(urth) Tzadkiel's form
Lee
severiansola at hotmail.com
Mon Sep 15 07:02:21 PDT 2014
>Marc Aramini: There is a statue of Nox/night in the second chapter of Book of the New Sun
>after Juturna casts him out, linking that scene directly with Abaia.
I'm not fully understanding you Marc. After the scene where Severian is rescued by an undine,
a "statue of Night atop the khan (inn) on the opposite bank (of Gyoll)" is mentioned. Are you
saying this statue is sufficient to dismiss mythology and connect "Night" to Abaia, rather than
Erebus?
Abaia and the undine are clearly aquatic creatures but the suggestion is that Erebus is associated
with an Antarctic mountain. For me, a statue atop an inn on the bank of a river is more evocative
of a mountain than water.
Moreover, of all the possible megatherians, Abaia is mentioned the most, but Erebus is a close
second. The other candidates (Scylla, Arioch, Ouroboros, Jurpari) are generally mentioned only
once. Given this, I would expect Erebus to make some sort of appearance in the story, somewhere.
Otherwise, why would Wolfe mention this particular name so many times?
I'll note that there is an old boatman in the Severian drowning scene who asks about a woman in
the river, though Severian (perhaps pretends to) misunderstand him.
Much later in the story, there is another old boatman who tells the story of a giant ship carrying
gigantic, notably pale-skinned warriors. There are women's voices coming up from the water and
a deeper male voice also. For me, the pale-skin and giant size are hinting at an Antarctic mountain
origin for these warriors. Perhaps what lies below the water represents Abaia and undines while the
ship and warriors above water represent Erebus.
Definitely ambiguous and intended to be. But I continue to think the distinction between Erebus
and Abaia is not as great as the distinction between one human being and another (similar
connection between the gigantic Mother on Blue and Great Scylla on Urth).
For Tzadkiel, we have animal versions, human versions, angel versions, male versions, female versions,
tiny versions and cosmic-sized versions. Might this not be a clue that there are Urthly creatures who
come in gigantic oceanic versions, smaller lake and river versions, land/mountain versions, cave versions,
human sized versions and animal versions?
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