<div dir="ltr">>David Stockoff: The cloning theory is well grounded, but temporally dislocating the mausoleum is new AFAIK. In a way, I don't like this, because it seems to move the explanation further away rather than explain it. Where is this place? how does Severian get there? who put it there? But Lee is right, and the best answer may simply be "Gene Wolfe." Whether it's out of time or not.<br>
<br>>I see none of the usual clues to time dislocation: Severian doesn't<br>refer to time passing or not passing, and it seems like there are easier<br>ways to store clones than by slowing time.<div> </div><div>Reread the first and second mausoleum scenes (Shadow, 12-13, 21-22). The passages are pregnant with the concept of time. The door was sprung "long ago," and remains "eternally ajar," and "a moment suffices to describe these things, which I watched for so long," "decades" wouldn't be long enough to write of them, the first thought that obsesses Severian while in the mausoleum is that "at some not-distant time, time itself would stop," and there is little to watch "in the sleepy hours around noon." Shadow 12-13. And again, when he returns to hide his coin, Sev travels over "aged grass" and feels "a proximity in time" regarding the truth of imagined enemies. Shadow 21-22. Far from conclusive, but these passages perhaps provide some textual support for linking the mausoleum, thematically at least, to the concept of time. </div>
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