Talk:Book:I Shall Wear Midnight/Annotations: Difference between revisions
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;Page unknown:"The strength of the witch is the coven and the strength of the coven is the witch" seems equivalent to Kipling's "The Law for the Wolves", as found in ''The Second Jungle Book'': | ;Page unknown:"The strength of the witch is the coven and the strength of the coven is the witch" seems equivalent to Kipling's "The Law for the Wolves", as found in ''The Second Jungle Book'': | ||
:''As the creeper that girdles the tree trunk, the law runneth forward and back</br>For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack.'' | :''As the creeper that girdles the tree trunk, the law runneth forward and back</br>For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack.'' | ||
== Pub names == | |||
I don't know enough on the subject to add an annotation myself but I know there's a deeper meaning to why so many pubs are called things like The King's Head (p. 157 of Harper Paperback), that that one in particular was often formerly The Pope's Head, prior to Henry VII, & the naming is a longer story than that, which, if I knew it better, I could make it a shorter story [[User:Superluser|Superluser]] ([[User talk:Superluser|talk]]) |
Latest revision as of 01:51, 10 July 2023
Simon Hawking
The idea of Simon becoming the Stephen Hawking of the Discworld is certainly a beguiling one and fits the character as we saw him in Equal Rites, quite admirably. Especially since our own S.H. would be dead by now were it not for the attentions of a series of nurses/care assistants/wives who have devoted themselves to doing the things he cannot do for himself - with a certain associated controversy. (One alleged mental and physical cruelty; another, a Cambridge physics postgrad herself, is allegedly whispered to have given him her ideas to develop...)
But two things leave me wondering.
At the end of Equal Rites, after his visit to the Dungeon Dimensions and Esk's rescue of him, Simon is apparently cured of all his ailments, allergies and stammer -
"They seem to have all gone, sir!"
Secondly, since Moving Pictures, Ponder Stibbons has progresively filled the niche for super-intelligent research wizard. The H.E.M. has increased in importance, especially after HEX and the The Science of Discworld series, and if there were a "Stephen Hawking" in residence at UU, he'd have been known about before now? Stibbons might find the academic rivalry jarring, but he'd be sensible enough not to let such a fantastic theoretician go by un-used.... but we haven't seen a sdign of this, so far? (OK, we are told Esk and Simon went off touring and researching together for an unspecified length of time. And it is posible Simon might have followed "Henry" in the brain-drain to Brazenose... but nothing has been said of this.)
It would be fun to develop - Windle Poons' wheelchair comes out of mothballs and is given a speech recognition unit somehow linked to HEX (an imp and an oscilloscope fragment?) Simon stirs the imp by means of a keyboard, which taps a corresponding part of the imp's body, who then assembles the knocks into speech...--AgProv 10:24, 10 September 2010 (CEST)
Missing quotes
The "strength of the witch is the coven" bit and the "we're all doomed" bit... i'm not sure they exist. I've searched through the E-books - there is a close quote for the latter on DD page 164, but it's Wee Mad Arthur saying "You'll be doomed". Can't find the coven quote at all. JaffaCakeLover 23:44, 12 December 2010 (CET)
- I’ve done this search too, and I agree - the “coven” quote isn’t there in any of the Tiffany books. In case it crops up somewhere else (and I think there is something at least similar in one of them), I’ll preserve it here:
Annotations missing page numbers
- Page unknown
- "The strength of the witch is the coven and the strength of the coven is the witch" seems equivalent to Kipling's "The Law for the Wolves", as found in The Second Jungle Book:
- As the creeper that girdles the tree trunk, the law runneth forward and back
For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack.
Pub names
I don't know enough on the subject to add an annotation myself but I know there's a deeper meaning to why so many pubs are called things like The King's Head (p. 157 of Harper Paperback), that that one in particular was often formerly The Pope's Head, prior to Henry VII, & the naming is a longer story than that, which, if I knew it better, I could make it a shorter story Superluser (talk)