Quote:
Originally Posted by Thenamir
Darn it, now I'm going to have to actually read HDM so I can see what you guys are talking about and write a thorough refutation.
-- Thenamir The Gadfly
|
You might find you like it
And some more on Dust...It falls, in Lyra's world, on those who have got a fixed Daemon, as opposed to children who have shifting Daemons - so it must be linked to what the Daemon 'is'. Which cannot be firmly defined, but we can guess that the Daemon is part of the human which feels, which thinks, which learns, judging by what has happened to the nurses at Bolvangar who have undergone intercission as adults:
Quote:
she would be able to stitch a wound or change a bandage, but never tell a story
|
Adults also make even more Dust:
Quote:
by thinking and feeling and reflecting, by gaining wisdom and passing it on
|
So aside from the notion that teachers must be Dust-y old things
that tells us that in many ways Dust is indeed divine, is just like Tolkien's own notions of the importance of Imagination and Art. Love is also a part of what Dust is about as when children grow old enough to have a crush on someone (or some
thing) they tend also to become adults and the Dust settles on them - so Love too is linked with Art; this has to be something Pullman gleaned from Blake.