The Annotated Sandman Edited and largely written by David Goldfarb Issue 59: "The Kindly Ones: 3" Neil Gaiman, Marc Hempel, D'Israeli Disclaimer: Sandman and all related characters are copyrights and trademarks of DC Comics Inc. Sandman and this annotation are intended for mature audiences only. Notice: Commentaries and additional information should go to goldfarb@ocf.berkeley.edu (Internet) or goldfarb@UCBOCF.BITNET. This material is posted by the editor directly to rec.arts.comics, and is licensed to appear on Compu$erve and GEnie. It is also available via anonymous ftp from theory.lcs.mit.edu in pub/wald/sandman. Please contact the editor if you see this material on any other forum. Reproduction in any form without permission of the editor (as agent for the contributors) is forbidden. Page 1 panel 1: Each Hempel-drawn issue of "The Kindly Ones" has a cord or string of some kind in the first panel. panel 2: The return of Loki, last seen at the end of "The Season of Mists" (issue #28), and of Robin Goodfellow, aka Puck, last seen in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" (issue #19). panel 3: "silver cord": a reference to Ecclesiastes 12:6: Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern. The most common interpretation is that "silver cord" here is the spinal cord. Some traditions have posited a "silver cord" as a mystical link between body and soul. Puck's quote is also an echo: the verse from Ecclesiastes was used in the funeral service at the end of "A Game of You" -- 37:17:4. panel 5: A true story from a trickster god of lies? Well, maybe. Page 3 panel 6: The phoenix, of course, was a magical bird. At the end of its life it would build a pyre for itself and die in the flames to be reborn from the ashes. Page 4 panel 3: This is reminiscent of some Greek myths in which a mother tried to make her child immortal by dipping him in water from the river Styx (the river that flows through the land of the dead) and then putting him on a fire to burn away his mortality. Page 5 panel 1: As we learn a few pages from now, this is the return of Dream's immortal friend Hob Gadling. His most recent appearance was in issue 53, although his cameo in issue 22 is chronologically later. Page 8 panel 1: The narrator of issue 53 was named Margaret. "Peggy" can be a nickname for Margaret, and the dates involved are close enough that the two might be the same person. Page 9 panel 4: Another trio of women... Page 12 panel 1: Note Hob Gadling in the background from page 8 panel 4. This is a bit odd, as the pictures in Despair's realm are supposedly all the backs of mirrors; there certainly was no mirror there in the cemetery. Page 13 panel 1: According to 21:10:2, the green one. Just thought you'd like to know. panel 2: Delirium of course acquired Destruction's dog Barnabas (or, equally true, the other way around) in issue 48. Page 14 panel 1: This settles a minor controversy about "The Season of Mists" part 1. Dream is holding a miniature version of the skull of The Corinthian, one of the escaped dreams from "The Doll's House". panel 4: Note, not *can* not... Page 17: Note the multiples of 3: 9 cents in the sign in panel 2; 9 cents in panel 3; 6 cents in panel 4; and the Triple Goddess on the cover of "People": Madonna, Roseanne Arnold, and Queen Elizabeth. panel 6: The verse is part of a rhyme called "Who Killed Cock Robin?". Page 18 panel 1: An echo of Daniel's appearance in the story, "The Parliament of Rooks"? Page 23 panel 5: Hempel is redrawing 12:23:5 -- just coincidence of numbering, I wonder? Page 24 panel 2: Redrawing 21:13:6, although from a different perspective. Note Morpheus' different appearance when he's being drawn by Kelley Jones as opposed to Mike Dringenberg. panel 4: 12:23:7. Dialogue in these three panels is verbatim. panel 6: As far as I can discover, "Oh that I were a man..." is not a quotation. Release history: Version 1.0 released 12 September 94. Credits: Greg "elmo" Morrow (morrow@physics.rice.edu) created the Sandman Annotations.