<div dir="ltr"><div>><a href="mailto:etonio@gmail.com">etonio@gmail.com</a>: At the risk of sounding pedestrian, I just don't see why such clones would be stored in such a place (but maybe those aren't coffins? Certainly Sev's mention of liking to sleep inside looks like something that ought to draw attention in a book where so much isn't what it seems).<br>
<br>>Don't be afraid to fire away theories! This list has seen all sorts of things with plenty of rhyme but not so much reason, whereas yours have the merit of being derived from the books.</div><div> </div><div>Thanks, etonio, I assure you I am the pedestrian on this street! I don't have any idea why someone would store clones inside coffins in a time-dislocated mausoleum.* I admit it may be a fatal flaw in the argument. But I think that any explanation for the mausoleum -- with its five coffins, two empty, three closed -- will present similar difficulties (maybe not? if not, please pipe up!). In any event, my focus isn't on exploring the Severian-as-clone theory, but on answering the question: what's up with the five coffins in Severian's mausoleum, two open, three closed? What/who/which-versions-of-who was/is/will be inside of them? I can't help but think that this is -- if not the threshold mystery of the novel -- one of the first tier mysteries, and I can't find a satisfying theory anywhere! </div>
<div> </div><div>*(Not for nothing, Father Inire's Second House consists of rooms that look like paintings, so why not a clone-storage unit that looks like a coffin -- Inire may be one of the walkers of the Corridors of Time that Severian tells us is manipulating his destiny - Citadel, pg. 405-406 - and, if so, he could be behind the mausoleum of clones. I think this is at least as plausible as some theories on other topics published by Borsky or Clute, so I figured I'd throw it out there and see if it strikes a chord with anyone else.)</div>
<div> </div></div>