(urth) Urth-Earth links

David Stockhoff dstockhoff at verizon.net
Wed Oct 19 04:39:32 PDT 2011


On 10/19/2011 12:47 AM, Lee Berman wrote:
>> David Stockhoff: I'm not sure why Death + Sin = monsters, beyond that the whole
>> reason Adam and Eve were kicked out of Eden is that they sinned and thus
>> found mortality. Cue Pandora and her box.
>
> Perhaps the monsters figure in if we add Adam's first mate Lilith (Jahi) to the mix.
>
> After the failed relationship, she mated with a fallen angel and produced many of
>
> earth's mythic monsters. (also, child-stealing was her special province, a tradition
>
> which extended to faerie folk and kelpies and such creatures who seem to lurk in the
>
> shadows of Wolfe's stories)

I did not know that!

>> Jeff Wilson: How do we know they (the large pale pandours on the ship) are Erebus'?
>
> Well, I don't suppose we can know but I find it to be a reasonable conclusion.
>
> Erebus is said to command cold, pale warriors. The ship and the undines and the
>
> voices seem to clearly invoke Abaia. I take this scene as symbolic of the alliance
>
> between these two powers (or perhaps an even closer connection).
>
>
>> I don't see that skin color supports their Ereban origin. Fuegians would
>> have to sit at the back of an Alabaman bus, there's no Antarctic natives
>> to judge by, and arctic indigines like Sammi and Inuits are also darker
>> than the average caucasian.
>
>
> That's good anthropology.  But I interpret this idea in more literary terms.
>
> The text does say Erebus resides in the Antarctic, like his volcanic namesake,
>
> and that he commands pale warriors. Moreover, the most southern-residing character
>
> we meet is Hallvard, who is light in coloration. IIRC, Ascians are pale also, so I
>
> have tended to think that pale color= colder home environment is a connection Wolfe
>
> uses in this story. 	

> 	 	   		
You're ahead of me.



More information about the Urth mailing list