Ali, I believe the gist of SRDs comment was that the Creator had handed over his responsibilities to Covenant, or to Covenent+Linden+Jeremiah. (Precisely which would be another great question.)
But I want to clarify that I think it was a handover, and not a "merging". The original Creator didn't become embodied in Covenant (as Foul had) but rather he gave them the keys and moved on to something else. Under the circumstances, I think that's an important distinction.
Of course, for this to be successful, Covenant+Linden+Jeremiah had to do a bunch of creator-type-stuff. They had to gain experience as new creators who could take over for the old. And then, or course, they do, in a very literal way.
This process was signaled long before the Last Chronicles. (When I quote myself, it's because I like the way I said it at another time.)
wayfriend wrote:In the Second Chronicles, Covenant discovers the horrible responsibility of gods: his god-like actions have reshaped the Land.
In [i]The Wounded Land[/i] was wrote:... all the fathomless ill of the Sunbane and the Clave was his fault, his doing. He had no answer for the logic of his guilt. The Staff of Law had been destroyed - and he had destroyed it. Wild magic had burst from his ring to save his life; power beyond all choice or mastery had riven the Staff, so that nothing remained but its heels. For such an act, he deserved to die. The lassitude of blood-loss seemed condign and admirable. His pulse shrank toward failure. He was culpable beyond any redemption and had no heart to go on living.
Covenant has become like the Creator himself; the Land is as much his Creation as any others. And, like the Creator, Covenant desires the beauty in his creation to survive, and the blight to be erased. And so he takes responsibility for his world, and sets out to restore it.
... Being one with the Arch of Time, the Creation upon which the Earth's very existence rests, Covenant is another step closer to the Creator. He's not only responsible for the Land, but he's even part of the process that allows the Land to exist. At the end of the Second Chronicles, when he usurps the Creator's place to speak to Linden, he does so as a co-creator who has earned the privilege.
Since I wrote that, AATE has come out, which brings us the brilliant description of Covenant literally remaking himself.
In [i]The Last Dark[/i] was wrote:Bleeding from more wounds than he could count, Covenant found the path that led toward his present self. At once, he began to work his way along it. And while he arose from the Earth’s past, he fused fissures behind him. He closed cracks. Rife with silver fire, he healed breaks until all of them were mended.
Deliberately he annealed fragments of his former being, rendering them inaccessible so that he could be whole.
Like an astral spirit done with wandering, Thomas Covenant reentered his body in front of Joan.
Not only is Covenant re-creating himself, he is also repairing the broken Arch of Time, an object with which he is exceedingly familiar having
been it for three and a half thousand years.
But more important than either of these things is that Donaldson makes these things seem like the same thing!
What better practice can anyone have for the events of The Last Dark than what Covenant undergoes here?
I think Linden's creator acts are a lot more obvious. She literally re-creates Law. And Jeremiah's abilities are rather straightforwardly applied.
We have a man who can re-create Time. A woman who can re-create Law. And a son who can build anything.
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