amorphous_constellation
Well-Known Member
Looking at the passage slower all it seems to mean to me is this: they tried to bind him before and failed, gave up, and he was always crying out and/or cutting himself with stones.
And he could break lose of the bonds how : did he receive jolts of metaphysical power from the demons, that would overlay the muscular action, or did he actually have additional tendons on his ligaments?
This part of the passage seems have an analog with a variety of actual conditions that modern science might identify, but I am unaware that supernatural strength is ever a part of those ailments. But I suppose I expect you to argue that this is actual demon possession, and that it is different than any of those. Or is it?
History has examples of descriptions being like this, before science more accurately describes what really happened. For example, I read an article the other day on how people thought rare roses with certain patterns were magical a few hundred years ago, but modern science clearly identified a virus at work
do not know what he ate if he ate at all, and I presume he was away from civilization (mostly, a graveyard is sort of a border-area)
That would be an additional extra-physiological characteristic, to achieve feats of power and working biology without sustenance. One would think at least, that the character would require copious protein
because of the vast amount of demons that were in him and they prefer to be in such a place (hence the desert fathers constant battles with demons in the middle of nowhere).
Likely within earshot of a village of some kind, since they could hear the moaning. Though it is interesting that you say that he is driven away from people, because that mode of living would characterize many generations of christian ascetics. The anchorites, the stylites, monks who lived alone in caves and islands.
And they go do and that, not because of demons I don't think, but because he takes them away from all kinds of human temptation. No solitary monk needed to worry about chasing money, or satisfying lust - he was far away from any of that, purposely
I think the nature of his isolation is plenty unclear. It could be due to the influence of the plurality (more than one involved here?) of demons, or it could be choice of the tenuous balanced human within the character (this seems to get kind of jungian). Or the ostracization might be coming from the mainstream community itself.
But we definitely have different senses for what is fantastic or not, to me this is entirely believable.
I think maybe it is metaphorically useful, I suppose. But if I am going to believe the story for literal fact, I might as well believe the stuff I hear on coast to coast, for example. As I was going to bed yesterday they were talking about 'skinwalker ranch,' where a scruffy hyena/dog creature with a flattish low body was playing with a cow, then it disappeared into thin air like a phantom.
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