You may prefer it, but what remains unalterable is not stone and sea, but life and death. Everything dies, and this fact remains indifferent to your preferences.Vraith wrote:I see...and the point is taken.
OTOH, I'm appalled at myself that I wrote it in a way that made you think I was appealing to the literal/technical. I meant to use that only as an analogy to point at what I see as the metaphorical weakness of the Worm as Indifference [if that is really what it is...and it might be].
I think it is too simple in relation to other metaphors/symbols in a few nebulous ways, but at least one fairly specific way:
For me [and again, this may be idiosyncratic] one thread, among several, that runs through my reading of the Chron's is that everyone, even...especially, perhaps...LF works because whatever they are they have the capacity to be something else.
This doesn't seem to be the case for the Worm [heh...unless there is another sense in which the Worm can be "Awakened"...and that might be an interesting thing to happen].
Of course it makes sense that there is at least one fundamental thing, like the Worm, that is an unalterable fact of existence, is just [paraphrasing/altering someone] brutally, or indifferently, so...yet, in a metaphorical/symbolic world of externalized human facets and choice as an essential force, I would prefer an external Indifference that has chosen/is transformable.
The Land's Earth, as a living world, has to contain within itself the means of its own decay and death. It's just, I guess one could say, the genetics of that world.