<span style>"I've long thought the Old Leech was the Cumaean in disguise. The Old Leech is connected to</span><br style><span style>Vodulus as is the Cumaean (through Hildegrin). The lamia were snake-women who stole children</span><br style>
<span style>to drink their blood (remembering the poor youth Mamas in the story).</span><br style><br style><span style>I also think the Cumaean is in disguise as the necromancer, Ceryx. I tend to think all the encounters between the Cumaean and Severian, perhaps even the first in the Witches Tower were</span><br style>
<span style>pre-arranged, not chance meetings. I think the (never fulfilled) purpose of the meetings was to wrest from Severian the secret of the one (christ-like) power the pagan deities (even Tzadkiel)</span><br style><span style>did not possess: true resurrection, be it the life of a human being or a planet."</span><div>
<font color="#222222" face="arial, sans-serif"><br></font></div><div>The Old Leech as the Cumaean in disguise is an intriguing notion, but what other evidence do you have of this? The blood bat that attacks Severian at the ziggurat is also an indicative of vampirism, and everything about the Old Leech character seems to revolve around blood. </div>
<div><br></div><div>As for Ceryx, I don't really see the connection, but obviously that doesn't mean it's not there. Another problem is that this would make the Cumaean a demonic character, which wasn't really my impression of her upon reading the books.</div>