wait! This has to be do-or-die!
> But I ask again: has anyone any better explanation for Jonas's (confirmed)
>architectural observations
> and the other things I mentioned?
He just recognizes that the antechamber looks like a bunch of rooms joined into
one.
What details does he have? The room is big, with a low ceiling, and he
recognizes it as a drop ceiling.
There are lots of alcoves and niches around the walls, presumably the outlines
of the original rooms,
and there's a uniform tile floor. That might be enough. Big rooms usually have
high ceilings; this one's
low ceiling suggests the ceiling isn't the original. And big rooms in a palace
might be expected to have
neat, symmetrical plans; this one's irregular outlines, probably shaped like
parts of rooms, would also
be a clue.
Since no pillars are mentioned, maybe only the walls are original. You seem to
be suggesting that
Jonas recognizes something about them, which Severian never mentions, as
starship architecture.
But I think there's enough other information for him to figure out what
happened.
Stay tuned for the next episode of This Old House Absolute.
Jerry Friedman
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