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Susanna ClarkeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
The enormous labyrinth mingles with the elements above (sky) and below (sea). Upper levels create a “Cloud-haunted World” (34) while in the lower levels, there is “Water lapping the Walls in a thousand, thousand Chambers” (58). Elements include celestial beings, such as witnessing the moon while “Night fishing [...] when the fish are drawn to play in spots of bright Moonlight and are easy to see” (35) and how “the Spray caught the Sun; it was as if someone had suddenly thrown a hundred barrelfuls of diamond into the Hall” (207). However, there is an absence of earthly elements. For instance, the narrator wonders “Do trees exist?” (17) when he spots a leaf, and his journals are evidence of trees in a dead, processed form.
While represented as powerful proper nouns, elements are also defined by their opposites and their mutable qualities. The elements are in constant conversation with architecture: “The wildness of the Water contrasted with the severity of the lines of the Doorway” (29). Water itself transforms through condensation: fresh “water [...] was delicious and refreshing (it had been a Cloud only hours before)” (163) and freezing: “Every statue with an outstretched Arm (of which there are many) held an icicle like a dangling sword or else a line of icicles hung from the Arm as if it were sprouting feathers” (27).
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