RETURNING HOME
The body petrified: an unfinished work by Michelangelo (left); a casting from Pompeii (right) |
One,
now, may be reminded of the following lines from Spenser: "They
crying creep out of their mothers woomb / So wailing backe go to
their wofull toomb" — taken fittingly, here, from The
Ruines of Time. However, the indulger of "uroboric incest,"
as we are told, does not wail in going back, but, rather, returns
quite willingly. If so, might he also occasion to mark this return,
or to signify his willingness in some other way? Might he build, or
identify with certain structures that somehow represent his unusual
longings? Would he empathize with certain forms that attain toward
his objectives; with certain locations that embody his intentions?
What,
then, of one who seeks not "incest" per se, but ouroboric
annihilation? One who is not merely satisfied with cyclic return,
but who wishes to slay from within the Great Mother of animacy; of
swirling, churning birth-death-rebirth. One who yearns for that
"ocean of pleasure" to freeze right over, or, better still,
to dry up completely. Might one such as he look with dim nostalgia
into the mineral indifference of a stoney riverbed — only to find,
perhaps, with envious regret, the alien inanimacy of something other?
Would he then find hope in something else — in a "stone"
which man himself creates — and reason if he can create a stone
himself, that he might, then, create of himself a stone? Would he
set, at last, his peculiar work by a rushing stream, or some lapping
shore, settle in for an indeterminate age, and await disintegration
into everlasting changelessness? And, if so, who might this person
be?
Perhaps
one who penned such lines above, and also penned such lines as these:
Then
gin I thinke on that which Nature sayd,
Of
that same time when no more Change shall be,
But
stedfast rest of all things firmely stayd
Vpon
the pillours of Eternity,
That
is contrayr to Mutabilitie:
For,
all that moueth, doth in Change delight:
But
thence-forth all shall rest eternally
With
Him that is the God of Sabbaoth hight:
O
thou great Sabbaoth God, graunt me that Sabaoths sight.
These
are, in fact, the final lines of Spenser's Faerie Queene —
from the so-called "Mutabilitie Cantos," appended
posthumously to his unfinished work. As a whole, this epic poem was
intended to show the perfection of Arthur, in virtuous kingship,
through he and his knights' allegorical questings for Gloriana, the
titular Fairy Queen herself. The seemingly unrelated Cantos, however,
depict a grand legal contest for universal power between God and
Mutability, constancy and change, wherein the latter is judged, at
last, by Mother Nature to be subservient to the former — somewhat
after the Heraclitus dictum that change itself is an unfailing
constant, and somewhat after a singular Christian eschatology as writ
in the lines above.
We
will recall Spenser and his Faerie Queene from Clarinda Park
and the East Don ruin — that now expressly pointed symbol of a
broken weir or dam; the thing which once controlled the water and now
permits the flood. Might we then, from here, presume some deeper
affinity between this particular author and the rest of our
structures? There are certainly further lines to be drawn from his
writings to our toponymical studies. Indeed, in the first book of The
Faerie Queene alone we are met with a redolent cast of
characters that includes not only our ubiquitous Arthur, but also one
Queen Lucifera, a faun-begotten Sir Satyrane, the
gogonesque serpent-woman Errour, and a certain figure known as
Despayre who provokes all those willing into suicide. Then, of
course, we have the Redcrosse Knight, who drinks of magic pools,
slays a dragon in Eden, and is revealed, at last, to be St. George
himself. The overall arc of the story, as well, may be seen as
analogous with our ouroboric mythos; from the hero-king's gradual
union with a mystical queen, to that final appeal, by way of a "Great
Mother," to the cause of eternal stasis.
Spenser,
however, in all liklihood, was far too worldly a man to subscribe
with any of our peculiar business here. Both his life and his work
dealt mainly with social, political, and moralistic concerns. His
fairy queen was Elizabeth I, his Arthur was England itself. His heart
was for chivalry and Protestant ethics, not ouroboric incest or
annihilation. Even his inertia was a divinely fated release from
decay, and not some mortally enforced commitment to permanent
concretion. Any followers of his would be cognizant of such facts,
and thus unlikely suspects in the case of our ruins. Nevertheless,
others could still make use of his prolific symbology, or make of the
man a symbol himself. But this leaves him, once more, just one symbol
out of many — and leaves us no closer to the source of these
stones.
Pursuant
to this aim, there are those, because of certain recurrent themes,
who have read into Spenser leanings of a vaguely Gnostic bent. Of
course, any such leanings might well tend to be vague considering the
catch-all nature of this term. That said, all of the various cults,
sects, and schools which have existed under the rubric of
"Gnosticism," since the dawn of Christianity into the
present day, typically seem to share a common intent on deliverance
from what is perceived as a fallen, material world — one in which
man is kept ignorant and fearful by a false deity who has eclipsed
the true light of an original, hidden god, or higher form of wisdom.
In their opposition to this "demiurge" and rejection of all
his creation (their own mortal lives included), the Gnostics would
seem to travel in uniquely ouroboric territory, somewhat related to
our own. As this general state is treated by Neumann:
The
picture becomes more complicated when the hero ceases to be an
instrument of the gods and begins to play his own independent part as
a human being; and when he finally becomes, in modern man, a
battleground for suprapersonal forces, where the human ego pits
itself against the deity ... The most typical example of this is the
Promethean theft of fire; another is the story of Paradise as
interpreted by the Gnostics. Here Jehovah is the vengeful old god,
while Adam, in league with Eve and the serpent, is the hero who
imparts new knowledge to mankind.
This
specifically appears as an inversion of the expected biblical "red
king" motif in which the serpent would be the antagonistic
element of the quartet — just as Satan/Lucifer would presumably
serve this role against Jesus, Mary, and God in the Gospel version of
this archetype. Indeed, Lucifer, in the looking-glass view of the
Gnostics, is often cited by name as the saviour of man; messenger of
the hidden god, if not this god himself. As symbolized by the
mysterious figure of Abraxas, he is the serpent-legged warrior who
stands beyond good and evil, life and death. Alongside this hero the
Gnostics wage war on vitality — on the earthly, the temporal, the
carnal, the animate; to the point of condemning procreation
itself so as not to further populate a deceptive, sinful world. Yet
all of this is not to say that the Gnostics would have truck with any
of our absolute inanimacy. As Neumann notes:
In
Gnosticism, the way of salvation lies in heightening consciousness
and returning to the transcendent spirit, with loss of the
unconscious side; whereas uroboric salvation through the Great Mother
demands the abandonment of the conscious principle and a homecoming
to the unconscious.
As
much might be said of those elder "Gnostics" further to the
east — those Hindus, Buddhists, and Jains who aspire toward
enigmatic states of moksha or nirvana wherein one
attains release from endless rebirth by way of some conscious
enlightenment. Certain teachings and practices of their more
hard-line adherents would seem, nonetheless, to align them closer to
our own preoccupations than not. One will often hear, for example,
tales of the ascetic saddhu who, in search of liberation, has
stood motionless in one spot for not hours, but years; who has had
himself buried, or been left up a tree, maintaining some form of
physical inertia to the point of irreversible atrophy. Such acts
prefigure the Christian tradition of self-mortifying hermits who
imposed on themselves similar ordeals. Here we might speak of St.
Thalelaeus who allegedly imprisoned himself for 10 years in a cage
hardly bigger than himself, or, then, of the famed Stylites who,
apropos of our current research, stranded themselves atop ruined
pillars in the deserts of Egypt and Syria. But these were all means
to quite other ends, committed either to aid in the contemplation of
Christ, or in penance for sins of their own. To the Indian ascetic,
though, such cessation of activity is all to the plan of a much
greater cessation, enacted to stem the accumulation of karma which
keeps one in the grips of eternal samsara, the wheel of
unending reincarnation.
A 6th century Syrian plaque depicting the Stylite St. Simeon harassed by a serpent (left); Buddha in meditation upon the great snake Naga, from a 14th century Thai carving (right) |
The
Jains, in particular, seem rigorously impelled toward this goal,
appearing prepossessed more than any with the cause of inanimacy. To
them, the woes of the world and the tragedy of life are not, as the
Gnostics contend, due to the actions of some fraudulent deity, but,
rather, they are due to action itself. As Paul Dundas writes in his
study of The Jains, "action, whether done, caused or
condoned by oneself, brings about rebirth, and the world is in a
state of suffering caused by the actions of ignorant people."
Here one is not concerned with "good" actions or "bad"
(as is the case with most karmic religions), but all and any actions
of any type or purpose. This flight from animacy, however, does not
necessarily conclude in total azoic inertia. Instead, it concludes in
some existence "about which," as the Acaranga
Sutra (one of the earliest Jain texts) professes, "no
statements of mundane knowledge can be made and which the mind cannot
fathom," yet can still be positively construed as "having
knowledge and sentience." Dundas, for his part, manages to
cobble from various sources a somewhat more detailed account of this
deliverance into moksha:
The
jiva [soul] becomes free from its body and the occluding force
of karma. It then rises through innate capability in one instant,
without coming into contact with any of the entities which permeate
the loka [material world], to the realm of the siddhas, the
liberated jivas at the top of the universe where it will exist
perpetually without any further rebirth in a disembodied and
genderless state of perfect joy, energy, consciousness and knowledge.
Such
is clearly not the mineral inanimacy — the ouroboric annihilation —
as envisioned for any theorized claimants to our local set of ruins.
Instead, these Gnostics, Jains, and ascetic Christians are all
engaged in what Neumann would deem "heroic incest," a
return to the womb so as to transcend it; a baptismal rebirth into a
higher plane of consciousness. Yet we, of course, seek those who wish
neither to heighten the conscious aspect, nor return to the
unconscious realm, but, rather, those who wish to remove
consciousness from the equation all together. That said, it is still
interesting to note that each of these close correlates seem to
arrive from a shared Indo-European lineage, with its distant echoes
of grammatical animacy — the oriental branch rising, in part, out
of the Aryan Vedic traditions of northern India, and the occidental
branch arising mainly from the over-arching Hellenistic and Byzantine
milieu of the Near East during the Common Era's first few centuries.
If we now consider a more direct line between language and the
etiology of our subject, it suddenly occurs that we may, all along,
have been casting our net rather too far and wide. Recalling the
animate/inanimate gender division of the Anishaanabe
dialects native to this area, could it be that the true roots of this
phenomena have been right under our noses this entire time?
Looking
back to our investigation of the South Humber obelisks, we might now
summon that moose-antler comb found at Thunderbird Mound, just
upstream from this site, described as depicting "a panther
with a rattlesnake tail, transforming into a bear and then into a
human shape." Putting aside the fact that this artifact was
unearthed from an Iroquoian burial mound (Iroquoian having only vague
linguistic ties to animacy), it is thought that the figure upon it,
at least in part, represents the mythological Anishaanabe entity,
Mishipeshu; antagonist of countless tales told by First Nations
peoples across the Great Lakes region. As we read of Mishipeshu in
The Canadian Encyclopedia:
This
fantastic dragon-like animal resembles a feline with horns, symbols
of his power. It has palmed paws that enable him to swim fast, and
his back and tail are covered with scales [it is sometimes said that
the horns and scales of Mishipeshu are made of pure copper, and most
Indigenous populations in the Great Lakes see those aquatic monsters
as the guardians of this metal]. Mishipeshu lives in the depths of
big lakes. Although he has a feline shape and is an amphibian, he is
always described as a reptile.
Here
we will note of this chimerical beast a slight resemblance to the
aforementioned Tutu — Egyptian god of sleep and death, who was
depicted as a sphinx with a serpent for a tail — as well as to the
original Lycian Chimera, being lion-serpent-and-goat in one, later
slain by doomed Bellerophon astride familiar Pegasus. This odd
feline-reptilian-aquatic composition is not, in fact, all that
uncommon, but rather seems to serve as a template for much of the
world's dragon mythology. Julian Franklyn, in his compendious 1960
work Shield and Crest, expounds upon the dragon's heraldic and
historic significance, while recapitulating many of the denotative
observations we have already made regarding this creature:
The
dragon was primarily a personification of the
life-giving-and-destroying power of water ... He is the water-god and
the sun-god, and is himself symbolic of both good and evil, a
dichotomy he shares with the dragon-slayer, as well as with the
weapon of slaughter. The dragon, as conceived in Egyptian myth, is
both Osiris and his enemy Set. He is also the Great Mother and the
lioness, combining opposite attributes in one form; hence, in the
earliest pictorial representation of the dragon, which is to be seen
on a cylinder-seal from Susa, he is drawn as a compound of eagle in
the forepart and lion in the hindpart.
We might now give some further consideration to those alchemical and astrological connections between lions and our "red king." Then, with
respect to the last detail above, we should also note that Susa (originally
Shush, or Shushun) was the capital city of the
Elamites (a culture roughly contemporary with the nearby ancient
Sumerians, which developed around the northern end of the Persian
Gulf) who, along with the
Sumerians and Anishaanabe, spoke a language defined by its use of
grammatical animacy. We mention this because the Sumerians, and their
Mesopotamian descendents, had their own equally established tradition
of dragons (recalling, of course, Tiamat and Labbu) — with one in
particular, by the name of Mushhushshu, drawing special attention
here.
This dragon was most notably represented by the Babylonians on Nebuchadnezzar II's famed Ishtar Gate, appearing somewhat as an opposite of the bizarre Susa beast, having a feline forepart, an aquiline hindpart, and the head and tail of a serpent. What most catches the eye, however, is the strained yet striking phonological resemblance between Shush (Susa), Mushhushshu, and Mishipeshu. While the latter is conventionally translated as "great lynx" or "panther," and the former is seemingly locked in a cyclical etymology with a tutelary god called Inshushinak (a satyr, or minotaur-like figure, unhelpfully translated by scholars as simply "lord of Shush"), we will note of "Mushhushshu" that this name likely derives from the Sumerian muš + ḫ(r)usu, meaning "red snake." We will then note the symbolic association of Mushhushshu with Marduk (linchpin of our Mesopotamian "red king" trilogy), coming by way of the local Sumerian god Tišpak, whom Marduk replaced in his homeland of Eshnunna following the Babylonian conquest this area (an area, it should be observed, which was previously under control of the Elamites) — and whom Lurker also contends was possibly "taken over by the Hurrian weather-god Tešub" (otherwise known as our Hittite Tarhund).
Tišpak
seemingly gained his association with Mushhushshu through inheritance
from an even older god, Ninazu, and/or by slaying this dragon in an
early version of the myth of Labbu (who's name, we have been remiss
in mentioning, may very well come from the Old Akkadian word for
"lion"), although in some texts he is found declining to
slay this beast, leaving the obligation to another unnamed god (and
thus leaving the way clear for later tales of Marduk and Tiamat). All
three would then gain association with Shush and Inshushinak by way
of the direct cultural/political influence detailed above, as well as
a potentially shared iconography, noting a certain recurrent Elamite
motif of an unidentified deity (possibly Inshushinak) who dons a
horned crown, wields water from a magic sceptor, and sits upon a
coiled serpent throne (recalling, now, the horned crown of Enlil,
unleasher of the great flood, creator of the serpent Labbu and, by
some accounts, father of Ninazu as well). But here, again, we are
trolling our net along rather distant shores.
Four feline dragons: Tutu (top left), Chimera (top right), Mushhushshu (bottom left), and Mishipeshu (bottom right) |
Having thus attempted the case for a Shush-Mushhushshu correlation, as we return to the shores of Lake Ontario we now assume the much more difficult task of establishing a Mushhushshu-Mishipeshu connection. Whereas the Elamites and Sumerians were separated by only the Tigris River (and, as such, were often not separate at all), both are separated from the Anishaanabe by two continents and an ocean — and then by how many ages?
One is
tempted, here, to invoke various fringe theories of far-flung
prehistoric contacts and improbable reverse-migrations; or, then, of
common global roots in some lost Atlantean diaspora (though such
tales of a sunken world agree with certain themes already discussed,
thinking here of Donn's Atlantic abode, Tech Duinn, or another
episode involving Midas and Silenos, wherein the latter tells of a
hidden land inhabited by the mysterious "Meropes"). One is,
perhaps, most tempted to cite the controversial Walam Olum, or
"Red Record," an allegedly ancient birch-bark document
which tells of the exodus of the Algonquian Lenni Lenape people
(ancestors of the Anishaanabe) into North America from Eurasia
roughly 3,600 years ago (thus allowing for a possible chronological
alignment with either the Sumerians or the Elamites), and which also
involves the extraordinary tale of a serpent and a flood — but
which is, almost certainly, a 19th century hoax created by the
eccentric French-American polymath Constantine Rafinesque. Still, it
is interesting to compare such postulations with further descriptions
of Mishipeshu from The Canadian Encyclopedia:
He
is feared by all Ojibwa because he is the cause of waves, rapids and
whirlpools, and he even breaks the ice in winter, thus claiming
numerous victims. In the area of Churchill River, there used to be a
game called 'Mishipeshu' that symbolized this being's drowning power.
A child, randomly selected, held the role of the aquatic monster; he
had to catch his friends and throw them into the water ... Although
the most important enemy of the Mishipeshu and other underworld
reptiles was the Thunderbird, these also had to face the destruction
programmed by Nanabozo in the myth that tells how the world was
destroyed by a catastrophic flood.
Here,
again, we entertain notions of drowning and floods, Maelstrom-like
whirlpools and mock child sacrifice. Intriguing, then, that our
artifact (still assuming it depicts Mishipeshu) would be found at
"Teiaiagon" which "crosses the stream." Even more
so that it was unearthed at one "Thunderbird Mound," a site
named for the mortal enemy of this monstrous beast. We must then
consider this Thunderbird (who, as the name implies, assumes the
attributes and functions of lightening and storms) in relation to the
various other dragon-fighting storm-gods of our conglomerate "red
king" — Marduk and Tarhund (Tešub/Tišpak) being not least
among them. Here we also seem to have a faint linguistic affinity
between Nanabozo (Promethean trickster-hero of the
Anishaanabe, patron of the medicine man), and Ninazu (the
Sumerian underworld god of healing, whose name, by Lurker, means
"master physician"). Any further connections, however,
would still leave us with that cultural crossing of half the world to
account for.
Leaving,
then, the logistical and geographic problems of this matter aside,
let us simply recall the "red snake" aspect of
Mushhushshu's Sumerian name, while noting once more the horns and
scales of Mishipeshu which are "made of pure copper,"
that most golden-red of all the metals. Here we might observe that
the Thunderbird Mound artifact was found alongside of a copper pot,
adding that copper is linked through both astrology and alchemy to
the planet Venus (hence to Lucifer, hence to Ishtar, hence to Marduk
and Mushhushshu). We'll note also that the stone Hittite sea-monster
Ullikummi was, according to Gurney, defeated by Tarhund in part by
the use of a magical copper knife. This particular tale may, in fact,
be read as somewhat historically symbolic (whether this was
intentional or not), metaphorically representing the passage of the
Neolithic "Stone Age" into the Chalcolithic, or "Copper
Age" — the period running roughly between 3,500 and 1,500 BC
which, while somewhat overlapping/conflating with the "Bronze
Age" (bronze, of course, being a copper alloy), marks the birth
of modern civilization through the wide-spread
discovery/implementation of metallurgy. This discovery, as it
happens, then relates to that of concrete, both of which Courland has
emerging from the invention of those lime kilns mentioned earlier:
It
is no coincidence that fired ceramics make an appearance soon after
the invention of the limekiln ... Ceramic technology was quickly
followed by metallurgy ... Since copper metallurgy arose after the
invention of lime and ceramic kilns, it seems probable that the
copper was put into a kiln to make it easier to work with.
And
so, in this way, it was concrete that gave birth to copper smelting,
that then gave birth to the modern world. Did it also, then, birth
Mishipeshu and Mushhushshu, Chaoskampf and the "red
king," words of animacy and thoughts of the inanimate? We'll
note that it was during the dawn of the Chalcolithic that the first
writing appears, in Sumerian and Elamite. It was then, during the
close of this period, that the Anishaanabe (or their Algonquian
ancestors) began to impede on the lands of the "Old Copper
Complex," a mysterious copper-mining civilization which
encompassed the Great Lakes and ran roughly concurrent with both
Sumer and Elam. It was also somewhere in the midst of this era that
the melding of copper with tin resulted in the eponymous material of
the aforementioned Bronze Age — leading directly to subsequent
alloys and eras, most notably that which arose from the ensuing Iron
Age: our mighty, reinforcing steel. In such fashion, these
developments represent a millennia-long form of ouroboric return, as
the tawny "red king" of copper arrives out of concrete,
through the flaming red fire of lime kiln metallurgy, only to find
its way back into concrete again as the rusty "red king" of
steel rebar.
Stoking the fire and returning to water; detail from the Splendor Solis |
Pointedly, it was the large-scale production of these new materials, particularly in the Old World, that led to the hyper-animate urban/industrial society which replaced early man's traditional nomadic/agricultural lifestyle. One can almost imagine the noise and clamour of their primeval foundries keeping those first Mesopotamian gods from their divine slumber, and thus serving as the catalyst for Jacobsen's theomachy of motion versus rest. One might also imagine some who, being dissatisfied with this march into unchallenged modernity, could sympathize with they who sent dragons and floods to return everything back to its natural, inanimate state — or who, likewise, might personify such technological progress as a copper-scaled beast that would drag mankind down in its watery lair, to drown us in the darkest depths of some existential abyss. In this light, perhaps, the embedding of fabricated metal into concrete was not always meant for the purpose of mere structural reinforcement, but, rather, in certain symbolic cases, represents the burial or entombment of this material (and all that it stands for) back in the substance from whence it originally came — the "red king," as such, sent to sleep in the mountain; devoured by the lion; devoured by his parent; subsumed by the whole.
The
question still remains, however: can we put a name to any who might
enact this process — can we affix any definite I.D. to our
hypothetical ruin-tenders? Are we to seriously entertain some
continuous transfer of animacy-based traditions from Mesopotamia to
Toronto?; from the Sumerians or the Elamites, to the Old Copper
Complex, to the Anishaanabe and the Iroquois, the French and the
British, then finally to us in the present day? Or, shall we
reconsider some other aforementioned route, through Egypt, India, or
Anatolia; via the Greeks, the Norse, or the Celts; then, by some way,
through Yorkshire, or elsewhere? Or, will it simply suffice to find
someone familiar enough with this vast, intercultural web of symbolic
reference to make use of it towards their own particular ends?
Someone familiar enough as we ourselves are now? ...And, if that
someone could now be us, could that someone not also be pretty much
anyone?
Well,
perhaps not quite anyone. Holding fast to the course of our
speculations, such a person or group would, at least, require the
ability to raise or maintain structures in toponymically significant
areas of the city — or, conversely, have the authority to place
significant toponyms in the area of pre-existing structures.
Returning to our introductory discussion of the status of concrete
across Toronto, might it not best serve our hypothetical suspects to
have the power to accomplish both? If so, such power points directly
to municipal government. But to what specific element of the
government might we attribute these doings?