(urth) do the Hierogrammates *care* about the megatherians?
Jerry Friedman
jerry_friedman at yahoo.com
Fri May 20 22:07:05 PDT 2011
> From: James Wynn <crushtv at gmail.com>
...
> Here's the deal:
> 1) Abaia is called "Great Beast"
> 2) Megatherian means "of the great beast(s)" or "like great beast(s)"
Or, in particular, followers or even worshipers of the great beast(s).
> 3) "Megatherian" is not a "different word". It is the same term in a different
>language.
Almost the same term. "Great beast" isn't quite the same as your definitions,
which I agree with.
> To me, it seems to be not even much of a puzzle that the 17 Megatherians are
>names for the powerful giant aliens that do rule and/or have been ruling Urth.
To me it seems like one speculation, and not the most likely.
> The other options are that megatherians refers to a line of human rulers that
>have ruled under Abaia's authority or a line of human rulers that have
>fashioned themselves as being like Abaia or all the undersea powers.
Is there an objection to those options?
> But the various occurrence of '17' in Ascia and in the Commonwealth simply has
>to be related.
They don't, though I'd say there's a good chance that they are.
> And I think we have enough information to put the pieces together:
>
> There are 17 recognized "Great Beasts" who are ruling or have ruled Urth.
Part of Urth? And what makes you say they're ruling?
> The term "Casdroe
(I too mix up "Casdoe" and "Cadroe".)
> of 17 Stones" originates from a time when the 17 alien powers came to Urth and
>were actively fighting over territory.
I don't see where you get that idea.
> Ascia's Group of Seventeen was put together with those Great Beasts in mind.
>Either the founders originally recognized and even worshipped all of them or,
>as Dan'l suggests, each of the original members represented an alien power (not
>necessarily 'possessed' them). Now, apparently, Ascia is wholly dominated by
>Abaia and Erebus (or perhaps only Erebus's memory). When the Ascians say "Where
>the Group of Seventeen sit, there final justice is done" that refers to a human
>council.
>
> Why would people NOT write a history of the alien powers that have controlled
>and influenced life on Urth for millenia?
Because they have no material? It seems quite possible that people know very
little of those undersea powers' lives.
> And if you write a history of the activities of a sentient life, then that is
>a biography ("The Life of").
Usually a biography called "The Life of" is written when the person's whole life
is known, from beginning to end. An example is Suetonius' /Lives of the Twelve
Caesars/, the title that may have inspired /Lives of the Seventeen
Megatherians/. (By the way, that comparison favors your suggestion that the
megatherians could have been a "line" of rulers over my suggestion that they
were a "group" of contemporary rulers and yours that they were contemporaneous
monsters--but I don't think it's conclusive.)
> I think you really have to understand the literature Severian encounters as
>having been culled and translated from ancient literature by persons greatly
>separated in time, location, and culture with often very little knowledge of
>each other. That you or I would not call an inquiry into the history of a giant
>sentient sea creature a biography is irrelevant.
It's that I wouldn't call a biography of a living being a "Life".
It's not an insuperable objection. Maybe Ultan only gave part of the title, and
the full one is /Lives of the Seventeen Megatherians from Sprouting to the
Present Day/. Maybe, as you say, Blaithmaic's culture differed from ours and
the ancient Romans' in this way.
As I see it, all that your arguments prove is that your version is
self-consistent and explains everything. I agree aside from Cadroe, though I
think there are minor objections. But I also think the idea that the 17
megatherians were human rulers of Ascia is self-consistent and explains
everything aside from Cadroe, and I don't see any objections. At this point, I
think they're both speculations, and we can have our favorite, but I don't see
how we can say one is right and the other is wrong. And maybe there are other
explanations as well.
> Wolfe is twisting our expectations of language to give the sense of the eons
>before Severian's birth.
Unless he's using our expectations to communicate.
> I've tried to argue this before in the case of The Story of Frog. I think it
>is really key. Some guy (somewhere along the line in the Asian subcontinient)
>is researching the story of Frog (Ymir) and says "Look, the story of the Ymir
>(king = raja = frog) is the same as this other old story of 'Romulus' that I
>found. They just use different names. His own story doesn't mention Raja's
>mother's name so he uses Romulus's "Rhea Silvia". He has two names now for
>Raja's father, so he calls him "Mars-Typhon" just as the Greeks and the Romans
>used to combine the names of foreign gods with their own when they considered
>them equivalent. Later, another translator performs some speculative philology
>and translates the parents names as "Bird of the Woods" and "Spring Wind".
>"Raja" gets named Frog. And with that designation, a new wholly different
>translator says "Look! this old story 'The Jungle Book' is actually a
>mythologized tale of the life this fellow "Frog".
>
> Anyway, so it seems to me.
All of it seems possible to me, but I suspect that whichever of those Wolfe had
in mind, they were more playing with words than an attempt to create a story of
scholarship that readers could reconstruct.
Jerry Friedman
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