(urth) First Exodus theory revised
Gerry Quinn
gerryq at indigo.ie
Fri Feb 11 10:26:27 PST 2011
From: "Lee Berman" <severiansola at hotmail.com>
>>Gerry Quinn:
>>So you are saying the Outsider really is a wooden toy? After all, that's
>>what the dream tells us and we certainly didn't know it.
>
> Ah, Gerry, your pugnacious, argumentative side is on full display in this
> post. Still, is
> probably better to not let that side get the best of you. For brevity,
> I'll just say that
> for me this view of the Outsider hearkens back to the wooden marionette we
> see early in
> BotNS in Severian's dream and forward to the mythic references to the
> Outsider that
> we encounter later.
You think the Outsider is Baldanders? Because that's who the marionette
represents in Severian's dream.
>>I've re-read the passage containing the dream, and in fact it has a very
>>clear and obvious interpretation, which isn't really about sex and
>>sexuality
>>although I was heading in the right direction.
>
> If it was clear and obvious, why didn't you get it the first time?
Fair enough, though I was on the way there. Let's say it becomes obvious
when one sees it. I believe most people will see it now that I've pointed
it out.
>>***************************************************
>>[using quotation marks for italics]
>>"I would claim her in that case, long before the end. As I have so many
>>others. As I am claiming Kypris even now because love always proceeds
>>from
>>me, real love, true love. First romance."
>>The Outsider was the dancing man on a toy, and the water the polished
>>toy-top on which he danced with Kypris, who was Hyacinth and Mother, too.
>>"First romance", sang the Outsider with the music box. "First romance".
>>It
>>was why he was called the Outsider. He was outside -
>>[Remora wakes him up]
>>***************************************************
>
>>Isn't it totally obvious what is being said here? Kypris is the goddess
>>of
>>LOVE. His love for Hyacinth and his love for his mother. Kypris,
>>Hyacinth,
>>Mother - they are all aspects of love, which proceeds from the Outsider.
>>There is absolutely no implication that they are the same human
>>personality.
>>In fact the idea is absurd, because we know who Silk means by Mother
>>[capitalised] - he means his adoptive parent....
>
>>Yes, there are important revelations. The Outsider is the God of Love.
>>that's about as important a revelation as you might hope for.
> I think "The Outsider is the God of Love" is an interesting interpretation
> worth considering.
> It could be condensed to a common modern Christian aphorism, "God is Love"
> and perhaps that's
> what Gene Wolfe intended to convey here.
No 'perhaps' about it, IMO.
> I don't see how that jibes with the wooden puppet or
> the later "God of Wine" association we get for The Outsider but I wouldn't
> dismiss your idea
> out of hand.
The puppet is just a transition in Silk's dream. The Dionysus reference is
a pretty unimportant aside showing that the Outsider has been known by many
names - several others are given throughout the Solar Cycle. I don't know
why some folks are trying to build it up - it has no apparent explanatory
power since the Outsider displays very little in the way of specifically
Dionysian associations.
> My own interpretation would focus on the idea that The Outsider has
> directly interacted with each
> of the women mentioned in a way which is significant to Silk.
Well, yes... the interaction is precisely that they represent to Silk the
Outsider in his aspect as Love.
> I would not dismiss Marc's consideration
> that the dream shows a thread of identity connection between these women
> as "absurd". "A who
> was B who was C" implies an ABC connection to me.
It's absurd to say that Silk's adoptive mother is Hyacinth. And when Silk
capitalises Mother, he means his adoptive mother.
- Gerry Quinn
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