(urth) Oldest altar
Lee Berman
severiansola at hotmail.com
Fri Sep 17 06:36:09 PDT 2010
Not that I have a solution but a few vague observations:
> "When the first people came here, Auk, they were shown how we desired
> to be worshipped. Soon, they were made to forget.
Sounds like a conflict. One person or group reversed the actions of another.
>They did, but because they had seen what they had seen, a part of them remembered,
>and when they found our altars on the inner surface, they sacrificed as we had
>taught them. First of all, here."
So the reversal was only partial. Maybe it means human sacrifice was reduced to
animal sacrifice? Human sacrifice is most closely associated with Echidna, I think.
On Urth, Typhon demanded tribute of fair women and boys. What he did with them seems
illustrated in the painting of his court orgy. Perhaps shrewish Echidna did not look kindly
upon such attractive objects of her husband's attention and had her barbaric way with them
when Typhon was finished.
The name Scylla is invoked in BotNS. Echidna is not but there is mention of a book bound
in echidne hide. Perhaps it is a spelling error and spiny anteater is meant. But that seems
like an awkward, painful sort of binding for a book. Moreover "Echidne" is an alternate
spelling for the Mother of All Monsters. Having her skin used to bind books in Ultan's Library
could be part of the foul mood of her electronic avatar in the Whorl.
Regarding Scylla, I'll re-observe:
>She founded your Chapter as well, a parody of the state religion of her own whorl.
To me the word "own" might imply ownership more than just origin. Typhon ruled a multi-planet
empire. Perhaps Typhon installed Scylla as the ruler of another planet in his empire.
The Empire had much interstellar travel and trade so I don't see that everything on The Whorl
needed to come from Urth.
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