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A Canticle for Leibowitz is a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel by Walter M. Miller, Jr., first published in 1959. It is set in an abbey in Utah after a devastating nuclear war, and takes place at intervals of hundreds of years apart as civilization rebuilds itself. The plot combines elements of dark comedy with more serious examinations of the issues surrounding faith, knowledge, and power. The first section of the book is based on an earlier short story from 1955. It won the 1961 Hugo Award for best novel. Download high resolution version (500x764, 80 KB)Scan of the cover of A Canticle for Leibowitz Fair use claimed This work is copyrighted. ...
Download high resolution version (500x764, 80 KB)Scan of the cover of A Canticle for Leibowitz Fair use claimed This work is copyrighted. ...
Apocalyptic science fiction is a sub-genre of science fiction that is concerned with the end of the world or civilization, through nuclear war, plague, or some other general disaster. ...
Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ...
Walter Michael Miller, Jr. ...
Jump to: navigation, search 1959 was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
// History Early history Native Americans have lived in Utah for several thousand years; most archeological evidence dates such habitation about 10,000 to 12,000 years ago. ...
Nuclear War is a card game designed by Douglas Malewicki, and originally published in 1966. ...
Jump to: navigation, search A civilization or civilisation has a variety of meanings related to human society. ...
Black comedy, also known as black humor, is a subgenre of comedy and satire that deals with serious subjects – death, divorce, drug abuse, et cetera in a humorous manner. ...
This article discusses faith in a religious context. ...
Jump to: navigation, search 1955 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Jump to: navigation, search 1961 was a common year starting on Sunday (link will take you to calendar). ...
The Hugo Award is given every year for the best science fiction or fantasy stories of the previous year, and for related areas in fandom, art and dramatic presentation. ...
The plot
Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. A Canticle for Leibowitz is divided into three parts: - Fiat Homo (Latin – "Let There Be Man," Gen. 1.26 [?])
- Fiat Lux (Latin – "Let There Be Light," Gen. 1.14)
- Fiat Voluntas Tua (Latin – "Thy Will Be Done," Matt. 26.42 [etc.])
Jump to: navigation, search Latin is an Indo-European language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Genesis (Greek: ÎÎνεÏιÏ, having the meanings of birth, creation, cause, beginning, source and origin), also called The First Book of Moses, is the first book of Torah (five books of Moses), and is the first book of the Tanakh, part of the Hebrew Bible; it is also...
Jump to: navigation, search Genesis (Greek: ÎÎνεÏιÏ, having the meanings of birth, creation, cause, beginning, source and origin), also called The First Book of Moses, is the first book of Torah (five books of Moses), and is the first book of the Tanakh, part of the Hebrew Bible; it is also...
Jump to: navigation, search The Gospel of Matthew (literally: according to Matthew, Greek: ÎαÏα Îαθθαιον) is one of the four Gospel accounts of the New Testament. ...
Background Around the end of the 20th century the "Flame Deluge"—a nuclear war—destroyed civilization as we know it. The "Simplification" followed, a violent backlash against the culture of advanced learning that had led to the development of nuclear weapons, during which anyone of learning was killed. Literacy became almost nonexistent. Books were destroyed en masse. (19th century - 20th century - 21st century - more centuries) Decades: 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s As a means of recording the passage of time, the 20th century was that century which lasted from 1901–2000 in the sense of the Gregorian calendar (1900–1999 in the...
Isaac Edward Leibowitz had been a Jewish electrical engineer working for the United States military. After surviving the war, he converted to Catholicism and founded a monastic order, the "Albertian Order of Leibowitz", dedicated to preserving knowledge by hiding books, smuggling them to safety (booklegging), memorizing, and copying them. A principal base for the order was an abbey Leibowitz founded in the American southwestern desert (near the military base where he had worked before the war). Leibowitz was eventually betrayed and martyred—he was killed by simultaneous hanging and burning. Later he was beatified and became a candidate for sainthood. Long after his death, the Abbey is still preserving the "memorabilia" — the few surviving writings from before the Flame Deluge, in the hope that they will help future generations reclaim forgotten science. Jump to: navigation, search The word Jew (Hebrew: ×××××) is used in many ways, but generally refers to a follower of Judaism, a child of a Jewish mother, or someone of Jewish descent with a connection to Jewish culture or ethnicity; and often a combination of these attributes. ...
An engineers degree is an academic degree which is intermediate in rank between a masters degree and a doctorate; it is occasionally to be encountered in the United States in technical fields. ...
Jump to: navigation, search This article considers Catholicism in the broadest ecclesiastical sense. ...
Jump to: navigation, search A Roman Catholic monk A monk is a person who practices monasticism, adopting a strict religious and ascetic lifestyle, usually in community with others following the same path. ...
Jump to: navigation, search Albertus Magnus (fresco, 1352, Treviso, Italy) Albertus Magnus (1193? â November 15, 1280), also known as Saint Albert the Great and Albert of Cologne, was a Dominican friar who became famous for his universal knowledge and advocacy for the peaceful coexistence of science and religion. ...
A religious order is an organization of people who live in some way set apart from society in accordance with religious devotion. ...
An abbey (from the Latin abbatia, which is derived from the Syriac abba, father), is a Christian monastery or convent, under the government of an Abbot or an Abbess, who serve as the spiritual father or mother of the community. ...
Historically, a martyr is a person who dies for his or her religious faith. ...
Hanging is a form of execution, or a method for suicide. ...
Burning of two sodomites at the stake outside Zürich, 1482 (Spiezer Schilling) Execution by burning is capital punishment by fire. ...
In Catholicism, beatification (from Latin beatus, blessed, via Greek μακαÏιοÏ, makarios) is a recognition accorded by the church of a dead persons accession to Heaven and capacity to intercede on behalf of individuals who pray in their name (intercession of saints). ...
General definition of saint In general, the term Saint refers to someone who is exceptionally virtuous and holy. ...
Fiat Homo In the 26th century, Brother Francis Gerard of Utah, a novice training to become a monk, is sent out from the Abbey of the Albertian Order of Leibowitz on a Lenten mission of "penance, solitude, and silence" in the desert. While there, Francis encounters a traveler, who points out a rock that might help him complete his shelter. In moving this rock, Francis discovers the entrance to an ancient fallout shelter containing "relics", such as handwritten notes on crumbling memo pads bearing cryptic texts like "pound pastrami, can kraut, six bagels–bring home for Emma". Brother Francis soon realizes that these notes appear to have been written by his order's founder, the Blessed Leibowitz himself. // History Early history Native Americans have lived in Utah for several thousand years; most archeological evidence dates such habitation about 10,000 to 12,000 years ago. ...
A novitiate (also called a novice) is a member of a religious order who has not yet taken his/her vows. ...
Jump to: navigation, search A Roman Catholic monk A monk is a person who practices monasticism, adopting a strict religious and ascetic lifestyle, usually in community with others following the same path. ...
Look up Lent on Wiktionary, the free dictionary In Western Christianity, Lent is the period before the Christian holy day of Easter. ...
A sign pointing to an old fallout shelter in New York City. ...
Pastrami is a popular deli meat made from beef (a form of corned beef). ...
A plain bagel The bagel (or sometimes beigel, in Poland also bajgiel, bajgel, precel, obwarzanek) is a bread product traditionally made of yeasted wheat dough in the form of a roughly hand-sized ring which is boiled in water and then baked. ...
In Catholicism, beatification (from Latin beatus, blessed, via Greek μακαÏιοÏ, makarios) is a recognition accorded by the church of a dead persons accession to Heaven and capacity to intercede on behalf of individuals who pray in their name (intercession of saints). ...
The discovery of the ancient documents causes an uproar at the monastery, as the other monks see the traveler as a miraculous sign from their patron. This leads Francis into conflict with Abbot Arkos, the head of the monastery, who worries that the discovery of so many miraculous signs in such a short period may cause problems with Leibowitz's canonization. Seeing Francis as the source of the problem, the Abbot Arkos forces him to spend 7 more years as a novice. Francis then becomes a full brother and begins work as a scribe. Abbots coat of arms An abbot (from the Hebrew ab, a father, through the Syriac abba, Latin abbas (genitive form, abbatis), Old English abbad, ; German Abt; French abbé) is the head and chief governor of a community of monks, called also in the East hegumenos or The English version...
Canonization is the process of declaring someone a saint and involves proving that a candidate has lived in such a way that he or she is worthy of sainthood. ...
Francis makes a faithful copy of a blueprint of a circuit diagram, and then spends 15 more years making an illuminated manuscript version of it. Meanwhile, evidence found in the shelter helps propel the monks' effort to have Leibowitz canonized. The abbey is visited by Monsignors Aguerra (God's advocate) and Flaught (the Devil's advocate), both of whom encourage Francis to finish his illumination. Modern blueprint of the French galleon La Belle. ...
The circuit diagram for a 4 bit TTL counter, a type of state machine A circuit diagram (also known as an electrical diagram or electronic schematic) is a pictorial representation of an electrical circuit. ...
In the strictest definition of illuminated manuscript, only manuscripts decorated with gold or silver, like this miniature of Christ in Majesty from the Aberdeen Bestiary (folio 4v), would be considered illuminated. ...
Canonization is the process of declaring someone a saint and involves proving that a candidate has lived in such a way that he or she is worthy of sainthood. ...
Formerly, during the canonization process by the Roman Catholic Church, the Promoter of the Faith (Latin Promotor Fidei), or Devils Advocate (Latin advocatus diaboli), was a canon lawyer appointed by the Church to argue against the canonization of the proposed candidate. ...
Eventually, at least 15 years after the discovery of the shelter, Leibowitz is canonized, based partly on the evidence Francis discovered in the shelter. Brother Francis is sent to New Rome to attend the canonization mass. He takes the documents found in the shelter and the illumination he has spent years working on. He intends to give the illumination to the Pope as a gift. En route, he is robbed, and his illumination is stolen. The highwayman, accompanied by two cannibalistic mutants, tells him that if he returns with gold, he'll ransom the illumination. He lets Francis keep the original manuscript, thinking it worthless. Francis completes the journey to New Rome, attends the canonization mass, and has a personal audience with the Pope afterwards. He explains how he is distraught at having lost the illumination, but the Pope reassures him, telling him that all his work on the illumination made the original seem (by comparison) worthless, and thus protected it from the thieves. Before he leaves, Francis is given the gold necessary to get the illumination back. Francis returns to the spot where he was robbed, but finds it empty. He decides to wait there, until the thieves return. While he is waiting and praying, the two mutants sneak up on Francis. - "They advanced to within ten yards of Francis before a pebble rattled. The monk was murmuring the third Ave of the Fourth Glorious Mystery of the rosary when he happened to look around. The arrow hit him squarely between the eyes." (Chapter 11)
Afterwards, the same traveler who pointed out the rock for the fallout shelter happens to wander by. He buries the partly eaten body, and notifies New Rome about it. The Church has the body retrieved and returned for interment in the abbey. Jump to: navigation, search Our Lady of Lourdes - Mary appearing at Lourdes with Rosary Beads The Rosary (from Latin rosarium, crown of roses), an important and traditional devotion of the Catholic Church consisting of a set of prayer beads and a system of set prayers. ...
Fiat Lux In 3174, the Albertian Order of St. Leibowitz is still preserving the half-understood knowledge from before the Flame Deluge and the subsequent Age of Simplification. But the new Dark Age is ending and a new Renaissance is beginning. The Dark Ages (or Dark Age) is a metaphor with multiple meanings and connotations. ...
Jump to: navigation, search By region Italian Renaissance Northern Renaissance French Renaissance German Renaissance English Renaissance The Renaissance, also known as Il Rinascimento (in Italian), was an influential cultural movement which brought about a period of scientific revolution and artistic transformation, at the dawn of modern European history. ...
Thon Taddeo Pfardentrott, a secular scholar, is sent by his cousin King Hannegan of Texarkana (placenames have survived fairly well from the ancient times) to the mission. Thon Taddeo is one of the smartest men of the age, compared, probably correctly, with the barely remembered sages of the old civilization (Albert Einstein in particular). Jump to: navigation, search Albert Einstein, by Yousuf Karsh Albert Einstein (March 14, 1879 â April 18, 1955) was a German-born Jewish theoretical physicist of profound genius, who is widely regarded as the greatest scientist of the 20th century. ...
At the mission, Brother Kornhoer has just finished work on a tread-mill powered electrical generator that powers an arc lamp. He gives credit for the generator to the work done by Thon Taddeo. The work is being done in the library, to the disdain of the chief librarian, Brother Ambruster. Early 20th century Alternator made in Budapest, Hungary, in the power generating hall of a hydroelectric station. ...
The 300,000-watt Plasma Arc Lamp in the Infrared Processing Center (IPC) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory An arc lamp is a device that produces light by the sparking (or arcing, from voltaic arc or electric arc) of a high current between two carbon rod electrodes. ...
Dom Paulo, leader of the abbey, goes out to see the old Jewish hermit living nearby to ask advice. The hermit makes several references to brother Francis's discovery of the fallout shelter, implying that he was the traveler whom Francis met. He also implies (once again) that he is the Wandering Jew. Jump to: navigation, search The Wandering Jew by Gustave Doré The Wandering Jew is a figure from Christian folklore. ...
- "That was during my earlier career, of course," the Old Jew went on, "and perhaps such a mistake was understandable."
- "What earlier career?"
- "Wanderer."
In the same conversation, however, the old Jewish hermit hints that he is Lazarus. He claims to be waiting for one who told him to "come forth", the words Jesus said to raise Lazarus from the dead in some versions of the Bible. Resurrection of Lazarus by Juan de Flandes, around 1500. ...
Meanwhile, Hannegan makes an alliance with the kingdom of Laredo and the other civilized nations surrounding the midwestern plains against the threat of attack from the nomadic warriors. But Hannegan secretly makes an alliance with their leader Mad Bear, supplying them with weapons to attack Laredo. He also secretly makes alliance with Laredo—to attack the nomads, and infect their cattle herds with disease. The resulting wars effectively neutralize all of Hannegan's enemies and let him conquer the entire region. Thon Taddeo, by studying the memorabilia, has made several major discoveries. For example, he describes how he spent a great amount of time decyphering the extremely compact notation for representing mathematical systems (this is likely matrix notation). For the square matrix section, see square matrix. ...
Monsignor Apollo, the papal nuncio to Hannegan's court, sends word that Hannegan intends to attack the empire of Denver next, and that he intends to use the abbey as a base of operations from which to conduct the campaign. For his actions, Apollo is executed, and Hannegan declares loyalty to the Roman Catholic church to be punishable by death. The Church excommunicates Hannegan and calls on Catholics to take up arms against him. A Papal Nuncio (also known as an Apostolic Nuncio) is a permanent diplomatic representative (head of mission) of the Holy See to a state, having ambassadorial rank. ...
Shortly thereafter, several members of the honor guard that came with Thon Taddeo are found scouting and mapping the abbey, intent on bringing that intelligence back with them. The plans are confiscated, and the Thon and his guard leave the abbey. Before departing, the Thon comments that it could take decades to finish analyzing the memorabilia.
Fiat Voluntas Tua The third section of A Canticle for Leibowitz takes place in the year 3781. Technology has advanced beyond where it was prior to the Flame Deluge—mankind has starship technology. However, two world superpowers, the Asian Coalition and Texarkana, have been embroiled in a cold war for 50 years, and both sides have "hydrogen weapons" (no doubt a reference to the hydrogen bomb, invented just a few years before the book was written). A superpower is a state with the ability to influence events and project power on a super scale. ...
A cold war is a state of battle between nations that does not involve direct military action but is pursued primarily through economic and political actions, acts of espionage or conflict through surrogates. ...
Jump to: navigation, search General Name, Symbol, Number hydrogen, H, 1 Chemical series nonmetals Group, Period, Block 1, 1, s Appearance colorless Atomic mass 1. ...
The mushroom cloud of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945 lifted nuclear fallout some 18 km (60,000 feet) above the epicenter. ...
The section begins with a press conference. Reporters are questioning the defense minister of Texarkana. It is revealed that there are abnormally high levels of radiation on the "Northwest coast" (likely in or around present-day Oregon). They also ask about recent rumors that both sides are assembling nuclear weapons in space. The minister denies everything. Jump to: navigation, search State nickname: Beaver State Other U.S. States Capital Salem Largest city Portland Governor Ted Kulongoski (D) Senators Ron Wyden (D) Gordon Smith (R) Official languages None Area 255,026 km² (9th) - Land 248,849 km² - Water 6,177 km² (2. ...
Meanwhile, at the Abbey, Dom Jethras Zerchi, the current abbot, is in contact with the authorities in New Rome. He suggests that the Church should reactivate the Quo peregrinatur grex ("Whither wanders the flock") plans involving "certain vehicles"—plans the church has had since 3756. While discussing matters with another monk, Brother Joshua, Joshua informs Zerchi that there were recent seismic measurements, indicating a nuclear explosion in the megaton range; it was most likely a tacit threat. Zerchi laments the Texarkana government's policies that keep the people ill-informed, A megaton or megatonne is a unit of mass equal to 1,000,000 metric tons, i. ...
- "The Government knows. The government must know. Several of them know. And yet we hear nothing. We are being protected from hysteria. Isn't that what do they call it? Maniacs! The world's been in a habitual state of crisis for fifty years. Fifty? What am I saying. It's been in a habitual state of crisis since the beginning—but for half a century now, almost unbearable. And why, for the love of God?"
The next chapter (chapter 25) begins with another news conference. The reporters are again questioning the defense minister, but this time the worsening international crisis. A "nuclear incident" has occurred in the Asian Coalition city of Itu Wan—an underground nuclear explosion has destroyed the city. The reporters ask what happened and by whom, while the defense minister angrily replies that it was a Asian nuclear test and that to say otherwise is sedition. Shortly after Itu Wan was destroyed, Texarkana evidently fired a "warning shot" over the South Pacific. Sedition refers to a legal designation of non-overt conduct that is deemed by a legal authority as being acts of treason, and hence deserving of legal punishment. ...
An old Jewish hermit visits the abbey. He has intimate knowledge of the actions of the previous hermit, hinting that it is the same man. When asked for his name, he answers "call me Lazarus". Back at the abbey, Zerchi receives a response from New Rome telling him to go ahead with the Quo peregrinatur plans and to prepare to leave within three days. Brother Joshua asks what the plan is: - "Well, it started as a plan to send a few priests along with a colony group heading for Alpha Centauri. But that didn't work out, because it takes bishops to ordain priests, and after the first generation of colonists, more priests would have to be sent, and so on. The question boiled down to an argument about whether the colonies would last, and if so, should provision be made to insure the apostolic succession on colony planets without recourse to Earth? You know what that would mean?"
- "Sending at least three bishops, I imagine."
- "Yes, and that seemed a little silly. The colony groups have all been rather small. But during the last world crisis, Quo peregrinatur became an emergency plan for perpetuating the Church on the colony planets if the worst came to pass on Earth..."
Zerchi goes on to explain that the Church has a starship, and that every monk and priest with experience in space has been assigned to the abbey, should it become necessary to crew send the mission. That night, Texarkana launches an assault against Asian Coalition space platforms, and the Asian Coalition responds by using a nuclear weapon against the capital city of Texarkana. A cease-fire is issued by the World Court, and both sides agree to cease hostilities for ten days. The next day, the mission (led by brother Joshua) departs on a specially chartered flight for New Rome, and thence to the starship. The abbey, at Zerchi's approval, offers shelter to those people whose homes were in the blighted regions. It is soon overrun by refugees, many of whom were exposed to high levels of radiation during the attack and are dying. Zerchi is approached by Doctor Cors, a doctor from Green Star, a government emergency response agency. He gives permission to the doctor to set up a Green Star hospital in the abbey, provided that they do not advise anyone to go to a Green Star "mercy camp" (i.e. euthanasia center). Later that day, Zerchi heard that Green Star was setting up a relief center a short way down the road. From the abbey, he used binoculars to view the work and realized with horror that it was a Mercy camp. Jump to: navigation, search Euthanasia (Greek: εÏ
θαναÏία - εÏ
good, θαναÏÎ¿Ï death) is the practice of killing a person or animal, in a painless or minimally painful way, for merciful reasons, usually to end their suffering. ...
That night, Zerchi meets with Doctor Cors again. Cors confesses that he has broken his promise, and recommended suicide for one particularly sick woman and her infant child. Cors offers to leave immediately. - Zerchi stalked away, then stopped, and called back. "Finish and then get out. If I see you again—I'm afraid of what I'll do."
- "Cors spat. "I don't like being here any better than you like having me. We'll go now, thanks."
Zerchi goes and finds the dying woman, and gives her a rosary and encourages her to pray. That night, the ten-day cease-fire ends, along with the diplomatic meeting on Guam between the superpowers. The newscasts report that the superpowers are conferring with their governments, and that a new round of talks is expected. Meanwhile, word arrives at the abbey that the pope has stopped praying for peace, and has begun saying wartime prayers—a clear sign that the Vatican diplomatic service (a generally more reliable source of news than the broadcasts) believes war is inevitable. The next day, as he drives into town on an errand, Zerchi encounters the dying woman walking down the road (in the direction of the death camp and the city). When asked, she says she is going to town. An obvious lie—she was really going to the euthanasia camp. Zerchi offers to go to town for her, but she insists she must go herself. Zerchi then talks her into going with him in his car. Unable to decline without looking suspicious, she is forced to accept the offer. While in the car, Zerchi tries his best to convince her not to commit suicide. On the way back to the abbey, as the car passed the Mercy camp, Zerchi is ordered by a police officer to pull over. As soon as he does, the woman says she is getting out. Dom Zerchi tries to stop her, but is restrained by the police. Dr. Cors assists in taking the baby from him and gives to the woman, as she enters the camp. Zerchi is served with a restraining order by the police, enjoining the order from protesting. Cors approaches him to talk, but Zerchi punches him in the face. Zerchi is restrained again by the police, but Cors declines to press charges, and Zerchi returns to the abbey. After making confession for attacking Cors, he himself hears confession from Mrs. Grales, the local tomato vender. Grales, a mutant who has two heads, is a descendant of the mutants caused by the Flame Deluge. Her second head, named Rachel, is incapacitated—it has never opened its eyes or moved. Mrs. Grales had earlier tried to get Zerchi to baptize Rachel. While hearing Mrs. Grales' confession, the confessional booth lights up and gets extremely hot in a matter of seconds—A nuclear weapon has gone off nearby. Zerchi tells Mrs. Grales to run, and Zerchi himself runs to the tabernacle to retrieve the Eucharist. As he turns and is running out of the church, the building collapses on and around him. In criminal proceedings, a confession is a document in which a suspect admits having committed a crime. ...
Jump to: navigation, search This article needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of quality. ...
When he recovers consciousness, he is pinned under several tons of rock. Alone, he fades in and out of consciousness. During one particularly alert period, he notices that the explosion opened up the crypts, and bones are scattered in the rocks. He is able to work loose a nearby skull with an arrow protruding from the forehead (presumably the remains of Brother Francis). - What did you do for them, Bone? Teach them to read and write? Help them to rebuild, give them Christ, help restore a culture? Did you remember to warn them that it could never be Eden? Of course you did. Bless you, Bone, he thought, and traced a cross on its forehead with his thumb.
After sleeping a short while, Zerchi awakes to hear singing from a short distance away. He had heard it twice earlier, but this time it is close. He calls out, and the voice echoes his words back to him. He looks up to see Mrs. Grales approaching him—only, this time, Mrs. Grales's head is unconscious, and Rachel's is alive. He tries to administer baptism to her, but she refuses. Instead, she offers him the Eucharist, and he takes it from her. Just before he dies, he realizes what Rachel is: - "The image of those cool green eyes lingered with him as long as life. He did not ask why God would choose to raise up a creature of primal innocence from the shoulder of Mrs. Grales, or why God gave to it the preternatural gifts of Eden—those gifts which Man had been trying to seize by brute force again from Heaven since he first lost them. He had seen primal innocence in those eyes, and a promise of resurrection. One glimpse had been a bounty, and he wept in gratitude. Afterwards, he lay with his face in the wet dirt and waited.
- Nothing else ever came—nothing that he saw, or felt, or heard."
In the last chapter of the book (chapter 30), we find out that the crew reached the starship safely, and the crew is blasting off as the nuclear explosions are occurring. The last to board, knocking the dirt from his sandals, murmurs, "Sic transit mundus" (Thus passes the world) — a more final judgement than the conventional Sic transit gloria mundi—"Thus passes the glory of the world".
Analysis Some critics assert that the book espouses a pessimistic, cyclical view of history—that is, that history inevitably repeats itself. William Butler Yeats was a strong proponent of this philosophy. However, the ending belies this reading. Although the Earth is most likely destroyed in a final thermonuclear exchange, the fact that the occupants of the spaceship escaping from the planet takes not with it human life (as it might not in any event, as it is repeated several times that there are human populations on other worlds), but the Church (Miller at this point was a convert) seems to indicate that, indeed, history does not repeat itself. This hopefulness has been linked with Miller's own faith in the Church, that no matter what, God would not let his people kill themselves. Years later, Miller held a more negative (or perhaps less enthusiastic) view of the Church, as can be seen in the sequel to this novel. William Butler Yeats (June 13, 1865 â January 28, 1939) was an Irish poet, dramatist, mystic and civil servant. ...
The third section, Fiat Voluntas Tua, takes a strong stance against euthanasia (assisted suicide). Ironically, decades later, Miller himself, mentally ill for years, committed suicide.
The sequel Miller worked for many years on a sequel, Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman; it was completed by Terry Bisson, and published after Miller's death. Terry Bisson (born February 12, 1942) is an American science fiction and fantasy author. ...
The Babylon 5 episode "The Deconstruction of Falling Stars" contains a scene that is almost identical to the premise of this novel. Jump to: navigation, search Babylon 5 is an epic science fiction television series created, produced, and largely written by J. Michael Straczynski. ...
The Deconstruction of Falling Stars is the final episode of the fourth season of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. ...
Quotations - "Listen, are we helpless? Are we doomed to do it again and again and again? Have we no choice but to play the Phoenix, in an unending sequence of rise and fall? Assyria, Babylon, Egypt, Greece, Carthage, Rome, the Empires of Charlemagne and the Turk. Ground to dust and plowed with salt. Spain, France, Britain, America—burned into the oblivion of the centuries. And again and again and again." – Abbot Dom Zerchi (chapter 25)
- "Due process, they call it," he growled. "Due process of mass, state sponsored suicide. With all of society's blessings."
- "Well,", said the visitor, "it's certainly better than letting them die horribly, by degrees."
- "It is? Better for whom? The street cleaners? Better to have your living corpses walk to a central disposal station while they can still walk? Less public spectacle? Less horror lying around? Less disorder? A few million corpses lying around might start a rebellion against those responsible. That's what you and the government mean by better, isn't it?" – Dom Zerchi's conversation with Dr. Cors (chapter 27)
Jump to: navigation, search The phoenix from the Aberdeen Bestiary. ...
Assyria in earliest historical times referred to a region on the Upper Tigris river, named for its original capital, the city of Ashur. ...
Babylonia was an ancient state in Mesopotamia (in modern Iraq), combining the territories of Sumer and Akkad. ...
Jump to: navigation, search A map of the central Mediterranean Sea, showing the location of Carthage (near modern Tunis). ...
Jump to: navigation, search The Roman Empire is the term conventionally used to describe the Ancient Roman polity in the centuries following its reorganization under the leadership of Octavian (better known as Caesar Augustus). ...
Jump to: navigation, search Hi my name is Bob what is yours dear lady. ...
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External links - A Canticle for Leibowitz publication history at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Study Guide for Walter M. Miller, Jr.: A Canticle for Leibowitz
- Slashdot book review of A Canticle for Leibowitz
- Review of A Canticle For Leibowitz
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