The Annotated Sandman #24–Season of Mists, Chapter 3
Lots and lots of annotations for #24, especially about the Norse gods, but I feel they’re most well-known. So I just chose a few interesting tidbits this week for our community reread (that got totally buried under the show 🤣. But it’s still good info because this is obviously exactly where we are…)
On Starting the Story
Apparently NG had problems with beginning the story.
In one version of the script, Odin sent his wolves to fetch Loki and Thor. In another version, the Phantom Stranger, a longstanding DC character (first appearance: The Phantom Stranger #1, Nov. 1952) who also plays a significant part in NG's Books of Magic series, was slated to appear. NG intended that the Phantom Stranger would be waiting for Dream at the shores of the Dreaming, to warn him that he had guests waiting for him, and still arriving, in the castle. The Stranger there points out that Hell is the most desirable plot of psychic real estate in the DC Universe (a sentiment put into the mouth of Death in the published version). That script notes that the Stranger and the Sandman "have obviously known each other for a very long time." In an interview with the website Universe HQ, in 2000, NG talks about the relationship between the Sandman and the Phantom Stranger: "There is a script that was never used in Sandman # 24. In the first five pages of this issue, I originally wrote a version where Sandman is flying back from Hell and ends up finding the Phantom Stranger. They are there, standing, and have a conversation about what is to happen, saying mysterious things that only have meaning for themselves. It did not work very well, because Sandman and Phantom Stranger are very similar. I had a page and half of this, and I thought, This is just silly, and I cut everything."
The cavern is part of Teutonic mythology relating to Loki, one of the asir. According to some sources, he is brother to Odin; others state that he is bound to Odin by blood-oath (see 24.4.5, below). He is generally seen as the god of fire, mischief and evil. After reviling the gods at a feast arranged by Egir, he enraged the gods and was pursued by Odin, Kvasir (see 24.1.4, above), and Thor. He was bound with the entrails of his son Narve (by his third wife Signe) and put in a cave where the giantess Skadi placed a serpent, the venom of which drips onto his face. Signe (Sigyn) holds a cup or bowl to catch the poison, but when she steps away to empty it, drops fall onto his face, causing him to writhe and the earth to tremble. According to legend, he will remain bound until Ragnarok, the day of the final battle, when he will break free to lead the forces of evil against the gods. Then he and Heimdall, another son of Odin, will fight to the death.
On Alternate Scripts
Fimbulwinter is prophesied to be a terrible season, three years of cold and three years of rising lawlessness, preceding Ragnarök.
In an alternate script, Odin seeks Hell not to hide from Ragnarök but to avoid war, to end the disputes among the asir, Giants, humans, dark elves, and dwarves over territory. [sounds like they went with the alternate script for the show then]
Who is This Guy?
Several readers wrote to the editors, asking the identity of the dark figure visible behind Dream. The editors had no answer, and NG's script describes only a "grotesque thingie."
Order and Chaos
NG comments in the script, "Okay, now what I want to do here is bring in chaos and order. Frankly not a concept I have much time for in the DC universe:
It seems to be another way of talking about vaguely magic-ish gods, of whom the Lords of Order are splodgy shapes that sort of glow (not very orderly) and the Lords of Chaos are disembodied smiles (not particularly chaotic) — unless we're talking Hawk & Dove type titles, in which case Lords of Chaos and Order are good or bad magic gods, Order being a bit nicer than Chaos — straight out of Dungeons & Dragons. Up until now I've tended to simply avoid them (and slag them off in The Books of Magie)." The names Hawk and Dove have been used repeatedly as duo characters in the DC universe, but NG refers here to the series appearing in the late 1980s and early 1990s entitled Hawk and Dove in which it is eventually revealed that they are respectively a Lord of Order and a Lord of Chaos.
The Lords of Order first appeared as a group in Dr. Fate, Vol. 1, #1 (Jul. 1987), although only Nabu (created in 1941 but revealed here to be one of the Lords of Order) is named there. Beginning in 1963, British fantasy writer Michael Moorcock (1939-) wrote extensively about the metaphysical forces of Order and Chaos (drawing, among other sources, on the work of Poul Anderson, in particular his Three Hearts and Three Lions (1953)) and the struggle for the Cosmic Balance. NG, in a private conversation with this editor, acknowledged Moorcock as an important source for the characters appearing here.
The Lords of Chaos first appeared in Justice League America, Vol. 1, #32 and Justice League Europe, Vol. 1, #8 (both Nov. 1989), as the natural opponents of the Lords of Order.
The name "Kilderkin" is a joke — the obsolete word was a measure of beer or ale, half a barrel.
According to John Camden Hotten's 1865 Slang Dictionary, “Shivering lemmy" is "the name given by street-folk to any cager who exposes himself, half-naked, on a cold day, to obtain alms. The 'game' is unpleasant but exceedingly lucrative."
Remiel and Duma
Duma is usually identified in Jewish tradition as the angel of silence, associated with the underworld; he is said to guard the place of the dead, who are of course silent. Remiel ("God raises up") is said to be the angel of the resurrection of the dead, watching over those souls who rise to Heaven.
The Merkin
Another joke-name: A "merkin" is a pubic wig (the term was first recorded in 1617), used by women to conceal their shaved genitalia. (It has achleved a second life on the Internet as a slang - and derogatory - term for a denizen of the United States, in the form of a corruption of "merican," the colloquial abbreviation of "American.")
Eve
Note that, this being the Dreaming, Eve's appearance changes, in stages, from a woman of about 70 (according to the script) to a girl of about 20. As will be seen in Vol. 3, 40.16.3, Eve embodies the Three-in-One in herself.
The Egyptian Pantheon
The Egyptian gods represented here are not the chief deities: Anubis, the son of Isis and Osiris, was originally the god of the underworld, but by the fifth Egyptian dynasty he was supplanted by Osiris, whose attendant he became, serving as merely the guardian of tombs and the patron of embalmers. Bast, who also appears as a lion-headed woman with a solar aura, is the personification of life and fruitfulness, and while her worship was widespread, she was not one of the more potent gods. In her cat-headed aspect, she was generally known as Pasht. Bes is described as a shaggy-haired dwarf god who wears a lion's skin and bears a tail. In his gental aspect, he is a patron of dance, music, and pleasure and a protector of children and child-bearing women, justifying his designation as a "household" god.
Susano-o-no-Mikoto
Izanagi, together with his wife Izanami, one of a number of couples who were the original deities of japanese folklore, gave birth to the islands of japan. After Izanami traveled to the underworld, Izanagi pursued her. Finding her there in a disgusting state, he abandoned her. Furious, she sent the Furies after him, but he escaped. In the course of washing off the impurities of the under-world, Izanagi gave birth to more deities, including Susano-o, the god of wind, springing from his nose.












