
I JUST caught on to Myrrha's name...
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- fightingmyinstincts
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I JUST caught on to Myrrha's name...

"Well of course I understand. You live forever because your pure, sinless service is utterly and indomitably unballasted by any weight or dross of mere human weakness. Ah, the advantages of clean living."
TC to Bannor, LFB
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- Alynna Lis Eachann
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Wow. I wonder if that was intentional? SRD seems not to do things like that (names, I mean) on purpose, but his subconscious slips all sorts of things in... at least that's what it seems like to me. A possible GI question?
"We probably could have saved ourselves, but we were too damned lazy to try very hard... and too damn cheap." - Kurt Vonnegut
"Now if you remember all great paintings have an element of tragedy to them. Uh, for instance if you remember from last week, the unicorn was stuck on the aircraft carrier and couldn't get off. That was very sad. " - Kids in the Hall
"Now if you remember all great paintings have an element of tragedy to them. Uh, for instance if you remember from last week, the unicorn was stuck on the aircraft carrier and couldn't get off. That was very sad. " - Kids in the Hall
Re: I JUST caught on to Myrrha's name...
Thanks!fightingmyinstincts wrote:I went to see Mary Zimmerman's Metamorphoses last night, and one of the Ovid stories performed was the story of the girl who falls in love with her dad...whose name happens to be Myrrha, the name of Elena's horse. Unfortunately Myrrha actually gets to...relate to her father in that way, and it's a tragedy and she dissolves or gives birth to Adonis or something...Apparently SRD reads the classics, hmm. I can't believe I just caught on to this possible reference...
- Alynna Lis Eachann
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But a possibility... like incrossing racehorses or other animals to try to maintain or reinforce good characteristics. Maybe it was a "best of both words" scenario... I'm not familiar with the details at all.Khaliban wrote:She is punished by the gods and transformed into a myyrh tree while giving birth to Adonis. Why the perfect physical specimen is produced through incest is a curiosity.
So... did the Ranyhyn's death have a greater symbolism than Elena drew from it?
"We probably could have saved ourselves, but we were too damned lazy to try very hard... and too damn cheap." - Kurt Vonnegut
"Now if you remember all great paintings have an element of tragedy to them. Uh, for instance if you remember from last week, the unicorn was stuck on the aircraft carrier and couldn't get off. That was very sad. " - Kids in the Hall
"Now if you remember all great paintings have an element of tragedy to them. Uh, for instance if you remember from last week, the unicorn was stuck on the aircraft carrier and couldn't get off. That was very sad. " - Kids in the Hall
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I was thinking along the same lines...
Inbreeding in animals to develop the most desired characteristics has been practiced for centuries.
It generally doesn't quite work the same with humans. But I can imagine that in the mind of classical writers the same ideology was at work.
It generally doesn't quite work the same with humans. But I can imagine that in the mind of classical writers the same ideology was at work.
Spotteddoe
Few authors have conveyed so clearly the true meaning of the phrase "Unto Thine Own Self Be True."
Thank you Mr. Donaldson.
Few authors have conveyed so clearly the true meaning of the phrase "Unto Thine Own Self Be True."
Thank you Mr. Donaldson.
Those are some recessive genes I would NOT want to see expressed! Particularly the "hellfire one"... 

The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.
-F. Scott Fitzgerald
Stephen R. Donaldson Ate My Dictionary
-F. Scott Fitzgerald
Stephen R. Donaldson Ate My Dictionary
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On the thread topic though, does any other author put as much effort into naming charactors as Donaldson?--I doubt it!!
I thought you were a ripe grape
a cabernet sauvignon
a bottle in the cellar
the kind you keep for a really long time
a cabernet sauvignon
a bottle in the cellar
the kind you keep for a really long time
It doesn't surprise me that the Greeks thought so--at least among their gods. The Pharoahs, who were also believed by the Egyptians to be gods, believed it too. They married brother to sister all the time, to keep the divine bloodlines pure. If you remember the famous bust of Queen Nefertiti, one of the theories about why she (and many other Pharoahs) wore that distinctive headdress was that she had a hydrocephalic head--a sure sign of inbreeding.Khaliban wrote:She is punished by the gods and transformed into a myyrh tree while giving birth to Adonis. Why the perfect physical specimen is produced through incest is a curiosity.
Halfway down the stairs Is the stair where I sit. There isn't any other stair quite like it. I'm not at the bottom, I'm not at the top; So this is the stair where I always stop.
It doesn't surprise me that the Greeks thought so--at least among their gods. The Pharoahs, who were also believed by the Egyptians to be gods, believed it too. They married brother to sister all the time, to keep the divine bloodlines pure. If you remember the famous bust of Queen Nefertiti, one of the theories about why she (and many other Pharoahs) wore that distinctive headdress was that she had a hydrocephalic head--a sure sign of inbreeding.Khaliban wrote:She is punished by the gods and transformed into a myyrh tree while giving birth to Adonis. Why the perfect physical specimen is produced through incest is a curiosity.
Halfway down the stairs Is the stair where I sit. There isn't any other stair quite like it. I'm not at the bottom, I'm not at the top; So this is the stair where I always stop.
That's not quite accurate. The wife of King Cynrias was heard to boast that her daughter, Smyrna, was even more beautiful than Aphrodite herself. Aphrodite, being a Greek Godess and not easily given to rational action, took her revenge by having Smyrna fall in love with her father and climb into bed with him when he was too drunk to know what he was doing. When Cynrias discovered he was both father and grandfather of Smyrna's child he picked up a sword and chased her from the house. He caught up with her on the brow of a hill, but Aphrodite transformed Smyrna into a Myrrh tree, which Cynrias' sword then split in two. Out of the tree tumbled the infant Adonis, whom Aphrodite concealed in a chest and gave to Persephone to hide away in a dark place. The drops of sap shed by myrrh trees were said to be Smyrna's tears for Adonis.Khaliban wrote:She is punished by the gods and transformed into a myyrh tree while giving birth to Adonis. Why the perfect physical specimen is produced through incest is a curiosity.
Looking at the myth it's difficult to see whether Donaldson drew inspiration from it or Metamorphoses or both. My interpretation of the myth as relates to the Chronicles would be that Aphrodite represents Lord Foul in this instance (perhaps implying that he was able to manipulate Elena in some way, maybe through her mother). After that things get a bit too abstract to interpret. Adonis could be seen as the Staff of Law perhaps, being 'hidden away' way down in the earth, and there could be something relating to the Power of Command in there too.
Who knows, maybe I'm looking for symbolism where none exists.
Q. Why do Communists drink herbal tea?
A. Because proper tea is theft.
A. Because proper tea is theft.