This is the written transcript of an audio essay recorded for The Cluttered Desk Podcast. It is the fourth in a series of reflections on Neil Gaiman's The Sandman.
Have I mentioned that Dream once sentenced someone to an eternity in Hell? It seems like a rather glaring omission, doesn’t it?
Have I mentioned that Dream once sentenced someone to an eternity in Hell? It seems like a rather glaring omission, doesn’t it?
Once upon a time Dream of the Endless, our title character
and apparent protagonist, fell in love with a human woman. Nada, the beautiful and accomplished queen of
an ancient kingdom, returned his affection—until she learned who he was. Then, wisely deciding that perhaps it isn’t
the best idea for mortals to become romantically involved with eternal and
trans-dimensional personifications of elemental human experience, she rejected
his offer to make her his queen. There
is no wound to pride quite like the wound of rejected love, and so Dream acted
rashly. He banished her to Hell until
such a time as he would forgive her.
This story is alluded to in varying detail throughout the first three
volumes of The Sandman, but in the
fourth volume, Season of Mists, we
finally confront it for the problem that it is.
Season of Mists is
a volume filled with finally moments,
not the least of which is the opportunity to see the family of the Endless
gathered together. As the volume opens,
Destiny, the eldest, calls a family meeting with his siblings—or most of them,
at least. He meets together in his hall
with Death, Dream, Desire, Despair, and Delirium. We are missing only Destruction, who, we
learn, has abandoned his realm and cut off all communication with his family. This family reunion is rich with narrative
and thematic significance, but its most important contribution to the story at
hand is that it propels Dream on the mission that will give shape to this
volume’s narrative. Goaded on by his
sibling Desire, Dream is led to the conclusion that his response to his former
lover Nada was perhaps…well, less than magnanimous. Convicted of his error, Dream embarks on a
necessary but terrifying mission. He
will travel to Hell to forgive Nada and set her free.
Upon arriving in the infernal realm expecting a deadly
struggle, Dream finds something quite different. He finds that Hell is utterly empty. When he locates Lucifer, first of the fallen
of the Host of Heaven and ruler of Hell, things only become more bizarre. Lucifer has quit. He is concluding the process of kicking the
damned out of the place of their torture, and he seems quite happy to be
leaving his position. As he ushers the
souls of the tormented out of the gate, I am consistently reminded of the line
from the band Semisonic: “Closing
time. You don’t have to go home, but you
can’t stay here.”
As the two part ways, Lucifer leaves Dream with a
less-than-benevolent gift: He entrusts
the Prince of Stories with the key to Hell.
“Perhaps I ought to have given it to you with my best wishes,” the
former monarch of Hell explains. “I
could have told you that I hoped it would bring you happiness. But somehow…somehow I doubt it will.” The rest of the volume unfolds from this
moment. Prompted by the new availability
of what Death calls the “most desirable plot of psychic real estate in the
whole order of created things,” a crowd of hopeful claimants to the possession
of Hell meets at the court of the Dream King.
Representatives from the Norse and Egyptian pantheons; as well as the
realms of Order, Chaos, and Faerie; all plead their case for their right to
possess the key, with two angelic emissaries from the Heavenly realms standing
by to observe.
What unfolds is the most gripping and engaging entry in The Sandman so far, and the plot of this
volume will have incalculable ramifications for the future of the series. I find, however, that Season of Mists is most interesting when considered as a
contrasting study of two characters—two monarchs who must decide how they will
hold their authority, their responsibility, and their identities.
The first of these two characters is Lucifer, the erstwhile Lord
of Hell. It is notable that throughout
this volume, as well as throughout the series, he is never referred to as Satan or even the devil. He is always Lucifer, the light-bearer; the name that
he bore as the first in power, beauty, and insight among the angels of
Heaven. Lucifer nurses a grudge against
Dream stemming from events in the first volume of the series, and it is
apparent that his gift of the key to Hell is strategically given as a
retributive act. But, like all trickster
figures, Lucifer does not fit so easily into the role of villain. As he relinquishes his domain, the fallen
angel adopts a disposition that, within the thematic world of The Sandman, represents an indispensable
form of wisdom. In his final gestures as
the monarch of Hell, Lucifer shows himself to be the light-bearer in a
profoundly subtle way—he is one who bears himself lightly.
As Lucifer tells it, his drive and conviction as ruler of
Hell have been fueled by despair and resentment over one simple fact: That he will never return to the Heaven from
which he fell. But as he continues to
narrate the rationale for his abdication, it becomes clear that he has reached
a novel conclusion. Just because he may
never return to Heaven does not mean that he must stay in Hell. “I grew weary, Dream Lord,” he explains,
“mightily weary. And I ceased to
care.” From this newfound sense of
apathy, it seems, has arisen a sense of the possibilities that existence would
present to him if he let go of what he has always thought himself to be. “I could lie on a beach somewhere,
perhaps? Listen to music? Build a house? Learn how to dance, or to play the
piano?” Lucifer encounters holdouts
among the damned, tormented souls who seem to be clinging to their sins as if
they were badges, as if they would have no identities without these
crimes. For them he has one simple
message: It doesn’t matter. You did these things a long time ago, and no one remembers you. Stop defining yourself by who you have been,
and leave this place. As a final, brutal
display of his commitment to moving on, Lucifer submits himself to a brief but
painful rite of passage—he has Dream cut off his wings.
The narrative holds out the possibility that this is all an
act, all part of an elaborate ploy to get the revenge on Dream that Lucifer has
so desperately wanted. And maybe it
is. But, you see, for the purposes of
this story, it doesn’t matter. Not at all. Because regardless of his intention, in his
final moments as the ruler of Hell Lucifer becomes the sort of monarch that
Dream cannot be. But it is the sort of
monarch that Dream must become if he
is to transcend himself and his own limitations.
The second of the two characters in question is, of course, Dream.
If Lucifer embodies the possibility available to one who
holds oneself lightly, Dream is always encumbered by his own perception of
himself and his responsibilities. He
sees every choice that he makes as an inevitable fulfillment of his role as the
Lord of the Dreaming. When someone
steals a portion of his power, as John Dee did, he sets right what the other
has wrought through misuse. When one of
his creations goes rogue, as the Corinthian did, he punishes that creation and
undoes the wrong that has been inflicted.
This is all as it should be, but this unflinching sense of self and duty
also dictates that when someone rejects his affections, as Nada did, that
person must be punished in a way that is commensurate to the pain that it has
caused him. It is mathematical, and if
the equation is balanced according to mathematical principles then there is no
further responsibility. And the equation
must be balanced according to mathematical principles. But at the end of this sweeping drama
concerning the ownership of Hell, Dream must attempt an essential gesture of
reconciliation—he must apologize to the one he has wronged. By the terms of the sentencing, it is he who
must forgive Nada, but Dream finds the roles appropriately reversed. It is he who must implore her
forgiveness. When his apology earns him
the slap in the face that he deserves, Dream is forced to grapple with the
essential enigma of human relationships.
Nothing is mathematical. Nada
forgives him, but this forgiveness is not in response to what he has
offered. It is gratuitous, as grace
always is.
The title of Season of
Mists comes from John Keats’s poem “To Autumn.” For a long time I thought that this was
simply an appropriately evocative allusion, helping to strike a particular
mood. I was wrong in this
assessment. As he agonizes over the
decision he must make about the ownership of Hell, Dream risks a moment of
vulnerability with his servant Matthew the Raven. “Everything keeps shifting and changing,
Matthew. It’s like treading a path
through mist.” Mist is an evocative
metaphor, often standing in for the seasons and situations that obscure from us
who we are or what we are doing. But so
often it is the other way around. So
often it is the seeming clarity of our self-perception that hides from us the
truth of ourselves and the world of flux through which we move. Sometimes it is that which we would deem to
be solid that is the mist, keeping us from seeing the process of becoming that
is the essence of our lives. This is the
lesson that Dream must learn. This is
the lesson that, regardless of his motive, Lucifer would teach him. Our last glimpse of Lucifer in this volume
sees him making good on his promise. He
is sitting on a beach enjoying a sunset, even offering the Creator a grudging
acknowledgment of the beauty of the natural wonder that he beholds. The next time we see him, he will be playing
piano in a night club of which he is the proprietor. Dream, on the other hand, ends this volume
beginning an assay into undoing the harm that his self-consistency has
caused.
There is so much more to say about Season of Mists. There is
the evocative collection of meditations on each member of the family when the
Endless gathers together. There is the
toast offered by Hob Gadling, the stubborn immortal human. There is Charles Rowland and the completion
of his education. There is Lyta Hall
and her unborn son, Daniel. There is
Loki. There is so much to say about
Loki. But timing is everything, and for
now we will say what is necessary for our time.
For now we will depart with the picture we have painted. A picture of two kings: One who lives in a hell of his own making, and
one who has begun to realize that you don’t have to stay anywhere forever.
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