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Smoke and Mirrorrs: Question! *SPOILER*|
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Member |
OK, I've read most everything by Gaiman, and I've got my MA in mythology, so I pride myself on being able to get most of Gaiman's refrences, but in the short story in "We can get that for you in Bulk" in Smoke and Mirrors, I just don't get the ending. "We always could, but we needed someone to ask..." Does anyone know what this reference is supposed to be?
Thanks! |
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Member |
I as well would like to know what this is a referance too, if anyone would happen to know.
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Member |
My copy is a couple states away right now, so my explanation is from memory. As I remember it, it is a comment on their ability to kill everyone on Earth - it's just that they needed someone to actually ask for it before they could do it. And since the main character is someone who just can't resist a bargain...
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Member |
We understand how the quote relates to the story itself, we were wondering if the qupote is a referance from something outside of neil gaimans works
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Administrator/Colporteur Member ![]() |
Well, in the old stories, the Devil doesn't often initiate his dealings. Could just be that.
__________ AJGraeme "You see, I have a policy about honesty and ass-kicking: if you ask for it, I have to let you have it." -Taylor Mali "I am a sexy, shoeless god of war." -Belkar |
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Member |
Good point, that does make sense. Does anyone else have another referance or a confirmation on this one?
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Village Elder Member |
I never really thought of the ending as a specific reference, just a twist. The title is a reference, but nothing else imho. What Dweller said could be true, but that's not so much reference as tradition
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Companion to owls Member |
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Member |
That doesn't feel right to me. Gaiman constantly refrences outside mythology in his works. I can go through smoke and Mirrors and pick out refrences story by story. To me this clearly feels like a refrece that I'm just not getting. If you read the story the end screams out "You're supposed to get it now."
The expliantion with the devil is a possibility, but I think it something else. A refrence to a fariy tale, or obscure mythology. Any other ideas? |
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Member |
I agree with Jewell, I think that this is probobly a referance to something deeper, I am curious to know what to if anytone can find it.
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Member |
Maybe this is a way to say that what occurs to mankind is done BY humans. We are responsible for what happens to us. If we dislike it, it's our fault. Maybe the main character is a "metaphore" of our errors...
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Member![]() |
quote: I dunno. I thought it was a reference to the old Cold War Pentagon/Kremlin quest for getting "More Bang for your Buck, more rubble for your rubles" (more efficient atomic weapons, etc)? The drive to BUILD more and more evil weapons just because you CAN. I admit it's set up as if it means something far more specific though ... *********************** 'Not that you die, but that you die like sheep.' |
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Firekeeper's Sister Member ![]() |
I think it was just taking the idea of selling whackings wholesale to its logical conclusions.
However, the "Dirty Donkey" bit does seem to add a mythologic spin to the whole thing, so there might be a deeper reference. -Natalie ----*-*-*-*---- Not really human, just turns into one on the full moon. I've totally got deviantARTs. (and now I sell t-shirts too |
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*95 gold stars* Member ![]() |
quote: I didn't read too much into the "Dirty Donkey" reference as there are loads of pubs with similar names, The Dirty Duck for example. If there is another reference, the only one i can think of is Don Quixote. Just took the requirement of someone asking to be a extrapolation of the invokation clause in daemonology. Dear old Cthulu and his chums don't just rise up from the mighty depths and destroy mankind. Someone needs to set off the alarm clock first. Hermits have no peer pressure |
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Firekeeper's Sister Member ![]() |
Near the end it commented that the sign wasn't so much like a dirty donkey, but more like a pale horse...
And it trailed off like that too. -Natalie ----*-*-*-*---- Not really human, just turns into one on the full moon. I've totally got deviantARTs. (and now I sell t-shirts too |
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*95 gold stars* Member ![]() |
Peter meets Kemble four times,and it's after the fourth that the definately dirty donkey changes to a pale horse. The fifth contract is made over the phone, and the fifth horseman unleashed. This could be totally insignificant. As could the name of the street in which the pub resides (Little Courtney) also be. Even though there is no such street in London.
blarrrgnhnar Hermits have no peer pressure |
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Member |
An allusion to mankind's possession of 'free will' maybe? After all, how much free will could we have if the devils/disciples of cthullu/bush administration could just wipe us out any old time they wanted?
- Soul ______________________________ Written drunk, edited hung over - a brief synopsis of the story of my life. The Modern Mythology |
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What fruit bat? Member |
what is the reference of the name of the firm?
"Burke Hare Ketch" |
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Member |
It's "Ketch Burke Hare Ketch", actually.
Four names...another nod towards the Four Horsemen conclusion, asides from the pale horse connection (Rev. 6:8). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Call no man happy until he is dead I shall not be intimidated by the members of the quadruple-digit post club. Noobs rule |
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*95 gold stars* Member ![]() |
Burke and Hare were Edinburgh body snatchers, supplying corpses for dissection from fresh graves and later fresh people.
Ketch (both of them) is Jack Ketch, the generic name for a Hangman. Possible reason for its' repetition is that the name is passed from hangman to hangman. Or to read more into it: Jack Ketch would hang a person. The body would be stolen by Burke and Hare. Who were then caught and hung. By Jack Ketch. Implying that it's all cyclical and the wholesale destruction that peter orders results in the big bang. Though the last bit might be a little off. Hermits have no peer pressure |
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Neil's Other Works
more Other Works
Smoke and Mirrorrs: Question! *SPOILER*