(urth) Like a good Neighbor
James Wynn
crushtv at gmail.com
Wed Nov 23 11:29:53 PST 2011
> Dan'l Danehy-Oakes wrote:
> OK, let's see if I can summarize this correctly. You believe that
>
> (a) the Neighbors are sentient trees native to Blue, who can astrally
> project into the form the Narrator meets;
>
> (b) the inhumi are not-natively-sentient reptiles or amphibians native
> to Green, who take on the nature of what they feed on (at least in
> their offspring);
>
> (c) because they fed on Neighbors, who are trees, the inhumi "take on"
> a sort of tree-ishness and become lianas.
>
> Is that correct?
Precisely correct except that "reptile" is an analogy. One should not
assume a true reptile nature.
As the Rajan says:
"These people, like people everywhere here, seem to fear that an inhumu
may live on even with its head severed. That is not the case, of course;
but I cannot help wondering how the superstition originated and became
so widespread. Certainly the inhumi have no bones as we understand them.
Possibly their skeletons are cartilage, as those of some sea-creatures
are. On Green, Geier maintained that the inhumi are akin to slugs and
leeches. No one, I believe, took him seriously; yet it is certain that
once dead they decay very quickly, though they are difficult to kill and
can survive for weeks and even months without the blood that is their
only food. "
~ OBW chapter 4
Additionally, the Rajan notes that there is a general belief that inhumi
can survive even after decapitation. He asserts that this is not true,
but ponders how it came to be so generally believed. This might be
reference to the Rajan's lianna staff that (it is implied) is still
sentient. Additionally, HePenSheep says that the Neighbors fires are
burning liannas.
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