FGC:OP Cut 026: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:OPC026.jpg]]
 
{{FGC:Imagelink|image=OPC026.jpg|page=:File:OP C026 big.jpg}}


|cutnumbertext=[[FGC:OP Cut 026|026]]
|cutnumbertext=[[FGC:OP Cut 026|026]]
|script=
|script=


{{FGC:Script Text|type=description
{{FGC:Script Text|type=description
|text=The 3rd Angel UP.
|text=The 3rd Angel UP.
}}
}}


|comments=
|comments=


{{FGC:Comment|name=Reichu
{{FGC:Comment|name=Reichu
|comment=This is the face of the 3rd Angel, Sachiel (with a glaring inaccuracy I'll moan about later). As a symbol (including the "long-beaked" variation), it has come to represent the Angels as a whole, even though this visual motif recurs in very few. I don't know whether or not Sachiel's face is borrowed from actual religious iconography, although it does look an awful lot like a stylized owl face: disc-shaped, two large forward-facing eyes, “beak”.  
|comment=This is the face of the 3rd Angel, Sachiel (with a glaring inaccuracy I'll moan about later). As a symbol (including the "long-beaked" variation), it has come to represent the Angels as a whole, even though this visual motif recurs in very few. I don't know whether or not Sachiel's face is borrowed from actual religious iconography, although it does look an awful lot like a stylized [http://images.google.com/images?q=%22tyto+alba%22&hl=en&btnG=Search+Images owl face]: disc-shaped, two large forward-facing eyes, “beak”.  


What do owls have to do with anything? Well, Lilith, maybe. In some of the extremely convoluted folklore surrounding her, Lilith is a demon of the night and her patron animal, appropriately, the owl. The Hebrew word lilith even appears in Isaiah 34:14 from the Bible, where is it often translated as “screech-owl” or another “nocturnal animal that inhabits desolate places”. There is also the possibility that it refers to Lilith herself, a “female goddess known as a night demon who haunts the desolate places of Edom”.*  
What do owls have to do with anything? Well, Lilith, maybe. In some of the ''extremely'' convoluted folklore surrounding her, ''Lilith'' is a demon of the night and her patron animal, appropriately, the owl. The Hebrew word lilith even appears in ''Isaiah'' 34:14 from the Bible, where is it often translated as “screech-owl” or another “nocturnal animal that inhabits desolate places”. There is also the possibility that it refers to Lilith herself, a “female goddess known as a night demon who haunts the desolate places of Edom”.*  


Of course, that could well be completely irrelevent. Oh, the perils of overinterpretation!!
Of course, that could well be completely irrelevent. Oh, the perils of overinterpretation!!


* Note that the demon is the precursor of the "Lilith as first wife of Adam" who first appeared in the Alphabet of Ben-Sira. I'll attempt to add refs for all this crap eventually, but it's not high on the priority list.
 * Note that the demon is the precursor of the "Lilith as first wife of Adam" who first appeared in the ''Alphabet of Ben-Sira''. I'll attempt to add refs for all this crap eventually, but it's not high on the priority list.
}}
}}


{{FGC:Comment|name=thewayneiac
{{FGC:Comment|name=thewayneiac
|comment=So,... ''"The owls are not what they seem"''...?}}
|comment=So,... ''"The owls are not what they seem"''...?}}


}}
}}

Latest revision as of 20:08, 28 December 2009


Screenshots Cut # Description/Dialogue Commentary
026
The 3rd Angel UP.
Reichu: This is the face of the 3rd Angel, Sachiel (with a glaring inaccuracy I'll moan about later). As a symbol (including the "long-beaked" variation), it has come to represent the Angels as a whole, even though this visual motif recurs in very few. I don't know whether or not Sachiel's face is borrowed from actual religious iconography, although it does look an awful lot like a stylized owl face: disc-shaped, two large forward-facing eyes, “beak”.

What do owls have to do with anything? Well, Lilith, maybe. In some of the extremely convoluted folklore surrounding her, Lilith is a demon of the night and her patron animal, appropriately, the owl. The Hebrew word lilith even appears in Isaiah 34:14 from the Bible, where is it often translated as “screech-owl” or another “nocturnal animal that inhabits desolate places”. There is also the possibility that it refers to Lilith herself, a “female goddess known as a night demon who haunts the desolate places of Edom”.*

Of course, that could well be completely irrelevent. Oh, the perils of overinterpretation!!

 * Note that the demon is the precursor of the "Lilith as first wife of Adam" who first appeared in the Alphabet of Ben-Sira. I'll attempt to add refs for all this crap eventually, but it's not high on the priority list.


thewayneiac: So,... "The owls are not what they seem"...?