Girls Gone Canon Cast - His Dark Materials: Episode 1 - Northern Lights/The Golden Compass Chapters 1-3
Episode Date: August 1, 2019The girls set off on another journey that begins with a bottle of tokay, Dust, and Gobblers. Stay close to us on this new adventure if you don't want to disappear!  Covers Northern Lights (UK & A...ustralia) / The Golden Compass (US) Chapters 1 - 3  1. The Decanter of Tokay 2. The Idea of North 3. Lyra's Jordan  --- Eliana's twitter: https://twitter.com/arhythmetric Eliana's reddit account: https://www.reddit.com/user/glass_table_girl Eliana's blog: https://themanyfacedblog.wordpress.com/ Chloe's twitter: https://twitter.com/liesandarbor Chloe's blog: www.liesandarborgold.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to Girls Gone Canon covering His Dark Materials.
Hello and welcome to Girls Gone Canon, His Dark Materials, Episode 1, Northern Lights,
The Golden Compass, Chapters 1 through 3.
I am one of your hosts, Chloe.
You might know me from our other podcast on A Song of Ice and Fire, or as LiesInArborGold.com or LiesInArbor on the internet And I'm Eliana, you might also know me from our other podcast and various other media
about the A Song of Ice and Fire aka Game of Thrones series
But here I am, over on Girls Gone Canon
also known as GlassTableGirl on Reddit or Arithmetic on Twitter.
Wow, this is weird. It is new. This is to new fans and to old hello.
We are a podcast that started as a literary analysis cast.
We did start with A Song of Ice and Fire.
We're doing a reread from character to character, point of view to point of view.
and Fire. We're doing a reread from character to character, point of view to point of view.
On that podcast, we post it under the same feed as you will see these episodes for His Dark Materials. But we wanted to branch out. Sometimes you need to run. You need the wind in your hair.
So for those of you who are new, we release our A Song of Ice and Fire point of view episodes on
Friday mornings, most Friday mornings, weekly. And our His Dark Material work is going to come out are new we release our a song of ice and fire point of view episodes on friday mornings most
friday mornings weekly and our his dark material work is going to come out most of the time the
last wednesday of the month we're kind of playing it by ear this is kind of fun we're mixing it up
it's new we're very open to suggestions uh we also are doing monthly patreon episodes about
different content whether it's a song of ice and Fire or maybe even some His Dark Materials content in the future.
I have some ideas.
Eliana and I will talk offline about them, obviously, with our people.
Yep.
So, yeah, again, we're playing this by ear.
We want to make sure that what we create and put out is something that all of you want and enjoy.
So let us know your thoughts.
And to give you guys a little bit of background about how we're doing this,
we are starting with part one. There are three main parts to the very first book,
Northern Lights and the Golden Compass, depending on where you live slash bought your story. We're
starting with three chapter episodes so far monthly for now,
this could change, this could change. And there are going to be about three episodes in this part.
Yes, I think we are hoping to have the first book done by the time the television show for
His Dark Materials comes out. But right now we actually have no idea when that's going to come out. It says fall 2019.
That could literally be like November 20th, 2019.
Yeah, absolutely.
And we're milking that right now.
Yeah.
So again, we're playing it by ear.
Things might change as we get more information about the show, the release dates.
But because we are just starting out, we are keeping this episode a little simple.
We are doing the first three chapters of The Golden Compass slash Northern Lights,
which are entitled The Decanter of Tokei, The Idea of North, and Lyra's Jordan.
Eliana, you're sending us to Jordan College, aren't you?
You know why?
Why, Chloe?
Because it's syllabus week
oh wow but don't skip this week of classes
be a better student than I was everyone
yeah you'll want to stay
and if you stay there is an extra lecture at the end
it's going to be followed by what I favorably
and Eliana favorably have named it as a dust discussion.
What that means is that we kind of wanted to model this a bit like how our friends over at Davos Fingers have read A Song of Ice and Fire.
They finished and they generally do a setup where they do the chapter, they read the chapter, talk about the chapter,
etc. as it happens. And they do an after dark Davos Fingers after dark spoiler session where
they talk about what this means in the long scheme of things. And we know we have a lot of new
listeners. We know we have a lot of old listeners that are either reading for the first time like
I am. I am reading for the first time. Eliana has read before. And we want to separate it a little
bit just so that you can have a better experience if you so want to. Yes. And because it is syllabus
week, and again, we have a mix of people who are reading the series for the first time and people
who are rereading it, we're going to do a lot of setup during this episode. And of course, I mean,
that's how any story is structured, right? The beginning of the books are a lot of setup during this episode. And of course, I mean, that's how any story is structured,
right? The beginning of the books are a lot of that setup and exposition.
Lots of world building. And of course, if you want to get a little more from that world building and
exposition, I personally have now read the entire book. So as we started these episodes and have
started writing them, we kept in mind that I
hadn't finished yet, but now I have finished. So the After Dark episode here, the discussion,
will have me talking about only the first book. I have not read any of the other books. Eliana has.
She knows everything. She's so great. And that's probably why she has great hair. So in the future,
we will be covering in part two of the first book
bullvangr and then part three spellbard all this information for those parts will be announced
after we finish part one like we said it depends on the show announcement and if you guys are into
it if we think maybe it's a little crazy a little ambitious who knows eliana and i have done crazier so we have done crazier yes so the dust discussion
is gonna we're gonna cover a range of different things there just hop around the timeline and
again dust discussion get it because it's like dust and dust it is my favorite thing is important
regarding knowledge anyway we'll get to that we'll get to that. We'll get to that later on, everyone.
So another reason we've structured it in this way is because, again, this is a very different story than A Song of Ice and Fire, which we were able to give our own spin on to by doing that
character reread and compiling different characters, but His Dark Materials is not
structured that way, right? We're doing it more of in the chronological manner, partially because it's narrated through a third person
omniscient style. Yeah, and in the first book so far, I feel like while that narrator is that
third person omniscient, we are following Lyra to build this world for the most part.
So I'm really excited to follow that more.
And we'll talk about it later on as well.
But Philip Pullman has definitely said that he's a storyteller and not a writer.
So his writing is a little bit different than what most people who have listened to us might be used to us covering.
Anyway, and so let's get into it.
Here's Northern Lightslash's Golden Compass.
into it. Here's Northern Lights slash The Golden Compass.
We're going to start out with
this excerpt from Paradise Lost,
which is a huge influence
on Philip Pullman as
he writes his dark
materials.
Into
this wild abyss, the
womb of nature and perhaps her grave,
of neither sea nor
shore nor air nor fire, but all these and
their pregnant causes mixed, confusedly and which thus must ever fight unless the almighty maker
them ordain. His dark materials to create more worlds into this wild abyss the wary fiend stood on the brink of hell and looked a while pondering
his voyage john milton paradise lost book two
and so we open up with chapter one the decanter of tokay lyra and her demon which has a note
towards the beginning of my version or edition of this book that
says they are all pronounced like
the word demon.
And I don't know if it just sounds different,
like daemon or daemon or something
because of the accent
of the author, but anyways, they're sneaking through
a hall.
What's great is if you
change that a little, they're sneaking through a hell.
Demon's sneaking through a hell. I don't know. I was just thinking now that you mentioned it but that was off the cuff I love
this chapter it serves as this introduction to these strong-willed characters that are so
individualistic and so different in character we'll meet them very soon but Lyra is our lead
heroine and she is headstrong and bold while Pan, her counterpart,
is cautious and thoughtful, which we'll learn about soon.
And so Lyra sneaks into the retiring room and from the imagery we learn that this room is
very, very luxurious, as is most things at Jordan College.
And then Pantalamon, Lyra's demon, tries to goad Lyra into leaving.
Uh, Pantalamon is just so cute.
Right now, he's in the form
of a dark brown moth, and that's how
the text presents it to us. They say this is
his form right now.
I think something we're gonna start is
an animal corner, a new segment
soon. It's gonna rival
our fashion power hour we do
in our A Song of Ice and Fire series,
which might come back here too so stay
tuned so pantalimon lyra's demon is a tiny little brown moth and moths are nocturnal they gravitate
toward light and in a lot of texts they represent death but spiritually they also kind of represent
childlike wonder in a lot of situations. I thought that was really interesting.
I was doing some research.
I'm going to keep doing research on different animal symbolism because as we learn throughout this chapter,
all of these little demons are attached to these people and they change in their, you know, configuration of what they are, what animal they represent.
And I think it has meaning.
I think Pullman has to have thought about it, honestly.
The different kinds of animals, for sure.
For sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, look at later on, we'll meet someone named Ratter.
Yeah.
And it's kind of fun that, like, as children, there's a lot of that flexibility, right?
that like as children there's a lot of that flexibility right part of it is that playfulness and part of it is like pragmatism in some ways like it's pretty useful and uh for your demon to
change shape which is kind of why i always like i remember the first time reading this i was like
that sucks that your demon's not gonna change shape anymore it super sucks that it like
takes on one shape when you're an adult
but now that I'm an adult
now you're an adult yeah
now that makes sense
I would want to find my
Patronus too everyone
man ain't that
deep now that you're an adult
yeah
blame me F
there's this notion from Aristotle of De Anima.
I don't know if you're familiar with it.
And it's the animating principle of life, the soul.
And it kind of is this foundation of the idea of demon.
Pan is Lyra's bonded counterpart.
So there's this biopsychology that Aristotle wrote about in
Dianima, or on the soul is the translation of that. And it centers on souls that are possessed
by living things and what level of power different beings have. And in books two and three of Dianima,
we learn that plants can reproduce and consume nourishment. So they have a vegetative
soul, even though they're just a plant. Yes, I knew you would like that. Just their little smiling
faces. So lower animals have sense perception and motion. So they have a sensing and sensitive soul.
And humans have intellect. They have a rational soul and a sensitive soul and a vegetative soul.
They are all these things encompassed.
Aristotle goes on and he says that the essence of a living thing is its soul.
That a body without a soul or a soul without a body is unintelligible.
And to take it from his work in physics, he summarizes the soul in most living things as,
if it acts, it is.
We see a lot of this other folklore that comes through like witches' familiars, or even in something that might
be considered an anti-Pullman, guardian angels. Yeah, I think that everything that you've said
here regarding Aristotle is super spot on. And this detail of them being called De Anima,
I would have to look it up,
but I think that this is definitely something that Pullman has probably got in his pocket somewhere,
because he...
Pullman-ing?
Oh, wow. Indeed. Wow. I think we should say that all the time.
No, I think we should say that all the time. That should be a thing.
We're gonna.
We're gonna. Everyone, maybe you haven't been here, but puns are what we live and breathe on
yeah it sustains us so i do think this is something that he's got in his back pocket
somewhere because he is a professor and he's very interested like in a lot of these different works
and philosophy and theology so for him to be-versed in classical philosophy is not at all surprising.
I think that's a great catch.
Well, buckle up, because we're going to go into some more really soon.
Are you ready?
Yeah.
So first, Lyra comments on, again, how pimped out Jordan College's retiring room is. And she goes,
they do themselves well, don't they, Pan?
You know,
one of my best friends went to college
at this university in Michigan, and it wasn't
like a big-name university. It wasn't
the main couple ones that you want to go to
in Michigan, but it was a good
university, and they had
this cafeteria that was
when me, little 19-year-old Chloe this cafeteria that was when me little 19 year old Chloe understood
that was like oh this is college life this is what it's really like because I went to community
college so I didn't get this luxurious Jordan experience but when I went to my friend's college
I did and she used her points in her unlimited food plan on me that day. They had like little omelet stations and they had like little like salad stations and burrito
stations and they had all these people that prepare.
It was nuts.
I was like, is this real?
This is really how they live?
And if that's how they lived, you can imagine how these scholars are living and you get
to read about it in this chapter.
Yes, absolutely.
And I think that all this stuff about classism
and stuff starts to take more shape as the story goes on, but in slightly different ways,
but it's interesting. And some of the ways that they do it, and we're actually going to talk
about it in this episode, absolutely like break my heart. Yeah, as we get closer to like chapter
three, for example, that's going gonna introduce us to a lot of the
rest of the world because as you know if you live in this wonderful beautiful earth that we all are
listening to this podcast talking about this stuff on the rich are like a certain percentage
of the earth the people that live those cushy lives. Yeah. Lots of systemic classes.
And there is a professor, Gary Boyd, who wrote an essay called Curiosity, Wonder, and Zest
about some systemic philosophy.
A starting place is what it was called.
It was for a primer project.
And he talks about how holism, which is from the Greek holos, is this theory that makes
up the existence of holes
a fundamental feature of the world it regards natural objects animate inanimate as holes not
just assemblages of elements or parts so you know a piece of hair is a hole it's not carbon oxygen
hydrogen nitrogen and sulfur for example it is just a whole piece of hair. I just flexed that.
So this looks upon nature consisting of discrete concrete bodies and things,
not homogeneous continuum. So these bodies or things are not resolvable. They are one piece.
You cannot separate them and the mechanical putting together of them will not produce them or account for their character or behavior. The parts are not real, but abstract analytical distinctions and don't adequately express what has made the thing as a whole.
three different things. Each of us are able to experience or extend only what we know,
and to the most that we can exist. You can't teach someone something that you don't know.
You can't be something that you don't know how to be. It breaks down to three different factions.
We can use mimetic actions as humans attempting to relate to achieve greatness, which a lot of scholars that we're about to meet do. But the way we're ingrained in our culture and how many years it's affected us is hard to make a ripple through that. You can
relate to another human being, I can tell you, I believe this thing. And you could say, I also
believe this thing. But until it is more of a swarm of people believing that thing, you can't
really get motion moving. You can have a small bubble of trying something new, like a pocket of trying a new system or class out and seeing its rising strategy behind it.
So, you know, that idea of the world is big, a little people turn it around.
And then the other way that humans systemically move and classify are a top down strategy that looks at the overall universe and says this is good good for all of us, and it applies it as law.
So there's three major systemic struggles that society has seen and society operates under,
and it all breaks down to different systems that make the world turn. Not necessarily
physically make it turn, but make every day on the ground what you and me know work.
And as a story that's very much inspired by those first
two books of paradise lost and some of the other ones i think that all the things that you're
saying very much fit into this idea of different classes or the separation of different groups of
people so i guess it's not technically about people it's kind of about people you know you know what i'm saying rebel angels demons in angel angels god right and and archangels yeah jesus yeah and that and
that's very much something that's explored like right from the get-go in paradise lost of like
damn all right so we were so we were exiled, guys. And what it would take to change the system.
And the larger overarching story of His Dark Materials does explore that.
Spoilers, I'm not even there yet.
No, I don't really think it is.
I mean, it's just an overarching theme that I haven't gotten to really yet.
But before Lyra
and Pan can leave the room,
they hear the sound of voices, and that forces
them to hide. It's the
master of Jordan College,
together with his raven demon.
They are expecting a guest.
It's Lord Asriel.
There's also a butler
here, whose demon is
a dog. And then we this like little aside that tells
us like almost all servants demons and the butler is then to bring lord asriel here along with some
of the 1898 tokay i could be totally pronouncing this like fancy ass wine i'm sorry i'm like really
unsophisticated everyone no i think it's correct i think you're doing great really i mean i would
just drink it instead of pronounce it let's be real and then try to pronounce it like what while
drunk i'd probably do it right let's let's just go with that um hey in 1898 called it's embarrassed
these systemic classes and treating servants like animals still exist and also servants 1898 also is like hey 2000s you should
still not have them too um lots of world building here because this at least tells us a time frame
in the story right so 1898 for us that was pretty good chunk of time ago not crazy amount of time but pretty good chunk but
for in story it kind of builds for us like hey this is a vintage and it's special to these people
in current time and I won't spoil anything that comes but most people think it takes place around
1995 some of the future books kind of paint that for us and we will talk about that later in our discussion so yeah and i mean in going more into that wine it's very special and very specific
as a fun detail it's also lord asriel's favorite wine again might get all this wrong it's it's a
wine that's also known as a tokaji and the toke wine is like a white wine that actually appears
in a lot of literature it's produced in hungary in the tokaj wine is like a white wine that actually appears in a lot of literature.
It's produced in Hungary in the Tokaj wine region. So it's kind of fun that this is like a real thing,
right? Like not just made up for this part of the story. And there are reasons why that's the case.
And in order for something to be considered a Tokaj, it has to be produced by certain standards
in order to earn that name. There's a couple, of course, other foods that are like that, like champagne, right?
It has to...
You can't just call it champagne.
Yeah, otherwise it's just sparkling wine unless it's produced in a certain region of France.
But certain kinds of toque are actually very famous for being beloved by real world royalty,
which kind of shows us why Lord Asriel would desire it,
but it also is tying then all of these associations, again,
like about class and what it means to be sophisticated
and nobility with Lord Asriel.
Yes.
So Asriel leaves the lamp for them.
Lyra watches the butler leave, and the master puts on his gown. She's excited for the
visitor's arrival that they speak of, Lord Asriel, her uncle. The visitor mentioned by the master,
Lord Asriel, was her uncle, a man whom she admired and feared greatly. He was said to be involved in
high politics, in secret exploration, in distant warfare, and she never knew when he was going
to appear. He was fierce. If he caught her in here, she'd be severely punished, but she could
put up with that. I think that paragraph is so interesting and we are going to come back to it
so soon, but first I want to talk about a little etymology. Asriel is a name that exists in tons of different content, like religion,
for example. There's the archangel Azrael, the angel of destruction, and in Islam he's associated
with Malak Al-Mu't, the angel of death, which of course Malak Al-Mu't was responsible for taking
the souls of the deceased away from the body. The Zohar, which is a Jewish mystical tradition of Kabbalah,
paints him more positively as someone who receives prayers of the faithful
when they come to heaven and commands legions of heavenly angels.
But again, Philip Pullman is saying something here that why would heaven need angels as an army?
that why would heaven need angels as an army?
You know, you might be onto something,
but we're not going to talk about that for a very long time.
This is bullshit.
The master's next move stops Lyra in her tracks, and she watches him take a piece of folded paper out,
and then he pours a powder from it into the decanter of toke,
and then he throws the paper in the
fire.
It's fascinating to me that he's holding this powder in a paper.
And then he stirs the drink until the powder dissolves and yes of course poison, yes exciting,
but what I'm most disturbed by is that he stirs the decanter and stuff with a pencil.
Like obviously we're not worried about sanitation or hygiene if we're
poisoning people but like the fact that he's using a pencil as a stirrer just really stresses me out
and i don't know why like is it number one or number two lead what existed in 95 i was like
three i don't know just stresses me the fuck out i also the language there he throws the paper in the fire
we might come back to someone else throwing something in the fire later and i just thought
it was an interesting three chapter appearance i'm looking for patterns it's my first couple
read-throughs here and i'm just looking for patterns that i want to know everything and I can't. You could.
His daemon squawks at him.
Korn.
And he responds in an undertone Lyra can't hear before they depart.
Pantalamon tells Lyra to leave before the steward comes,
but a bell begins to ring, which signals the steward's coming.
They missed their chance.
She's been banking on the time
between spying on the master
and the steward's bell to escape,
but the powder in the paper actually distracted Lyra,
and it caused her to hesitate.
Whenever I read this,
I just feel this sad sense of hurt, guilt.
She was confused.
She got distracted.
She was worried about her uncle uncle yeah uncle but
i mean like anyone would just be like what the hell just happened here like it's just shocking
to see someone that you trusted to take care of you to potentially poison someone else that you
hold in high regard also have you ever felt such felt such a flip of emotions for a character too,
as you go through this for that said character? As we get to the third chapter, I feel like we're
going to feel completely different about some of these characters than we do right now.
For sure. For sure. For a lot of characters. Yeah. Lyra chooses to hide in the wardrobe where
she's very anxious. She closes the door and she thinks
if the steward catches her he'll beat her as he has before so some background Pullman has actually
been an author of children's fiction before he got to the His Dark Materials series he was a writer
and as well as taught English to middle school students and I think in university while doing
his writing. And a lot of this story is obviously influenced by a lot of the literature and ideas
that Pullman's interested in. And of course, part of it is inspired by his upbringing or I mean,
even maybe a revolt against it if you look at it that way, since his grandfather was an Anglican
rector. and this scene is
the first one that actually came to his mind when he began writing this series without all the rest
of the themes and adventure that eventually follows in an interview from like I don't know
2003 he says I began with the idea of a little girl hiding somewhere she shouldn't be overhearing
something she shouldn't hear I didn't know then who she was where she was or what she overheard I'm soft.
That's nice.
The grumpy one is soft for the sunshine one.
That tweet called me out.
No, that's literally.
It's just very nice.
It's great to see someone connect with their art.
And it's great, especially from the interviews I've listened to with Philip Pullman.
I've been listening to a lot of interviews.
I'm doing a panel at DragonCon with a couple people about
his dark materials.
Don't make fun of me, but I totally was like
his mortal materials.
His dark instruments. I'm about to say
A Song of Ice and Fire every two seconds
and then I stop and I'm like H sound, H sound.
If we just get the H out, then I can do this.
It's very weird. I feel like
I'm cheating on them. Do i feel like i'm cheating on them
do you feel like you're cheating on them no um i do i feel dirty i just i'm like it's just weird
it's just trying like trying to take a new route i've been listening to a lot of interviews in
preparation for a panel i'm doing at dragon con about the anti-narnia his dark materials you know
anti-christianity stuff and it, you know, anti-Christianity stuff.
And it's interesting hearing what he says about it.
He has said in previous interviews that when people say, you know,
what's with your religion status, what do you think?
He's agnostic for the most part, but he's also kind of atheist.
And he says that, you know, I've never seen anything that proves it.
When I see something that proves it, I'll believe. That idea of faith
comes up a lot throughout these,
but I think also he's written
a lot about it, and Milton
apparently, from my understanding, was
also quite
an atheist, so.
Yes. Truly following
in the footsteps of his heroes.
I love that, the influences
you see these writers have
panalimon is annoyed that now they must hide in here they banter about whether or not it's poison
they saw the master poor and pan says it's none of our business lyra but he realizes that the whole
time lyra had wanted to watch she's too prideful to share her thoughts with Pan as much as she wants to,
which makes me think that while Lyra is, of course,
our bold, brave heroine who wants good things to be done,
I think there's that little bit of shame,
that little bit of darkness that when you're growing up, you have.
It's kind of fun to have people's souls basically externalized, right,
through his dark materials in the way that it's
portrayed it's as you said but also it kind of gives you insight into that nature it's a little
childish but you definitely see adults do it too she's too prideful to share her thoughts with pan
that she wanted to do this and you can see it in real people sometimes people want to do something
but they're too prideful to admit it to
themselves so it's fun to see what that looks like personified and she's not the only person we're
going to learn keeps that trait she feels anxiety for lord asriel as she watches this scene break
down both asriel and the master of jordan college are members of many prestigious
societies like the cabinet council and the prime minister's special advisory body titles titles
titles lyra recalls rumors about tartars invading toward the north and wonders if there will be a
war a butler comes in to trim the wick of the naphtha lamps in the retiring room, even though there are rooms with enbaric light.
So there's a lot of really fun worldbuilding in His Dark Materials.
The Tartars come from an area in Lyra's world called Tartary, which is near what would our world be considered areas of Siberia and close to what in our world be considered like areas of siberia and like close to what in our world was
the soviet union and they're heading north we'll talk about naphthila lamps and embark light in the
discussion section a little but a shout out to shiloh car, author of Medievalism in A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones,
which I highly, highly, highly recommend if you are a fan of that series,
because she helped me look up the term in Beric in the Oxford English Dictionary.
Fun fact, it's not there.
Pullman, you're a liar.
I'm just kidding.
Fun stuff.
We'll get to this eventually.
The butler pockets some smoking leaf, which leads to a quote that Eliana is insisting we read aloud.
It's a great quote.
It's hilarious.
All right.
It's full of multiple meanings, if you're me.
Lay it on us.
All right.
The butler looked uncomfortable.
Guests entered the retiring room at the master's invitation only and Lord Asriel knew that but the butler also saw Lord
Asriel looking pointedly at the
bulge in his pocket and decided
not to protest.
I refuse to believe that Pullman wrote that and did not
know what he was
nudging towards.
Stop nudging it.
Stop nudging it.
Also, I'd say if you looked at it as a whole
and not just the bolded quote
it gets kinkier
that's true
oh I can see because of the different doors
yep
not protesting
I mean it's fascinating
fascinating quote
everyone thanks for being on this new journey with us
so lord asriel and his daemon uh snow leopard prepare for a projected presentation
and of course to break down in the animal corner snow leopard symbolism for you snow leopards like
to hunt in darkness and they tend to see things that other people cannot. They're associated with perception. Other than wanting to breed, the snow leopard lives a
life of solitude. Their markings protect them in their environment. They camouflage before they
reveal themselves to prey. Also, it can be equivalated with the hermit in tarot, which
of course shows us introspection interesting i like
how you say of course like we know that but no you are here giving us knowledge i am the professor
of the tarot of the snow leopard apparently you are one of the scholars i'm a luminary oh i am a
scholar of jordan exactly that's what i'm saying. Capital S Scholar. Yeah, capital D Dust. Indeed.
Indeed. Maybe you have a butler
like Ren who returns
once more to the retiring
room. Then Asriel notices the tokay
on the table. Asriel also
is like, uh, I would like
a screen also and a projecting lantern
and Ren's like, uh,
this is ridiculous. He's like, excuse me,
I'm very fucking rich
very fucking high up do what i want even though you just brought me coffee bring me all these
other things and then ren goes and has to do it and lord asriel is over here now he's down in
coffee like he's fucking detective pikachu and it's just just because it's helpful if you know
what he looks like, right?
Lord Asriel was a tall man with powerful shoulders, a fierce dark face, and eyes that seemed to flash and glitter with savage laughter.
It was a face to be dominated by, or to fight.
Never a face to patronize or pity.
All his movements were large and perfectly balanced, like those of a wild animal, and when he appeared in a room like this this he seemed a wild animal held in a cage too small for it there's so much language in this chapter that i did not
get the very first time through wow he seemed a wild animal held in a cage too small for it i
think there's something in that or something stuck in that but I also could add as
someone who is a luminary in this community
of his dark materials and wants to enrich
your experience while you read this story
Lord Asriel
is what we would call a
zaddy
and a zaddy for all of you since we apparently
like had to explain this to someone
recently yeah our friend yes
we're looking at you Alicia Alicia. I have a surprise.
She didn't know what zaddy meant. I asked too.
I was too. Eliana, what is a zaddy
for our listeners? Yeah, so
in general, a zaddy is someone who is
I guess very, very
good-looking, right?
Often older.
Very, a man
who is very good-looking, but my
understanding is the development of it being the term zaddy as opposed to daddy.
Comes from during the act of intercourse in which one would call out the term daddy.
But be so wrapped in pleasure that the words become slurred
into zaddy.
That is my understanding.
So transitioning
from that...
This is a children's book!
I was gonna say that
and I'm really glad you did, but we're still releasing
them as explicit, so...
So back
to the closet where Lyra is hidden. she watches asriel go for the tokay and without
thinking she blurts out and cries no she tumbles out of the wardrobe she throws the glass on the
ground and lord asriel twists her wrist cruelly and hard and she reveals the wine was poisoned. But then the porter-shooter comes.
Yeah, somehow Lord Asriel twists everything in this situation
to make it seem like the porter was the one who knocked the entire decanter of tokay off the table
and the glass, and then he just totally shits on the porter and gets mad at him
and pretends to be on his side, like,
I'm not going to get you into any more trouble if you just go and take care of this.
Which kind of echoes how he treated the butler earlier. to be on his side, like, ugh, I'm not gonna get you into any more trouble if you just go and take care of this. Which
kind of echoes how he treated
the butler earlier.
And then in comes
Thorold, Asriel's
manservant, who comes
in and helps get everything set up
so that Lyra can see the
presentation.
And then everything's set up, and the gathering begins.
And that's the first chapter.
We got through one. Let's move on. We're going to jump right into the idea of North,
where Lyra watches a hidden meeting. Yes, the Oxford scholars are now in the room meeting.
Lyra continues to stay hidden inside of the closet. And she watches the master's eyes
flick toward where the toke had been, and he comes toward
Asriel to greet him.
Master,
said Lord Asriel,
I came too late to disturb your dinner,
so I made myself at home in here.
Hello, sub-rector.
Glad to see you looking so well.
Excuse my rough appearance.
I've only just landed.
Yes, master, the tokeke is gone i think you're standing
in it the porter knocked it off the table but it was my fault hello chaplain i read your latest
paper with great interest damn such charisma right yeah uh asriel's charisma in this moment
it's saving face because literally the last five minutes were like lyra tumbling out
of the closet knocking the wine down and then like the manservant appearing and like just a huge rush
so he's saving face but i feel like this is hinting to us that we should be looking at his
other factions of his personality that he is very good at manipulating, very good at smooth talking. And
Lyra, of course, as we've read, sees him as ferocious but calmable. Like she said in the
last chapter that he was involved in high politics, secret exploration, and distant warfare. He was
fierce. While Lyra thinks that, you know, she can quell that storm and the punishment wouldn't be that bad, he kind of sounds like a man you wouldn't want to cross or trifle with, right?
cross him and a lot of people respect him but because you know he's so high up and good at all these things he turns out he's like a little divisive for people lyra watches the master's
demon that raven and it's restless on his shoulder asriel is being respected that like all right guys
it's all right i know this is in my, but it's obvious where the power actually lies
based on all of those things that Chloe just said.
Asriel's commanding the room.
He sets up the presentation and all the lords are very intrigued and focused on the wooden
case and lantern.
They're like, ooh, I've never seen a projection before.
They've seen projections before.
We get this introduction to all the scholars.
She knew the scholars well.
The librarian, the subrector, the inquirer, and the rest.
They were men who had been around her all her life.
Taught her, chastised her, consoled her, given her little presents,
chased her away from the fruit trees in the garden.
They were all she had for a family.
They might even have felt like a family if she knew what a family was, though if she did, she'd
have been more likely to feel about the college servants. The scholars had more important things
to do than attend the affections of a half-wild, half-civilized girl left among them by chance.
I love that. I love hearing about this like half-world she gets to live in and half-civilized girl left among them by chance. I love that. I love hearing about this, like, half-world she gets to live in
and half-world that she also gets to live in.
We'll get to that in the next chapter.
Yeah, it seems that she's just kind of been living a pretty great, cushy life here so far.
Truly having a great childhood.
Innocent and in her own little, you know, garden.
It's fun that garden is capitalized and we'll
come back to this later but for now the master is lighting a chafing dish of butter and throw
some poppy seeds in it to help clear the mind and stimulate the senses and tongue
he's literally lighting up opium you guys yeah he's incensing that shit. Or as Eliana likes to pronounce it, incesting that shit.
But yes, they're sitting in an opium den right now.
And it's super ritualistic.
The way he cuts open that poppy seed and the guy lights the chafing dish.
These guys are just sitting around waxing poetic about how they're better than everyone.
Getting high as fuck from incense
that's just opium smoke yeah this was like all the vogue during that time i know that what
not the exact same time region we'll talk about time timelines a little i picasso was really into
opium but he also like quit because he's like i don't know it felt good and i had a lot of ideas
but i actually never ended up doing any of those ideas because I was
on drugs.
And regarding
incensing and incesting, in my defense,
in the other series we discuss,
there's a lot of both.
There's a lot more incest than incense.
Well, right now
there's more incense than incest
so I want you to get it together.
Okay, alright, alright. Lyra, she's using the noise
from the frying poppies to move around
and get comfortable on a fur coat
then she begins to feel drowsy
because A, the coat's super comfortable
and B, she's in, again, a fucking opium den
and Chan's like
that was dumb
you should have chosen something less comfortable
because now you're going to fall asleep
and she's like, well then fucking wake me up
yeah, she's like, well, then fucking wake me up.
Yeah, she's super bored by this political discussion that's going on.
And they're not talking about like the Tardars, which would excite her.
But I kind of wonder if maybe this could be something important that she probably if she had listened to, she might have learned from.
Like, I don't know, some political information.
They start talking about politics and
politics as you and i know from our discussions are where money goes basically and that's an
important part of any adventure finding out what money takes things where so to be a kid she's not
thinking about that it must be nice it's hard it's so hard to be into it when you're 12.
yeah and pullman encapsulates that.
He's like, kids don't care about that.
They don't care about that news.
They want to go make clay bricks to throw at each other in the street out of mud.
And the financials don't matter to them.
This is probably a good talk she's missing out on, though.
As an adult, I'm like, Lyra, could you quiet down?
But eventually it is the politics that bring her back awake.
And as readers, we should be reading then between the lines,
because now we are adults.
Because I'm sure I missed all of this when I was 13 and read this too.
Yeah, I thought this was interesting,
that in the master's speech to all of the scholars,
he welcomes Lord Asriel and he says,
I speak for all of us when I
bid Lord Asriel welcome. He calls his visits rare but immensely valuable and he says he understands
Asriel has something of particular interest to show us. He says it's a high political tension
time, as they're all aware, and that a train is waiting to carry Asriel to London when they finish, so they have
to use their time wisely. And then he asks Asriel if he'd like to begin after telling them that
questions have to be kept short. While his speech doesn't sound threatening to the ear, it's
certainly not praising Asriel heavily, and it's basically saying as real as intel is super valuable we have very little
time to learn this intel ask good questions don't be stupid he has to leave soon this is our only
chance to get this information yeah i think it's interesting that you call it out it's it's
both that of like this is our only chance but he's also trying to make it seem like
i mean do you guys really want to listen to this guy, Lord Asriel? Because he's trying to make it seem like Lord Asriel thinks he's too important for us, and trying to play the politics in that way. Like, he doesn't this guy be that he wouldn't have time for Jordan College?
Then, though, Asriel does rearrange the room without notice.
He asks the master to switch seats with the subrector, whose eyesight is horrible.
And now the master sits close to the wardrobe that Lyra is hidden in.
Lyra hears him murmur to the librarian while he sits in the armchair.
The devil! He knew about the wine, I'm sure of it He's going to ask for funds if he forces a vote
If he does that, we must just argue against with all of the eloquence we have
And the lantern now is glowing too bright
And Asriel asks for it to be turned down because this is how slideshows
work.
And interestingly enough, he's
trying to show Lyra and us.
He's trying to groom, teach, and test
her and show her the information
without telling her
what it means.
As well as the dual hope
that like, alright, we're gonna talk to
Lyra after this and she's gonna to tell me anything that she heard.
Multi-purpose.
So Asriel basically tells them he had gone north to King of Lapland on a diplomatic mission, but his goal was to discover what happened to the Grunman expedition.
The Grunman expedition was a team that was going to ice.
It spoke of a phenomenon happening in the north that intrigued Asriel.
But he found something quite else.
Asriel slides a frame into the projector and a grayscale photo under a full moon of a wooden hut with snow and philosophical instruments appears on the screen.
Aerials, wires, and porcelain insulators.
You know, steampunk is obviously over, but this could be a big comeback in pop culture this autumn.
I'm just saying, when this show comes out,
steampunk could be cool again.
It could.
I'm curious because I've heard the directors or producers
or something say, especially seeing the trailers,
that they might modernize it a little,
but it's not super modern,
so I'm still not sure sure where they're gonna hit it
and i mean yeah a lot of the costuming does feel a little more oh i was gonna say steampunkish
i don't know i'm not sure where they're gonna land on all that we'll find out yeah
and this is actually something really interesting coming up i'm not a photography major i don't know about photography. I did not try to Google my way into it tonight. I'm going to be honest with you. I just am letting it be. But of all the things that Pullman keeps in his novels, he keeps some science behind photography.
he, Asriel, has a bunch of photographs
and he explains how he took this photogram
is what he's calling it here
and
says that it uses a standard silver
nitrate emulsion
and then he shows them a different
slide that is taken using a different
emulsion. The photo is dark
and it's obviously the same place as
the first photo
but all the instruments in it are hidden by darkness, and the man has now glowing particles that are coming into his hand.
The chaplain asks, wait, is that light from the hand going down, or is it going up?
And Asriel explains it's coming down, but that's not light that you're seeing, it's dust.
Controversial. but that's not light that you're seeing it's dust controversial something in the way he said it
made lyra imagine dust with a capital letter as if this wasn't ordinary dust well it's true because
ordinary dust does not glow in certain emulsions the scholars all then begin to speak very excitedly
after a moment of silence,
and then they raise their voices to object, discuss, and argue,
but the chaplain silences them,
asking all of them then to listen to Asriel.
Asriel explains,
it's dust but registered as light on the plate
because particles of dust affect the process,
like photons affect silver nitrate in photography
he redirects them toward the visible man figure and the blurred smaller shape next to him
the inquirer thinks it's his demon but asriel says no it's a child the demon is coiled at the neck
like a snake yes and someone then asks a severed child, but stops himself and the room suddenly gets all stiff because you can tell that he said a very wrong thing.
No, no. Bad word.
Because everyone's quiet, right?
And Asriel's like, reassuring them, no, it's an entire child,
which, given the nature of dust,
is exactly the point of what I'm trying to show you in this photo.
Graham.
Instagram.
Chaplin is the first, then, to break the silence, letting out his breath and mentioning those streams of dust in the photo.
Asriel responds, they come from the sky and bathe him in light.
He says he'll leave them the photo and then shows them another.
A photo at night, but with no moonlight this time.
Tents are prominent and boxes and a sledge next to them.
But the sky was the real point of focus.
Streams and veils of light hung like curtains,
looped and festooned on invisible hooks hundreds
of miles high or blowing out sideways in the stream of some unimaginable wind yes i rather
like that i think it's beautiful i uh you're not gonna hear a ton of prose in these books right
you get an author like george rr martin who loves to write, who writes for the craft,
for the flowery effect, for the fact that words are beautiful when they're placed next
to each other and he lets his words grow and the flowers in his garden just go where they
want.
But Pullman knows where he's going.
He doesn't write with that excessive flowery prose.
He, like I said earlier, is a storyteller, not a writer.
And he has a story to get done with.
Not, no shade at George R.R. Martin, he's a great author, but Pullman knows what his strengths were,
and he went for them. Yeah, and even if he doesn't feel that he's really digging into the prose,
I think he does it quite well, and it comes through, And a lot of that has to do with like the things, the influences that he loves.
It comes through in his work.
There's also, I don't know if this is a thing he's doing intentionally or not.
Sometimes I find like the language might use a more difficult word or a different word than I would expect them to use.
And part of me wonders if that's because it is a children's book
and you'll see this sometimes in children's books
where they'll introduce different kinds
of vocabulary less because it
necessarily is the best word but
sometimes because they're using it
as a vehicle to teach children
and introduce them to more words within the language
so
that's true that is something to keep sight
of in this
I don't know where the line is
for him it's interesting yeah either way it's a beautiful passage where you could see that light
of the aurora in your own mind because it is a photo of the aurora and the shaky old
percenter with a c asks if that is what they call the Northern Lights.
Ah, he said the thing!
It's the book!
It's the name! In some places in this
world, that's the book.
Not here.
Asriel says
actually it has many names. Sometimes
it's the Golden Compass Knot. It's
made of storms and particles and
solar rays that are invisible but
radiate in the atmosphere.
And he's showing them a
black and white version of this and wishes that he
actually had time to show them a tinted version that
someone would have had to, like, paint
colors into. Like, I don't know,
fucking Photoshop. That's what people
used to do back in the day, I guess.
Then he changes out the slides to show
a city and the master and librarian
speak again undercover.
If he forces a vote,
we could try to invoke the residence clause.
He hasn't been resident in the college
for 30 weeks out of the last 52.
He's already got the
chaplain on his side.
The dean mocks Asriel
about this slide of the city,
thinking he's about to say it's a city in
another world and asriel ignores the haters as many of the other scholars are suddenly excited
about because this is proof their tinfoil theory was real so i completely understand
the chaplain asks about the status of grumman and his expedition, but Asriel informs him of his death.
And everyone's like, no, what?
And they're all anxious.
They're like, what happened?
No way.
And he tells them the rumor that maybe there was an accident or he'd never be found.
But then I found him and he reveals his head.
He has his head.
He found him on ice off of Svalbard.
Gross. Gross.
Yes. And interestingly, Lyra
actually can't see this head
or this entire display
very well, and she's actually pretty bummed.
She's pretty funny like that.
She's-
The men start to talk about
how it looks like a routine scalping, and they start to
then look at this skull more scientifically.
Lyra finally gets all this tartar sauce drama that she wanted, and they discuss something called trepanning.
They say that there's a hole in the top of the head.
in this world was apparently banned in New Denmark, and had
originally moved to the
Skrælings after
Siberian Aboriginals and
the Tungusk.
What a name. Yeah.
Pan
is fluttering about her as his moth
self, visibly stressed, and
Lyra shushes him so she can listen.
The scholars realize
one of their own kind was basically taken by the Tartars and sculpt.
Dean tries to pin this on the fact he was found near Svalbard.
Are we to understand that the Panzerborn have had anything to do with this, someone asks.
I love that word, Panzerbjorn, Panzerbjorn.
I love it.
I love it.
The Palmyrean professor says they must not know Eofor Rakinson and says it wouldn't surprise him if they took to this scalping style.
Someone's like, who is Eoric Rakinson?
And the professor says he's the king of Svalbard, duh,
who tricked his way to the throne.
Also, he's a bear.
He's a bear.
A bear. A bear.
A bear.
And the dean and his cronies then make fun of the Palmarian professor
because they're like, this is fucking ridiculous.
Bear kings.
Like, what's that?
No one gives a shit about bear kings.
And then the professor tells them that
the bear could be flattered into listening and behaving,
that all he actually wants is a demon.
Side note, so the last name of this professor is Trelawney,
and it makes me think, I wonder if J.K. Polman did that?
There are a bunch of other Trelawneys in literature.
You have the Music of Time series by Anthony Powell,
if you've read that, with Dr. Tre trulani who was an occultist and you also have dr trulani from the from viscante de mezzato
by etalo calvino uh it's a eccentric english naturalist and sometimes surgeon so i don't know
could be something could be nothing but it's interesting that there are a handful of different UK characters with the name Trelawney that happen to be a little weird.
Yeah, I was wondering if it's just like one of those British names that people use that are common, but maybe it's a name that is associated with something like that.
Also, it reminds me of, you know, you can actually make it like a phrase like, oh, that's a load of Trelawney.
We could start doing that.
Yeah, that is a load of Trelawney, because all the scholars are laughing at him.
Not with him, at him.
And Lyra is kind of starting to snooze out of boredom.
It's warm, and the opium's getting to her, and she has Pan curled up against her.
He has changed his shape, his form form and he is now an air mine yes
cute and small i want one air mine yeah just curled up like on your neck right here you know
just real warm and cute and just like oh you're so cute and there's actually a good amount of
symbolism in this pet corner in this uh demon corner because air mines especially ones that are pure white
were always said even in history to embody moral purity and if we take a look at panel
imon's character it really fits uh the air mine with its beautiful white coat would rather die
before it soils its fur and in lore hunters that would seek the air mine they would smear the lair where the air
mine would live with mud and then begin their hunt the air mine on the trail will be tired
and exhausted from the hunt and when it went to go to its home to hide it would discover the mud
and then be caught by the hunters because it would refuse to go through the mud the air mine became
associated with phrases like death before defilement
and death rather than dishonor.
Man.
That's kind of, like, really sad, but
also fascinating. It's too
dirty. Can't go in.
Yep. I would never go home if that
were, if I were an Eremine.
Standards, bitch.
Standards.
They're actually talking, though, about funding about funding so the scholars are talking
about funding while lyra is falling asleep which to me it's like lyra probably important to hear
who's funding one but kids don't care about money because they have none so i get it i used to not
care either the good old days but lyra then instead awakens to her uncle shaking her because she fell asleep.
And then he's like, all right, you got to be quiet.
There are servants afoot.
And you just need to go to your bedroom and be quiet about everything.
She's like, so did they fund you?
And he tells her that, yes, they did.
And then she's like, so what's dust?
While you're here. like so what's dust while you're here yeah what's dust and he's not budging too she like protests that he showed her everything else and now he won't
tell her about dust and she asks to see the head that he found and he tells her stop being gross
tell me about the master who tried to poison me.
She reports to him about his face at the wine, and he seems content enough.
Asriel tells her, go to bed now, do as you're told.
Yes. And then the conversation moves to how Asriel is heading north.
And Lyra, of course, being adventurous like she is, asks to come along, but he doesn't allow her.
Though it's interesting that he does actually very seriously consider it for a second.
He apparently looks at her differently
when she asks to head north.
But then he decides, no,
your place is here at Oxford.
And then she tries to beg him. She's like,
I want to see the bears and the
lights and the dust.
And he's like, no,
forget all that. and if you're nice
I'm gonna bring you back a tusk with carvings
and it's like that's pretty lame compared
to hanging out with bears
but whatever
hey be careful
what you wish for girl
he tells her to stop
arguing or he'll be angry
and his demon a leopard
as we talked about growls frightening
lyra it reminds her that it is a dangerous creature she reluctantly heads off to bed and
the camera pans to the master and the librarian who are talking you know i'm not really sure if
it's given in these first few pages i don't think it is but for what it's worth the master's name
is dr carne which i think is really an interesting name for someone whose demon is a raven,
known to eat, of course, carrion and meat. And Carnet means meat in many different languages.
So the master and the librarian are consoling one another and they discuss about how did Asriel
know about the wine? And the librarian, whose name is Charles, feels actually relieved that it didn't happen, that they didn't really go through poisoning him. And the master says to him,
I'm only sorry I burdened you with the knowledge of it. And I kind of really find this line
fascinating in a story that revolves so heavily around truth and deceit, but of course, like also
knowledge, because knowledge is that tree,
it's that forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden. And we see it used in so many different ways
throughout the story, and the lengths that people will go to acquire knowledge. But at the same time,
there's definitely an aspect of the plot where you have some characters pulling towards ignorance,
have some characters pulling towards ignorance or trying to force ignorance on others conflating ignorance with innocence and that kind of comes forth in this conversation especially because
the librarian says that instead i actually wish you had told me more i would have felt more settled
about what we were doing if you had given me more information which is more about like how why he
could understand why they were doing this terrible thing,
which, again, links that
idea of knowledge and
evil, or sin,
together.
The Master
explains that the Alethiometer
has warned him of
appalling consequences if Lord
Asriel pursues this research,
and that Lyra will end up pulled in
no matter what i want to break that apart that ancient greek uh as far as vernacular goes aletheia
meant truth and meter means measure so take that as you will it's a very literal interesting kind
of word play with the golden compass with the alethiometer yeah apparently i think i don't know pullman and some people don't like it as
the golden compass they say that's not what it is but i think that there is a way that you can
interpret the alethiometer as a golden compass it makes sense to me oh that's bullshit like in
terms of like pointing you and i't know, we'll talk about it
later, obviously. Yeah, I think
especially as far as morality goes,
and the story plays such big roles
with morality as we see Lyra struggle
with what the right thing is,
I think not only is the story the
golden compass, but the alethiometer
is obviously the thing she looks to
for guidance. Well, it was
like the working title for publishers.
And then he decided eventually that he was going to title it Northern Lights.
So that's the title that is released right in the UK.
And the other publishers were like, I don't know, I'm pretty fucking lazy.
We're just going to do this.
But I don't think it doesn't work.
I know that's like a double negative.
I think it works.
I understand that Northern Lights. I think it doesn't work. I know that's like a double negative. I think it works. I understand that Northern Lights.
I think it absolutely works.
And I think it's just silly because it's like you already thought about it being named that once.
Even if it was the working title, you thought about it and almost subscribed to it.
Just let it be.
I don't know if he thought of it or if it was like the publisher's idea.
Because sometimes, you know, they just come up with titles or not.
I'll have to double check on that.
But I just like think northern lights
absolutely definitely worked especially as we're gonna see in the story we literally were just
introduced to northern lights they literally just said the thing but yeah anyway throughout the
conversation we learned that there are a couple of other factions that are at play uh there are
northern lights and golden compass no i'm joking. They are the Consistorial Court of Discipline and the Ablation Board.
And Lord Asriel
actually has no affiliation with either of these
organizations, and turns out,
despite previous
thoughts, neither organization
answers to the other.
And just keep this
in your pocket for later, this definition.
Because it's going to be a really
interesting name when we get to it regarding the oblation board. An oblation is the act of making a religious
offering. When it's capitalized, it's the act of offering the Eucharistic elements to God and the
Eucharistic elements, body and blood of Christ, commemorating the Last Supper. And something,
another definition of it
is something that's offered in worship or devotion,
a holy gift offered usually at an
altar or shrine.
So keep that in your pocket
for now.
And honestly, I do want to make sure
that we say, not only is it the
ablation board, but it's the general
ablation board.
And you might not think that's
important but that g adds everything because other ways that we could say this throughout
the rest of our podcasting is gob did you mean job job bluth god bless america god bless america
did you know people don't like Gabi anyways?
I've read this in our friend group.
Continue.
I feel betrayed.
There's a lot of betrayal in this story.
But back to the world building.
Pope John Calvin moved the seat of the papacy to Geneva,
where now lies the Consistorial Court of Discipline.
The church is an enormous political power in this world, and there are
no more popes anymore. Now we just have,
as the story says, courts,
colleges, and councils collectively known
as the Magisterium.
Many of them-
Go ahead.
Many of them compete
with the others, and the Consistorial
Court of Discipline as well.
That's the most active and
feared organization and it's just like you were saying eliana knowledge is power in this series
if the last chapter's meeting was anything to observe that's why asriel has so much power
because he has so much knowledge that dictates what this board of men do yes and then in this chapter that city in the sky and this whole barnard stokes
theorem gets a bit more explanation the holy church teaches that there are two worlds the
world of everything we can see and hear and touch and another world the spiritual world of heaven
and hell barnard and stokes were two how I put it, renegade theologians who
postulated the existence of numerous other worlds like this one, never heaven nor hell, but material
and sinful. They are there, close by, but invisible and unreachable. The Holy Church naturally
disapproved of this abominable heresy, and Barnard and Stokes were silenced. But unfortunately for Yes, I thought this was some great further explanation on what's going on here and setting stuff up within this story.
I like the use of this word renegade. There's a lot of ideas of renegade factions going on here and in Paradise Lost.
And then I love that the aurora earlier on when we're showed the photograms gets described as a curtain when Asriel shows it.
And that, yes, of course, the city can be seen behind it.
And I'm pretty sure I've seen other people describe the aurora as a curtain.
And I'm pretty sure I've seen other people describe the Aurora as a curtain, but it's interesting in this context with the idea of other worlds and spiritual worlds lying beyond it.
Of course, curtains, as well as being frequently used to describe Auroras, are also a well-known metaphor for describing the divide between life and death. This happens in the fifth Harry Potter book, R.I.P.
To that character. to that character to that character but because of the religious overtones of this series it kind of reminds me of that moment of
jesus's crucifixion when the veil and the temple tears which is meant to symbolize god opening the
way for salvation after the sacrifice of christ god ain't nobody right such good foreshadowing and
such good parallels and such good characters as the people that made up the bible dr carne and
charles worry that jordan will seem like it supports heresy and the master ponders trying
to keep political balance especially while Lyra gets drawn in.
Yes, Lyra has a part to play in all this, and a major one. The irony is she must do it all without realizing what she's doing. She can be helped, though, and if my plan with the Tokay
had succeeded, she would have been safe for a little longer. I would have liked to spare her a journey to the
north. I wish above all
things that I were able to explain
it to her.
No.
Oh shit, this conversation sucks.
I know, we were all like, damn, the master sucks
but turns out he wanted to
just protect Lyra.
Here I am, telling you guys
a little bit ago, you're gonna change your
opinions on characters, and here we
are changing them! Yes.
The librarian, though,
insists that, no, Lyra's not gonna listen.
She's not gonna be interested in dust.
And he's like, why would she be interested in
dust? The master
explains, though, that one of the things that will be
part of Lyra's story is
that she shall be a betrayer.
She will
be the betrayer, and the experience
will be terrible. She mustn't
know that, of course, but
there's no reason for her not to know
about the problem of
dust.
And Dr. Carnet actually thinks that Lyra would be
interested. And the librarian
I thought this was a cute line.
I'm not quoting it exactly, but he basically says,
it's the duty of the old to be anxious on behalf of the young.
The duty of the young to scorn the anxiety of the old.
I'm like, oh, I relate.
It's true.
As we get older.
Yep, big mood.
So they part.
And a couple things in this,
I really thought it was interesting how it was
framed that it was the problem of dust it's language that basically the church and the
magisterium are calling dust bad it's telling us their stance that the problem of dust the the
interesting quandary about dust capital d and this really isn't a prophecy per se in this story but it's
more just excessive foreshadowing to us the reader of what's about to happen with dust or with lyra
throughout the whole entire story but especially lyra because people do refer to it as a prophecy
whatever anyways yeah that's kind of what I was curious about.
But after, I don't know, after hearing prophecies and other stories, I just don't think it was a prophecy.
I guess it is, right?
I mean, he's using the alethiometer and that's where he's getting this information.
Is that what we think?
Yes, that is where he's getting it from.
That's where the alethiometer told him all this.
So maybe this one per se
isn't a prophecy
but
I see what you're saying
but also to be fair yes it likely is then
because he's making actions
based off of what this little
not golden compass
told him
yes
and just because and then I guess that raises questions of like
what constitutes as a prophecy in terms of like how you receive that information but
dust is indeed bad in the home but now let's talk about lyra's home
let's get to that third chapter.
It's titled Lyra's Jordan, and it is an exposition chapter.
This is world building.
This is info dump.
It is huge.
We are going to speed racer through it. We are going to get in the Mach 5 and drive on down these Google Doc pages of story, story, story.
Because we're at Jordan, the baddest bitch of Oxford colleges.
It has buildings from the early
Middle Ages to the mid-18th century
and it just kept growing because they're like,
I don't know, we're rich, let's just
make all this other shit.
We're going to own some farms in this state
and they're going to be all over the country, alright?
We're stacked.
And in particular, Jordan College
is very known for what is called experimental
theology here and lyra feels a lot of pride in the college that she calls home and boasts
of it to the i'm gonna this is the word using the story ragamuffins she plays with adorable
been called that as as a youth before a ragamuffin back before your demon chose shape.
Yes, exactly.
There's this passage.
As for what experimental theology was, Lyra had no more idea than the urchins.
She had formed the notion that it was concerned with magic, with the movements of the stars and the planets with tiny particles of matter but that
was guesswork really probably the stars had demons just as humans did and experimental theology
involved talking to them lyra imagined the chaplain speaking loftily listening to the star
demons remarks and then nodding judiciously or shaking his head in regret but what might be passing between them she couldn't
conceive oh that like first half obviously i haven't gotten through this whole series but
that feels right she it's because she only half listens to the scholars that's the thing
she like listens to some of it and then she's like all right that was cool then she's like i'm
bored of this now and so she kind she
understands like the movements of stars and planets and tiny particles of matter but the idea of it
being constrained with magic but i i just really liked this passage and the way it was written
you were talking about the language before and i thought that it was well done and there's i think
a lot of poetry to me in the idea of
stars having demons and being able
to speak with them to learn about
the world and I just thought that was really
that was really touching
yeah it goes back to that idea of
halos with the Greek theory
and it goes back of course
to Aristotle like we were talking about
it's really interesting
of if it exists, if it
acts, it is
that law of physics
but Lyra's not interested in
this whole metaphysics
biophysiology, she's not
interested, she's a child, not
an intellectual and I think it's
interesting and I think
it's really great how he colors this
he shows Lyra's humanity that she's a 12 yearyear-old girl, but she can coexist with these scholars.
But she also loves to spend time with this whole other family, these children that run the streets.
And it's just so nice.
It's a refreshing character.
Yeah, she's a lot of fun.
Her favorite activity also is running across the college's rooftops together with the kitchen boy
roger and they like to like throw stones and harass the visiting scholars they also they also
have a bunch of other things she's like you know just as we can't conceive of what the scholars do
they would never know that the children have battles and treaties with the other child factions
uh in other ox colleges. For example,
once Lyra had been captured by the kids of Gabriel College. There are 24 colleges and all the
children fight one another, but they all unite against the Townsies children, which I think,
I guess that would be called, I've never heard them referred to as townsies but i have heard the term townie uh here in the u.s so yeah i think that's probably similar i think it's the same
same word or vibe they're all perpetual enemies though of the brick burner children everyone i
guess hates the brick burner children they live by the clay beds and they knocked over their
clay castle once like goddamn. Kids are fucking vicious.
And every year they clash with the migratory Egyptian children
who come here on boats.
There was one family of Egyptians in particular
who regularly returned to their mooring
in that part of the city known as Jericho,
with whom Lyra had been feuding ever since she could first throw a stone.
When they were last in Oxford, she and Roger and some of the other kitchen boys from Jordan
and St. Michael's College had laid an ambush for them, throwing mud at their brightly painted
narrowboat until the whole family came out to chase them away, at which point the reserve
squad under Lyra raided the boat and cast it off from the bank to float down the canal,
getting in the way of all the other water traffic while Lyra's raiders searched the boat from end to end looking
for the bung Lyra firmly believed in this bung if they pulled it out she assured her troop the boat
would sink at once but they didn't find it and had to abandon ship when the Egyptians caught them up
to flee dripping and
crowing with triumph through the narrow lanes of jericho i just love this passage it just shows
i think a lot about lyra's childhood but also i like again there's some well done writing here
lyra firmly believed in this book she is 12 years old well she is very obvious she's just like
yes exactly there's just so much faith of i believe that this thing exists and we can
sink the ship with this i just love the way she firmly believed in this bug
she is a woman of a young woman of her convictions that is she really is though she and i think that's something that's really fun about her
she always felt that while part of her was in this world and of the college there was another
part destined for high politics alongside her uncle lord asriel she doesn't bother to find out
more but she does lord it over the other kids she has to dress up all nicely when Asriel visits and one time the other kids saw
and they started to make fun of her.
Yeah, they're like, ew, you're wearing a
dress, what the hell? And they just like
fall over laughing.
They're like, that's dumb.
And then during these visits
of course Asriel checks on how Lyra is
being raised. I think he's just like, what the hell is
happening here? On one
visit he calls her out
he's like so what do you do when you hang out and she's like oh i don't know i just hang out in
these libraries and gardens he's like i saw you on the fucking roof you monster kid she's like
all right i go on the roof and he's like all right so you go all over the roofs and she's just like
no i don't go on all of them i can't reach there's this one roof i can't reach from up there i've
never been on that he's like's like, alright, fine.
So you go in the gardens and the
libraries and you're all over the roofs. And then he
busts out and he's like, but have you
visited the underground?
Like the fucking hipster ass guy he is.
Right, like what is it?
Like some sort of prohibition era bar?
Knock on the back door three times?
It kinda is. We're gonna get to that.
In a way it kinda is, don't gonna get to that in a way it kind of is
don't you think yeah a little bit as we know the master and librarian were actually wrong lyra is
super deeply interested in dust and the book says she'll learn more about it than anyone else in the
world but enough about that we suddenly get a cut in the chapter. Kids are disappearing. We follow a child, we're told, that will disappear.
Very, very fourth wall breaking.
His name is Tony Makarios.
He is called Tony Makarios.
His mother thinks he's nine years old,
but she has a poor memory that the drink has rotted.
He might be eight or ten.
His surname is Greek, but like his age,
that is a guess on his
mother's part, because he looks more Chinese than Greek, and there's Irish and Scrailing and Lascar
in him from his mother's side too. Tony's not very bright, but he has a sort of clumsy tenderness
that sometimes prompts him to give his mother a rough hug and plant a sticky kiss on her cheeks.
The poor woman is usually too fuddled to start such a procedure herself, but she
responds warmly enough once she realizes
what's happening.
My heart's breaking.
Oh.
Tony is in the market. He's
stealing food so he can spend his money
on something else. Good for him.
Just putting it out there. And
by St. Catherine's Oratory, he's
eating his prize.
But he's being watched by a woman in a fox fur coat.
Her daemon is a golden monkey, which, of course, animal corner, represents playfulness, youthfulness, and trickery.
Tony's daemon, named Ratter, becomes a sparrow, and the monkey lures it in.
The sparrow represents simplicity caring and friendliness so simple
kind good yes i like how its name is radder though me too very simple i'm like but it's a
different animal entirely fascinating to me really fascinating to me but then the monkey closes its grip on the sparrow and Tony feels it and reflexively responds.
He can't help it.
The woman offers him some chocolatel and he agrees to go with her.
And then there's this other passage.
He's lost already.
He was lost the moment his slow-witted daemon hopped onto the monkey's hand.
He follows the beautiful young
lady and the golden monkey down Denmark Street and along to Hangman's Wharf, and down King
George's steps to a little green door in the side of a tall warehouse. She knocks the doors open,
they go in, the door is closed. Tony will never come out, at least by that entrance,
and he'll never see his mother again. poor drunken thing will think he's run away
and when she remembers him she'll think it was her fault and sob her sorry heart out oh man
sad i know this is obviously a really recurring theme that we see not only in pop culture i mean
there's other shows like the runaways for example is something that springs to mind right away but this sort of grooming behavior
and predator behavior is something that is involved with trafficking of children all the time every
single day and it's very gross she is preying on him like an animal. The demons are playing the scene of what she's actually doing.
So while this woman that is watching him and her demon is talking to his demon and interacting with his demon,
while that's going on, the demons are actually playing out on screen for us what she's doing.
But all the while she is smiling and she is seducing him with this chocolate.
Yeah. the while she is smiling and she is seducing him with this chocolate yeah especially when you look at how it's a lower class it's the one being seduced by this and this predatory behavior it's
just gross well because she's going after someone who seems like he's alone right like and no one
cares about him and someone does but like she's not going to come after him because if he's already
alone like that that there's clearly and then as you were saying this is how trafficking and
grooming unfortunately does occur they'll go after people where they feel as though those kids are
vulnerable yeah they don't really have a support network someone might not necessarily miss them
while tony mccarius's mom kissed him goodbye and loves him as he said or as
we have this third person omniscient narrator saying she's not very wary she doesn't know where
he goes she doesn't know what he does and she doesn't really care much she cares to the extent
that like she she cries about it but at the same time, she doesn't really have it to pursue him and thinks maybe that it was better for him.
That's why he ran away, because I was a shit mom.
But he loved her.
That's what that, not only that culture, but that's also what that breeds, right?
That money, like that, you don't have that money.
It's expected that your kid's out there stealing food to survive.
Yeah.
I mean, he had a bit of money, but he's just like,
no, I'm going to buy you other cool shit.
But yeah.
And Tony, it turns out, isn't the only child that's taken.
In the cellar of a warehouse are a dozen other children,
and none of them quite realize what they all have in common,
which is that none of them have reached puberty yet.
They ask the woman, why are we all being kept here?
And she's like, oh, I need your help.
And then suddenly when she pleads with them, the children all fall shy,
because they feel as though they've never seen someone so sweet and gracious before,
and they feel lucky to be here.
She offers to let them write letters home or tell their loved ones what's happened to them as she brings them on this journey to to help them and tony asks her
to deliver a message to his mother she agrees that she will get it to her and so the children say
goodbye to the woman the monkey pets their daemons and the children touch her coat for luck, or for strength, or for hope, or whatever.
They all just sort of ritually touch it, and then as they sail away, the woman turns around, and then she throws all of their letters into the fire.
Coming back to that idea of throwing a letter into the fire, or throwing a piece of paper into the fire from earlier with the master. This is a very different piece of paper.
This is Hope
being thrown straight into
that fire and has a bitch
ever been so fucking
evil.
Holy shit, what a way to characterize
this woman, that it starts
this beautiful, kind, sweet, shy
woman with this golden monkey
who's just come, sweetling.
It'll be fine.
And it's up there with that villain twist of Cersei Lannister, the queen in Game of
Thrones and A Song of Ice and Fire.
And that little line from a Game of Thrones that this character says, where it's just
this quiet line of something that's so condemning, so condemning that you realize, wow, this
bitch is a villain.
And Mrs. Coulter is exactly that she's she's got such complexities as we'll find out later on but she's evil this is
awful you're mean you're a mean woman yeah and i think if you've watched the trailer for his
dark materials there's a scene where ruth wil has this fabulous facial expression, which I think really captures a lot of what's so fucked up about this character.
And it's just in that second, right, in the trailer.
Yeah, absolutely. I'm very excited to see her performance.
Yes, and you can compare it, like, I haven't watched the movie, you can compare it like i haven't watched the movie you
can compare it with nicole kidman's performance see and i've watched the movie and you and i will
have we'll have to do some sort of extra episode about this because i have thoughts yeah i
intentionally did not watch the movie because i was like this looks like it's gonna go awry
oh it's it's garbage so i can't wait to talk about it but first children from the slums were easy enough to
entice away but eventually people noticed and the people were stirred into reluctant action
for a while there were no more bewitchings but a rumor had been born and little by little it
changed and grew and spread and when after a while a few children disappeared in norwich
and then sheffield and then manchester the people in those places who had heard of the disappearances elsewhere added the new vanishings to the story and gave it new strength.
Yeah, so again, there's a lot of what Chloe and I were talking about regarding children from the slums being easy enough to entice away.
children from the slums being easy enough to entice away and when enough of them disappeared now finally like action is taken by the authorities but it's just sad that like when
not enough right no one bothers to come looking for them because there's no money behind that
search and then no one really quite knows who takes the children or to where they they pose
a couple of theories from the rumors people have been saying and I kind of like this story
or this theory
a third story told of a youth who laughed
and sang to his victims
so that they followed him like little sheep
and I like this one because it reminds me of that
story of the Pied Piper who played songs
and stole the town of Hamlin's
children and like yes
obviously the right theory is
the one about it being a woman
but there's a lot about the way
she
acts in all this that
evokes this Pied Piper kind of story
okay
I like that
and eventually people
settle on calling them the Gobblers
and it becomes a part of common
parlance which the Gobblers and the true identity of who the Gobblers, and it becomes a part of common parlance, which the Gobblers and
the true identity of who the Gobblers are is looking us in the face, and we will come back to
that, and maybe it was alluded to earlier on. You'll have to pay attention and keep listening.
But of course, it's a game for the children. The children deal with it the way they can and make
it a game. Ly suggests to roger they play
kids and gobblers where she'll try to snatch him and then slice you open like the gobblers do
and then there's this line about roger's devotion he was her devoted slave by this time he would
have followed her to the ends of the earth of course as they go and play this game, no one actually knows what the gobblers do.
And Roger's like, you wouldn't even know what to do if gobblers came along.
You don't know what they do.
And she goes, I had to do the gobblers when I saw my uncle Asriel do.
Last time he was at Jordan College.
He gave a man a hard look and he died.
And I think that this is the same time that we were there.
Because she says this is in the retiring room.
And I'm like, we were literally there, Lyra there lyren this did not happen kids are such bullshitters and i respect that like that's
some hard game and in fact the opposite happened like asriel almost died in this scene yeah i'm
assuming that this is that same moment but i'm just like i don't think that happened
so instead they turn this story into a game of Lord Asriel against the Tardars,
and they smear sherbet dip on their mouth.
Hilarious.
Right?
Fucking kids.
As to be the foam, the foam of the time.
She convinces him to play gobblers, and they sneak into the wine cellars,
and they decide to taste wine for the very first time.
I love this.
It's kind of interesting that Pullman is spitting all of these relations on their head.
Usually the Romas are the ones with the stories of kidnapping kids
or snatching them from old lore.
Even the language is similar, that use of snatch and kidnap.
Even to current day with different gangs
in modern history this is something reported on but this time they're the ones that have been
victimized in a story and pullman's definitely hinting at that institution already named being
the culprits in kid snatching not the roma and it's an interesting play with that christian
persecution of old hmm Interesting, yeah.
And there's a lot of other stuff here too going on.
Again, a lot of the stories about how things aren't always
what they appear to be, and he does that with those different cultures.
You were talking about the Roma.
We're introduced to the Tartars as these terrifying soldiers
in the story, and the Egyptians' children
are initially set up as Lyra's enemy, terrifying soldiers in the story and the egyptians children's are like initially
set up as as lyra's enemy but as the story develops we see some of that curtain get pulled
back and the cultures of these people become a lot more humanized and so lyra and roger
get drunk for the first time and what happens when children are drunk, apparently, is that their demons strive to become an even uglier creature than the next.
That's the game.
And then they're plastered into drunk.
And then Roger asks, do they like doing this?
Gasped Roger after vomiting copiously.
they like doing this gasped roger after vomiting copiously yes said lyra in the same condition and so do i she added stubbornly me too lyra me too every morning waking up with a wine hangover
me too do they like doing this yes me too after this excion, Lyra explores the underground more with her uncle's advice, and we're going to talk a little bit about plunging into that underground, this other world with Roger later on in our discussion.
the wall with the years they were master, the name of their demon, and requesant in pace.
The coffin's plaques depict the shape of their demons, which for adults are permanent.
Yes.
So again, some of that world building of how adult demons become static.
There's some interesting demons here, like amongst the masters.
One has a basilisk, and someone else actually had a fair woman as a demon
and what's even more interesting is so we are using like an electronic version you know for
like notes and putting things into our outline but in my version slash edition of the book which is a
compiled version of like all three of the His Dark Materials
trilogy
that's in there, that fair woman
being a daemon of one of the masters and it's not
in this electronic version
so I don't know like what
the difference is between versions
and what the decision was
behind whether to include it if it was added
later or if it was taken out
because my version also still has
the woman in the golden coat.
The woman with the golden demon monkey
having black hair, so I don't know. Anyways.
This version does too,
the one I'm reading. Yeah.
It goes to show...
And the reason we call that out is because after
the Golden Compass movie with Nicole
Kidman playing
that woman,
Philip Pullman felt compelled that this
character actually has blonde hair.
And I think it really works
if she does, but
anyway, it does
go to show that the demons aren't
limited to our world's animals,
but also, like,
I don't know, what does it mean if someone
has a human as their demon? Tell me.
Tell me, Chloe's Aminal Hour.
Corner. Corner. Unknown.
Corner. Hour.
I don't know. I'm not there yet. That's an interesting
one. I haven't gotten to think about that
in depth yet, and I think we should come back to it next
episode. Okay.
We can come back to it, shelve
it, just like all of these skulls
that are in shelves.
Yeah, they're likely the skulls of scholars, and each contain a coin that depicts their demon as well.
Lyra one day plays a trick where she mixes up the coins, and Pentelimon stresses out.
He becomes a bat, and he tries to get her to stop, but she doesn't anyways.
he becomes a bat and he tries to get her to stop but she doesn't anyways that night she's visited by night guests in their robes headless where their skulls would be pan scares them off by
becoming a lion but after that she goes back down underground and she writes the coins and
apologizes yeah yeah and then another time when they're heading down there to the underground, the intercessor, Father Haste, stops them.
He sends Roger back to the kitchen and then he girls Lyra about her companions.
Like, are you lonely? Do you want to hang out with the girls more?
And she's like, no, I'm chill.
And he's like, whatever, you know you can talk to me about anything, right?
And she's like, okay, word.
And then he lets her go.
Mm-mm.
I don't like that.
What just happened there?
And you know why so then the gobblers
came to Oxford
the first time Lyra heard it
it was a child from Egyptian family that she knew
with the canal basin
full of boats
yep and this year
she has a plan for waging war against
Egyptian children again
it's not going to be about the bug,
but turns out
there ends up not being a war
because as it's about to start
by the boatyard, Lyra hears Ma Costa
yelling and trying to find her son
Billy, who's suddenly
gone missing.
Ma Costa had given
Lyra clouts on the ear twice,
but gingerbread trees thrice.
Her family's well-respected among the Egyptians.
Lyra describes them like princes.
But it's also their family she tried to sink by finding the bunghole.
The bunghole!
The bunghole!
Bunghole-io?
She firmly believed in this bunghole.
My favorite.
When Lyra asks, Egyptian child tells her they think the gobblers got him,
and Lyra's surprised to learn they're in Oxford.
Half a dozen brats turned with expressions of derision,
and Lyra threw her cigarette down, recognizing the cue for a fight.
Everyone's daemon instantly became warlike.
Each child was accompanied by
fangs or claws or bristling fur
and Pentalimon, contemptuous
of the limited imaginations of the
Egyptian demons, became a dragon the size
of a deer hound.
I just want to say, first of all, I like
that Lyra's like, alright, it's going down.
Throws her cigarette on the ground
because she's like, we're gonna fight. But also,
most importantly, Lyra is 12 and should not be smoking cigarettes young lady where did you get
this i know she's wild as i say truly she is she's unruly truly ma costa is not having any of this
bullshit she smacks the kids around and she's like have you seen billy lyra and i love my costa
she's like the molly weasley of the story she's the mother figure lyra didn't have growing up
right i think that's a perfect oh yeah that's a perfect description of her yeah she's loving
and caring and has a good heart she is is. And she protects Lyra.
Nope. Can't say that yet.
She is. She is.
And because the Egyptians often let their
children roam around and aren't
usually concerned with this, Lyra feels even more
fear seeing that Ma Costa is
terrified about Billy's
whereabouts. Everyone's
unsure about what happened to Billy and
what the gobblers actually do, as we've
noted. And Lyra
deduces that, based
on everyone's accounts, Billy
probably hasn't been seen for at least
two hours. She says, though,
that the gobblers must look like ordinary
people or must be able to blend in
or else they couldn't have just come out in broad daylight.
Clever.
Very clever. She's astute.
They don't find Billy
and the Egyptians are angry and
tired and sad and she learns that a
girl, Jessie Reynolds, was also
taken from the market.
She escapes Jordan College despite
the master's orders to talk to some kids
over at St. Michael's
and she admires the 16 year old
who can spit further than anyone she's ever seen before this is hilarious this is lyra's hero
she's just like that kid's so cool he can spit so far louise from bobsburgers i could see that
maybe we get along yeah same the older kids disbelieve the rumors of the Gobblers, and as Lyra explains they're real, she suddenly remembers.
Something had suddenly come into her mind. During that strange evening she'd spent hidden in the retiring room, Lord Asriel had shown a lantern slide of a man with streams of light pouring from his hand, and there'd been a small figure beside him with less light around it, and he'd said it was a child, and someone had asked if it was a severed child and her uncle had said no that was the point lyra remembered that severed
meant cut and then something else hit her heart where was roger no
but also sidebar it's just like this is how it opens and that's how it ends no i know fuck so
suddenly she feels fear she rushes back to jordan college and clamors for roger she's afraid the
gobblers got him she starts to cry and the others convince her they also care for roger and she says
no if you did you'd look for him so she runs away she runs onto the roof this was her world
she wanted it to stay the same forever and ever but it was changing around her for someone out
there was stealing children she sat on the roof ridge chin in hands pullman does just a great job
of capturing that cusp of adolescence and the grief that comes with that transition of realizing your world is changing,
especially because you're literally losing your friends.
Literally.
My world is still doing that bullshit.
I feel you, girl.
Lyra tells Pan they have to rescue Roger,
and this is like her big I want song, right?
This is Lyra's arc.
She thinks that the kids are being taken to the arctic piecing together
what she's learned from asriel and as she gets back to her area chatting with pan mrs lonsdale
the housekeeper who has a daemon golden retriever loyal kind dutiful animal corner calls her in
she scolds lyra for being unclean and she starts to prepare her for a dinner with the master
and his guests. In the
drawing room, Lyra meets Dame Hannah
from one of the other colleges, whose demon
is also a marmoset,
a monkey, and then
she meets Mrs. Coulter.
She was beautiful
and young. Her sleek
black hair framed her cheeks,
and her daemon was
a golden monkey.
Dun dun dun!
Dun dun dun! That's like a perfect place
to cut it. Now everyone's in suspense.
Yup.
Yup. And
everything's starting to come
together within this chapter. You get
that setup, and then that
reveal. All great. All great. Yes. together within this chapter you get like that setup and then that reveal all great all great
yes so of course we are going to go into our discussion after this a reminder that it will
cover the very first book of the his dark materials series uh all spoilers for the first book i do not
know anything past the first book besides like three things I read on Wikipedia on accident.
Eliana also spoiled one thing for me, but it is what it is.
All right, so there's obviously like a million things that we could discuss about this series.
But right from the beginning, we're getting a lot of really great setup for the fates of these characters.
And there's a lot of fun wordplay too.
And upon a reread, ends up to be a lot of foreshadowing
in that second chapter. When we're talking about Lyra growing up in Jordan College and these
scholars, there's a line that says, they were men who had been around her all her life, taught her,
chastised her, consoled her, given her little presents, chased her away from the fruit trees in the garden. And garden, again, here is capitalized.
And this is some really great imagery that harkens back to, again, that Garden of Eden,
because much of the story revolves around all these learned men chasing Lyra away from those
fruit trees in the garden, in a sense, very much controlling her. And I do think it's interesting
that it's men who are the ones who
are trying to keep her from that fruit tree in the garden, keeping her away from that tree of
knowledge, etc. Especially because later on in the story, and this is past book one, much past
book one, we're going to have like a woman later on playing more of that role of the serpent from The Fall of Man. And then, of course,
we have the master of Jordan College within this book, when he's talking about how Asriel must
have known there was poison in the cup, he calls Asriel the devil for having known about it. So I
think that's really interesting, and it is kind of a fun wordplay setting up the role that asriel is going to be
playing in this larger story yeah and obviously i haven't gotten past this first book i can't speak
to what you're speaking about for the next books but there's a lot being pulled on from paradise
lost right during all of this yeah and and a lot of that is because Paradise Lost, right, during all of this.
Yeah, and a lot of that is because Lyra's fate is to fulfill a prophecy, as Eve Pullman has stated, that he's inspired by that poem.
And of course, it comes up as like this prophecy of that fall.
And we learn later that the master's actions seemed insidious, as we were discussing earlier, of like, how things things seem especially because he's a raven for a demon and
I mean ravens
aren't always associated with
positive things but it seems like a lot of the
learned people or wise people
throughout this book seem to have birds
as their demons which
we can talk about that eventually in some sort of
animal corner and now
Lyra must go forth because Asriel didn't die in this chapter, bringing her fate even closer.
And what I really like about this at this stage in the story is that rather than Lyra being subject to the whims of fate and prophecy, right?
Because of what she sees and because she chooses to take action and cannot
ignore the poison, she's the one who ends up putting herself on this course, even though it's
unknowingly, because she is after all a very willful child. And it's poetic that her actions
here give her that autonomy in her course for her life, considering that the world is going to hinge
upon the choices that she makes.
So it's a lot of that free will in terms of fate versus someone else deciding it for her.
There's a lot of Netherworld language that you were discussing that you said I'm not allowed to know more about and we can't go into because it's a direct spoiler.
But I can already see kind of these splits in the text of who lyra is and
that kind of unfathomable living up to that mountain of who her parents are and who she
doesn't want to be and how her life is tugging her in that direction she's very much so living
half of her world in summer and half in winter with that Persephone imagery.
She's swimming amongst souls.
Yeah, and a lot of that is set up in these first few chapters, which can feel like foreshadowing, whether it is or it's not, that pulls the entire book series as a story together.
Yeah, and there's a lot of setup in these first couple chapters that gets
that stage going especially when it comes to roger and i don't want to get too sad because it's our
very first episode and i don't deserve this no truthfully no one deserves this pain but i didn't
notice until this read through eliana he was her devoted slave by this time.
He would have followed her to the
ends of the earth.
Fuck!
Dude, like, when I was reading this
again, I don't know, it's just so hard
reading it about the children
and knowing what happens to them.
It's so painful.
And
I don't know, I think it hurts because I used to work with a lot of street children. And also a lot of the work that I do now focuses on people who don't always have a is it these are the people who get preyed upon by those who think that
they can do whatever just because they have money and power and it just it's so painful to think
about like what happens to them yeah the idea of what a life is worth we're talking about that a
lot over at our song of ice and fire podcasting right now but what is a life worth and what
constitutes someone's life worth that more than another
person and why is roger's life worth less than someone like mrs coulter's life or why what makes
it that why is it like and of course there's like i guess prophecies around it and stuff but
asriel doesn't know that right asriel doesn't know that what lyra's place is going to be in all this what makes
roger's life worth less than lyra's and we know what it is right it's that like lyra's his daughter
and obviously he doesn't want to do that and it's almost that look of relief he gets when he sees
roger is there that choosing of the lesser person like, there's a better option that hurts less to do.
And the idea that he's a truly broken and empty man, you know, that's what this says to us,
that if you're willing to do that to a person, whoever they are, a person, you've truly lost
your path. Yeah, or I don't know, it plays with some other ideas or themes of like, is it worth it or not, right? Like, based on some of the courses that Lord Asriel will take, and lost path versus enormous conviction, because in a lot of ways, Lord Asriel is still painted as very heroic, despite this horrible act and I don't know it's such a gut punch
that idea he would have
followed her to the ends of the earth and he
does follow her to the end of this world
and the end of this earth as it opens
at the end into another one
and only death
can pay for life
or something like that
it's just
so Pullman does a really great job of showing and not telling.
He's not only having Asriel give Lyra these hints and unsaid quizzes,
but he's quizzing us, the reader, as well.
He's showing Lyra and us the photos.
He puts the slides, the pictogram slides up for us and the scholars and lyra the hints and
clues but the tragedy is that none of us just like lyra understand until it's too late right
yeah i i mean but like how would they like how would they realize what he's going for but i mean
i guess we should have seen right that like clearly he's not
like super perturbed by the idea idea of it being like a severed child no one in that room truly is
because they're all like we're intellectuals we're doing it in pursuit of knowledge or whatever higher
cause and they're all just like is it a severed child like everyone fucking knows yeah it's this
don't ask don't tell policy
and we see it a lot in religious institutionalism you look at catholic church look at all of the
covering up that's been going on there with a lot of stuff it's where power resides corruption
and rot resides every time yes and coming back up all the way to the beginning it is here we're going to
talk about lyra's name and why i'm now so insistent on saying lyra and correcting myself every two
seconds because i keep saying lyra because her name is lyra it's inspired by a lyre, the musical instrument. But of course, if you look at it in
the context of Lyra and the lyre, it sounds a lot like the word liar, right? And it makes a lot of
sense in the context of her being Lyra Silvertongue, which plays against this idea of truth versus lies that knowledge and innocence especially as lyra
is in many ways very innocent but she's still like doing this very deceitful thing
and continuing to portray innocence but it's kind of funny because both of her parents are also
very good liars yeah and we'll dive into Mrs. Coulter a little more
when we get closer to.
Oh my god.
But we did talk about Asriel's breakdown
and etymology of his name today,
and Mrs. Coulter's going to have a little bit of that too.
There's a big battle for truth,
and it all boils down to that knowledge
is power idea as we discussed earlier yeah it's just kind of funny because we're having these
sort of trickster characters right especially with all these animals set up as our protagonists
well ira is very much a trickster cat character and deceit then in all of this and the ability to deceive
well is set up as not necessarily a bad thing right in some ways it's set up as very heroic
because it belongs to our heroes so it's it's kind of interesting to turn that on its head, especially if you're taking inspiration from Paradise Lost and portraying Satan or the deceiver, right, the devil, as more sympathetic or a hero.
And then I like this thing about the Panzerbjorn, and I'm just flagging it for us to get back to much, much later.
Just remember this line, of course, when we come back to Yorick and when we're in Svalbard.
The Palmarian professor went on, for all that, I tell you that Joffre Rackinson would be capable of doing this to Grumman at the same time.
He could be flattered into behaving quite differently if the need arose.
Clever girl.
Yep. A lot of
good setup.
There's a lot of that. Lyra's very clever.
She's very sharp.
She's a smart girl, and that is a lot
of times what saves her ass in this
story, so far that I've read.
While we're
talking about groundwork being laid there is this
line but unfortunately for the magisterium there seems to be sound mathematical arguments for this
other world theory is this foreshadowing yes i don't know it but it sounds vaguely like
foreshadowing about a plot i accidentally heard like five words about so i don't know it but it sounds vaguely like foreshadowing about a plot i accidentally
heard like five words about so i don't know i mean it literally ends with this
exactly see the book literally ends with this so i'm allowed to say it
yes good good i can say whatever i want but yes yes absolutely and finally i want to come back to
one more thing about roger chloe take off your headphones unless you want to.
Oh, yes, yes.
Unless you've already read this.
I'm taking them off.
I'm spoiled.
I'm not allowed to know.
Okay, my headphones are off.
Are they really?
Go for it.
Okay.
So coming back once more, though, because this is something that happens in book three,
and I did want to touch on it since it is here in this first book,
book three, and I did want to touch on it since it is here in this first book, that language about Lyra and Roger exploring the underground and how Lord Asriel asks her if she goes there.
The underground, of course, can in many ways be seen as the land of the dead. It is, after all,
where the crypts of the masters are and the scholars' skulls, and along with Roger following Lyra all the way to the ends of the
Earth, I think
that them
exploring this
underground, which again, they call
the Netherworld, jokingly
here in this chapter,
pretends a lot of Lyra's later story where she
is going to venture into the land of the
dead to rescue
Roger and the other the other dead and
in another world they're reunited as they were in life so i'm bringing chloe back hello hello i'm
back i'm back what did i miss anything good um i don't know okay well i guess a tale for another
time i'm excited to get to another book eventually someday and
learn the rest of it
I'm itching
yes
so next time
we will be doing a couple of other
chapters we are still you know
feeling out which chapters we're
going to do it's in all likelihood it's
going to be about three to four chapters which
would place us at about you know we're going to do, in all likelihood it's going to be about three to four chapters which would place us at about
you know, we're definitely next
episode going to cover the alethiometer
and the cocktail party.
We'll probably
cover up to the throwing nets
and
I would say we might end up stopping there,
right? I don't know.
Yeah, I imagine we'll hit probably chapter four, five, and six,
the alethiometer, the cocktail party, and the throwing nets.
If we get into Jon Fah, that's an early present.
I don't think we will.
I think we need to save that for the next episode.
Yeah, and we'll warn all of you if that ends up happening.
Thanks so much for coming on this new adventure with us, you guys.
This is our second book series that we're reading.
I'm excited because I'm really into it so far.
I really just find myself falling more in love with it
each time we talk about it, Eliana and I.
So thanks for listening.
Yes, and of course, I'm very excited about it.
Pullman's expanded his universe
since these books had finished.
And I just really loved these books growing up.
So it's a real treat to come back to them and revisit it, you know, with my stable, defined demon.
Whatever the fuck that might be.
We will discuss that eventually.
We have to choose what our adult demons would be soon enough.
So we will definitely discuss it.
But for now, we'll leave you with this first episode of Girls Gone Canon on His Dark Materials,
Northern Lights, The Golden Compass, Episode 1, Chapters 1 through 3.
You can find us on social media at Girls Gone Canon on Twitter or send us an email at girlsgonecanon at gmail.com.
Yep.
And you can subscribe to us to get these episodes
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Yep. And so we hope that you've
enjoyed this series
beginning with us. Let us know what you think, of course, if you have any suggestions or things that you'd like to say.
I have been one of your hosts, Chloe. You can find me on the internet as at Liza Narber.
And I have been another one of your hosts, Eliana. You can find me as Arithmetric on Twitter.
Thanks, guys.