(urth) Oannes
David Stockhoff
dstockhoff at verizon.net
Fri Mar 16 18:13:32 PDT 2012
And isn't Oannes the Babylonian fish god?
On 3/16/2012 6:35 PM, Andrew Mason wrote:
> I mentioned a while ago the way in which, in Long Sun/Short Sun, the
> lesser gods can sometimes become manifestations of the true God,
> culminating in the Rajan's statement near the end that 'insofar as
> they are gods at all they are him'. I've realised that there is
> something similar in _New Sun_, in the Oannes passage (SOTL 31), 'I
> did not believe in Oannes or fear him. But I knew, I thought, whence
> he came - I knew that there is an all-pervasive power in the universe
> of which every other is the shadow. I knew that my conception of that
> power was as laughable (and as serious) as Oannes.' The power is
> identified as the Increate at the end of the chapter.
>
> Later, in _Urth_, Severian says that he has become the Oannes of his
> people. Might this be a clue to what Wolfe means by saying that
> Severian is a form of the Outsider?
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