(urth) do the Hierogrammates *care* about the megatherians?
Jerry Friedman
jerry_friedman at yahoo.com
Sun May 22 21:43:14 PDT 2011
> From: António Pedro Marques <entonio at gmail.com>
> No dia 22/05/2011, às 20:55, Jerry Friedman <jerry_friedman at yahoo.com>
>escreveu:
>
> > I have to say there is another
> > connection that people have stressed: Severian calls Abaia a "great beast",
> > "megatherians" means entities connected to the great beast(s) somehow, and
> > Father Inire says the Ascians are the "slaves of Abaia".
I keep saying that, but saying it doesn't make it true. He refers to the
attacks from Ascia as "Abaia's incursions". Still, Abaia seems to rule Ascia,
which is what's needed for the connection.
> > That makes it
> > considerably more likely that the two 17s are connected
>
> The part where that argument doesn't work is where there is no evidence at all
>that the great beasts are 17, and in fact that looks like an impossibly large
>number for us to only hear about two.
>
No, you're rebutting other people's argument. I'm the one saying the 17
megatherians might be the Group of 17.
By the way, LU says we know about four giant enemies of the New Sun, though
Arioch and Scylla are mentioned only once each.
> From: David Stockhoff <dstockhoff at verizon.net>
> On 5/22/2011 3:55 PM, Jerry Friedman wrote:
> >> From: David Stockhoff<dstockhoff at verizon.net>
> > ...
> >
> >> I have my own theory.
> >>
> >> I always assumed that the form of the title "Lives of the Megatherians"
>was a
> >> simple imitation of Butler's "Lives of the Saints." Based on this, one
>would
> >> think that the Beasts are the opposite of saints in a world even more
>fallen
> >> than our own: human beings who are evil rather than saintly, and who are
>in
> >> some sense "exalted" by their evil, thus deserving such treatment. But
>the
> >> saints are not numbered. And we don't know from this what evil the Beasts
>did
> >> except that it must have been great.
> >>
> >> Upon googling, I found that another precedent is Suetonius' "Lives of the
> >> Twelve Caesars"---which I always knew as simply "The Twelve Caesars."
> > ...
> >
> > Wikipedia says the original title was De vita Caesarum, with no number.
> Even better.
> >> I don't see anything to connect the Beasts with Ascia or Abaia except
the
> >> number 17, and again I think the whole significance of "17" is that it is
>not
> >> "12." It is the thematic opposite of 12. 12 is the "complete" number
>because it
> >> is highly divisible. 17 is "very" prime, i.e., highly indivisible.
> > I think that may be part of it, though 17 is no more prime than 13 or 19.
> >
> > [added later]
>
> Depends how you look at it. There are patterns among primes that I don't
> pretend to understand. But some primes may be rarer than others.
...
I see you meant that some have rarer properties than others.
> > Also, this is fiction,
> > not history. I don't think Wolfe anticipated what significance readers
>would
> > find in every tiny detail, but this one seems to have a good chance of
being
> > purposeful.
>
> I agree this is fiction, and that is my point. My theory is derived 100%
> from available books. Not history. Mine is a literary argument, not a
> historical one.
>
> I think the connection you describe is speculation and must remain so.
I agree. However, the speculative connection I described is entirely from the
books. The one you described also involves history (Butler's /Lives of the
Saints/, Suetonius' /On the Lives of the Caesars/--or is that what you meant by
"available books"?).
Jerry Friedman
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