TITLE
The title comes from the Henry Mancini song Moon River but
could also be a reference to this Chinese
legend.
Anonymous says that
the presence of the hare, which appears
twice, suggests an allusion to the Chinese moon myth.
SYNOPSIS
Stacia buys a copy of the Fantastic Art of Grace Brannagh.
Charon takes Promethea to a Houseboat on the Styx which comes from a book of the
same name by John Kendrick Bangs, who is Sophie's great great grand uncle. Mr.
Bangs takes Promethea up to a moonscape where she finds Barbara/Promethea(5)
talking to her late husband. It turns out that he isn't really her husband but
just her memory of him. Baron Munchausen and Lucian show the 2 Prometheas
through Yesod to the lunar realm. At a train station they board a train which
will take them on to to the solar realm.
Back in Malkuth Stacia manages to
turn into Promethea after painting a picture of her.
QUOTES
More quotes still to be added
"The ancients
thought the dream world and the dead's realm to be one. Where elese do we meet
the departed, save in dreams?" - Charon, pg 2
"Mainland Hades is for real
people, at least half fanciful fictions go elsewhere." - Charon, pg.
3
"...Coins or pentacles, that's one of the four magical weapons. It
represents earthly awareness..." - Promethea(6)
"Exactly. You won't need
earthly awareness here." - Charon, pg 5
"When romance meets the swords of
reason; when you awaken from a beautiful dream...there's cruelty." - 9 of
swords, pg 13
"Our Baron here is a common braggart, whose tales of having
visited the moon are frankly implausible...whereas I, Lucian, was carried there
by a monstrous water-spout, as reliably recounted in my True History." - Lucian,
pg 14
"So you're the real Baron Munchausen?" - Sophie
"Hardly there
wasn’t' one." - Baron Munchausen, pg. ??
"Scent is the faculty most closely
linked with memory." - Lucian, pg 17
"There's the Abyss where the Thames
usually is." - Promethea(6)
"Abyss that sounds heavy." - Promethea(5)
"Oh
you'll find Steve long before we reach that." - Promethea(6), pg 21
NOTES & ANNOTATIONS
Yesod
Reality Creator Workbook
Series
Page 1 Panel 1: Note the 5 Swell Guys poster, the Weeping Gorilla doll
with 15 mad phrases and the comic book being read by the proprietor. The style
of lettering on the title Mystake seems to point to a similarly titled comic
book Mystic.
Panel
2: Some Chucklin' Duck merchandise becomes visible.
Panel 3: Note
under what looks like a gnome on the cover of The Fantastic Art of Grace
Brannagh that the book is edited by J. Co(x)?
Panel 4: Painted Doll
T-shirt with 1 million killed visible.
Panel 5: Superman like poster
becomes visible
Pages 2-3 Top Panel: Fish jumping out of water turning
into submarines. Note the elephant and screaming faces in the rocks.
Page
2 Panel 3: The
Styx.
Page 3 Panel 4: The Houseboat on the Styx. See page
7.
Page 4 Top Panel: For an explanation as to why there is a rabbit or
hare carved on the rocks see here.
Page
5, top Panel: The Nancy Nox - name taken from A Houseboat on the
Styx.
Panel 2: That will do nicely: This line always
reminds me of an old American Express slogan. It's actually a trademark and
service mark of American Express in the UK.
Panel 4:
"..the
swellest social set in all Hades"
"The Associated Shades"
-
Both expressions taken from A Houseboat on the Styx.
Hades
Page 6 top
panel:
Shakespeare
Napoleon
Sherlock Holmes
Sherlock Holmes
doesn't actually appear in A Houseboat on the Styx but he does have a major part
to play in its' sequel The Pursuit of the Houseboat.
Page 6, Panel
4:
"I'll have you know Chaos was my grandfather! Erebus and Nox were
my parents"
is almost a direct quote from Chapter 1 of A Houseboat on the
Styx:
"I'm pretty well connected even if I am a boatman...With Chaos for a
grandfather , and Erebus and Nox for parents, I've just as good blood in my
veins as anybody in Hades."
Chaos More information
here.
Erebus More
information here.
Nox
Pages 6-7 top panel:
Visible on the steps is Pan.
I asked JHW3 to
identify some of the shades on the houseboat. His reply
Some of the shades
on the house boat and elsewhere are made up of unknown individuals and some are
more famous. The woman that seems to be flirting with Pan is no one in
particular, just a woman who is intrigued by his beastly nature.
A couple
that you haven't guessed at are Shakespeare, Napoleon, but a lot of them are
random people from various periods of time. Just regular people who have since
passed away.
Page 7, Panel 2: Medusa is having cocktails
with another unknown person.
Claire Jordan adds:
Ganesh in the
background behind Medusa and her friend. Note faces in the yellow smoke coming
from the chimneys (ditto on page 8)
Panel 4:
John
Kendrick Bangs.
Here is a quote from Jess Nevins essay "On Crossovers"
...in 1897, when John Kendrick Bangs wrote the The Pursuit of the
Houseboat, the sequel to his 1895 book A Houseboat On The River Styx. Houseboat
was the book that spawned the phrase "Bangsian fantasy," or a fantasy of the
afterlife in which the ghosts of various famous men and women come together and
have various, usually genial, adventures. However, Houseboat featured the ghosts
of real people, from Dr. Johnson to Shakespeare to Homer to Napoleon. Pursuit
took this idea a step further and showed the ghosts of fictional characters,
including Sherlock Holmes, Shylock, Lecoq, Hawkshaw, and Old Sleuth,
interacting, trying to solve the mystery of the missing houseboat, and competing
with each other.
Panel 5: A Houseboat on the
Styx
Pages 8-9 bottom panel: The flying fish are now turning into
airplanes. Note the elephant rock.
Page 9 Panel 1:
Dr. Johnson or
to give him his full name Samuel Johnson
Noah
Confucius and also here
Claire Jordan
adds
note Mr Bangs, who presumably isn't familiar with Tarot, refers to
the Nine of Spades rather than its Tarot equivalent the Nine of Swords.
Pages 10-11: The constellations in the sky form the astrological
signs of Pisces, Taurus and Cancer.
I can't recognize all the people at the
tables but two that look familiar seem to be
Cyrano de Bergerac also see here
Cleopatra and also here
Page
10 Panel 4/Page 11 Panel 1:
The unnamed 9 of swords reveals his brothers'
names and their occupations:
Bernie 9 of coins runs Club Gain
Jimmy 9 of
cups Lido of Happiness
Vito 9 of Wands Tower of Strength Gymnasium
Note
the seashells on the wall and flowers and also the chessboard pattern with stars
and the moon alternating on the squares.
Pages 12-13: Does anyone know
who the headless cook might be?
Claire Jordan writes:
I don't *think*
the cook is headless - I think he just has his face partly turned away, and very
sketchily drawn.
Constellation Leo visible in the sky.
Another hare
statue visible. That looks a bit like Elizabeth I to me in front of the food
stall. The Hindu elephant headed deity Ganesha but I'm not sure who the two
lovers are. Baron Munchausen and Lucian visible at a table. They will be named
on the next page.
Page 14 Panel 2:
Lucian
Page
15 Panel 3: Miles Kurland points out that
"Hardly. There wasn't one.
Being a shade, I'm more Munchausen by proxy."
There's a medical condition,
"Munchausen Syndrome", which is a 'factitious disorder' i.e. hypochondria.
There's also a condition known as "Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy" - in which a
person acts as if an individual that they are caring for has an illness, when in
fact they are healthy. Here's a citation
In either case, it's a sign of a pretty serious need for attention at any
cost... and a form of mental illness (which is, of course, lunacy - appropriate
to Yesod!).
Page 15 Panel 4:
Despite what Baron Munchausen
tells Sophie there really was a Baron Munchausen.
Being the Baron he's probably just lying.
Here are the details sent by
TL.
Karl Friedrich Hieronymus Freiherr von Münchhausen
German
officer and author, born May 11, 1720, estate Bodenwerder, Hannover; died
February 22, 1797.
Biography:
Karl Friedrich Hieronymus Freiherr von
Münchhausen, also known as "the baron of lies", initially served as a page to
Prince Anton Ulrich von Braunschweig, and later as a cornet, lieutenant and
cavalry captain with a Russian regiment in two Turkish wars. In 1760 he retired
to his estates as a country gentleman.
He became famous around Hannover as a
raconteur of extraordinary tales about his life as a soldier, hunter, and
sportsman. After the death of his first wife, Münchhausen married a 17-year old
noblewoman. This marriage was an unhappy one which constantly drove him to debt
and caused scandals.
A collection of extraordinary tales appeared
anonymously in the magazine Vademecum für lustige Leute (1781-1783), all of them
attributed to the Baron, though several can be traced to much earlier sources.
The man who created the Münchhausen myth was a family friend, a penniless
scholar and librarian professor from Kassel, Rudolf Erich Raspe (1737-1794), who
had had to flee England because of thefts. Raspe used the earlier stories as
basic material, extended it, translated it into English, and published it
anonymously in a small volume in London in 1785: Baron Munchhausens Narrative of
His Marvellous Travels and Campaigns in Russia. The book was a great success and
the second edition was translated into German in 1786, in 1798 further extended
with eight stories by the poet Gottfried August Bürger (1747-1894) and soon
became a truly popular book.
This became the prototype for the subsequent
genre of the Münchhausen wonder tales. In 1788 Bürger added another five wonder
tales to this collection and brought out an enlarged second edition. The later
and much larger editions, none of them having much to do with the historical
Baron Münchhausen, became widely known and popular in many languages. They are
generally known as The Adventures of Baron Münchausen, and the English edition
of 1793 is now the usual text. It has been translated to and plagiarized in most
European languages, and has been filmed several times. A German production of
1943 in Agfacolor was also intended as Germany’s (and Goebbels’) "Gone With the
Wind." It wasn't even close. It was remade by director Terry Gilliam as "The
Adventures of Baron Munchausen" in 1989.
If you read German, you will find
most of his stories in extenso on the Internet. Bibliography:
Karl Friedrich
Hieronymus Freiherr von Münchhausen: Vademecum für lustige Leute. 1781-1783.
Rudolf Erich Raspe:
Baron Munchhausens Narrative of His Marvelous Travels
and Campaigns in Russia.
London, 1785.
Gottfried August
Bürger:
Wunderbare Reisen zu Wasser und zu Lande. Feldzüge und lustige
Abenteuer des Freiherrn von Münchhausen, wie er dieselben bei der Flasche im
Zirkel seiner Freunde selbst zu erzählen pflegt.
This book appeared anonymous
in 1786, published by Dietrich in Göttingen. It was not until 1798, four years
after Bürger’s death in poverty, that the author’s name became known.
Karl
Immermann:
Münchhausen. Eine Geschichte in Arabesken. 1839.
"who says ve
Germans don't haf humour" (Mrs. Anna Sprengel as quoted by affable Al)
Note
the discrepancy between Page 15 panels 2-3 and the bottom panel. When they cross
the lantern-bridge Sophie and the Baron are in the lead whilst Barbara and
Lucian follow but coming down the stairs the opposite is true.
Pages 14-15
bottom panel:
I won't spoil it now by revealing what all those birds are
but we will all find out in Issue
#23.
Page 16-17 Top panel: Aquarius in the sky.
All the clocks
read 9 o'clock which is appropriate for the 9th sephiroth.
Page 16 Panel
4: The Sun and the planets with their signs visible on them are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter
Page 17
Panel 3: Appropriately enough the scent of jasmine is supposed
to help some people to sleep
Pages 18-19 top panel: Shrine to Endymion
Selene
Here is an online
version of Lucian's True
History
Page 19 Panel 4: Especially in this panel I am reminded of
Terry Gilliam's version of Baron Munchausen.
When I asked JHW3 about the resemblance his reply was:
he was
based Terry Gilliam's film version but we had to actually go back and change his
likeness from the actor due to legal reasons. Originally I had drawn him to look
like the actor but we couldn't keep it that way.
Page20-21:
According to Thomas Lautwein:
The scene at the station is obviously an
allusion to the pictures of Paul Delvaux (Belgian
surrealist, died in the 80s). Stations, naked girls and skeletons are typical
elements of his paintings, whose dreamlike atmosphere fits well to Yesod. Here
you can find a list
of his most famous paintings.
Page 20: Top Panel:For Alan's 50th
Birthday I wrote up a more detailed description of this top panel which can be
found (along with the panel itself) at A Long Awaited
Party. The man in yellow is Isaac
Newton
The image looks like it is based on this portrait:
Page 21: Top Panel: Here is the full version of the Kabbalah mapdone by John Coulthart
Compare the Sephiroth map to the original London Underground on the links
below
London
Tube Access Guide
Large
Print of Map
History of the Tube
Map
Note Alan Moore shaking hands with artist JHW3 as he greets him and
his wife Wendy.
JHW3 writes:
"we have never been face to face so what better way to
meet than in the dream world. This was done to also signify the beginning of our
own journey".
Chad Raymond asks about the tattoo just visible on JHW's
arm (not visible in image above sorry)
it resembles the exterior
design of Stacia/Grace Promethea's sun sigil. Perhaps as Sophie is an extension
of Alan Moore, Stacia is JHW3's persona?
Also note Elvis Presley with his
back to us just over Alan's right shoulder.
Compare the rings shown here with
the rings Alan Moore is wearing in this photo:
Page 21: Panel 2: Also from JHW3:
"The man pointing the way and
commenting on the book is Rick
Veitch. When he is mentioning the book he is refering to the Promethea comic
itself. Makes you head hurt just a little bit doesn't it?"
Pages 22-23
top panel:
I asked JHW3 about the the woman in the turban with the
arab letters on her back and his reply was that she was
my sister-in-law.
At the time she was facing a major change in her life and here I wanted to
depict her deciding which direction to take in her life, stay in the shadows or
move towards illumination.
The number 9 has fallen on the ground whilst
8 is buried in the ground just above the train. Behind the train some oil
pumping machinery and below the train it looks like some sort of steam
contraption is buried in the ground. The Icons of Science and Reason are clearly
visible here. Just in front of the pyramid a naked boy and girl are dancing with
their backs to us. Reminds me of Tarot Trump Card XIX: The Sun in Issue #12.
We
can see a route 30 sign next to the train tracks and on the other side of the
pyramid a polyhedron.
The sun has a face like the one seen in previous issues.
Claire Jordan
adds
- note giant blue human head with brain exposed, and chap in glasses
and strange columnar hat sitting looking at the train
Page 23 panels
2-3: Flying beside Barbara are what look like bird brains to me.
Page
24: Nice revelations in scenery as Stacia slides off the panels. Appropriate
sword in picture seen on Panel 5, Weeping Gorilla quote finally revealed on
Panel 6, the little doll at the bottom right hand of this panel reminds me of
Felix the Cat.
Claire Jordan writes
the sword in the picture is on the
cover of "The Art of Grace Brannagh" - earlier when we saw the gnome on the
cover he was sitting by the bottom/point of this sword, and now we see the
top/hilt. Note there seems to be a colouring error: if you look at panel 4
there's another book, plus some other small object, in front of "The Art of
Grace Brannagh" - in the panels above this book and object appear as transparent
outlines, not filled in