#like. ronan dreaming of his wasps and adam and that vision and blue and her prophecy
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kinda crazy that the members of gangsey all thought they were going to be the one to kill gansey
#like. ronan dreaming of his wasps and adam and that vision and blue and her prophecy#even without knowing abt the corpse road ronan was still always incredibly aware of the fragility of gansey’s life#and the juxtaposition between this ageless boy#who seems both old and young#and immortal and kingly#and that EVERYONE felt how fragile his life was#🕯️#sorry just. thinking abt gansey’s mortality again#what if the whole reason why he looks both old and young at the same time is bc of the fact that he came back bc of cabeswater#that in being imbedded into the cycle of death and recreation of this forest also means that his physical appearance reflects that
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(Ok so this is obviously going to contain huge spoilers for the Raven King) @girlbossfarooqlane , this one goes out to you
When I first listened to the chapter at the end of the book of Cabeswater sacrificing itself to save Gansey, my first thought was that Cabeswater was creating Persephone- was making itself Persephone- to be exchanged for Ganseys life.
It might sound a bit strange in the beginning but hear me out! I have some (good, if i might say so) reasons:
The chapter I'm talking about is chapter 67 of the Raven King. In this chapter we learn quite a few things about Cabeswater, that we know to be true because it’s literally written in its perspective:
Cabeswater is made and remade all the time. It is impossibly old and always young at the same time.
Cabeswater is not quite mortal and can’t sacrifice itself for Gansey, who is quite mortal
The sacrifice has to be a life
Adam/it's magician is the one trying to convince him of saving Gansey, giving it ideas and explaining in what limited way of communication they have
The easiest way of saving Gansey would be to make a copy of him, but Cabeswater knows that that isn’t what the Others would want and Cabeswater is all about making wishes (and not-quite-wishes) come true, so that isn’t what happened
[I would, at this point, like to point out that the way the chapter reads it sounds like Cabeswater is making Gansey new: “But it might be able to refashion him into something new” but that sounds like making a copy of Gansey but since They don’t want a copy of Gansey Cabeswater shouldn’t be able to do it (see point 5). Although it might be (probably is as far as i understood that scene?) that Cabeswater remade Gansey entirely. As in from the moment he died the first time, the moment Gansey received “a new heart” from the ley-line to save him from certain death by wasps. That moment is the reason why Gansey is a mirror like Blue, the reason why he died the moment Blue kissed him. They kept reflecting power back at each other, stronger each time, and the weaker one had to break.
But if we ignore those two or three sentences I can just continue with my theory I spent too much time on, yknow?]
Cabeswater can’t just kill itself because a) it’s not really mortal (see point 2) and b) it’s all about creation which is- as you might know- pretty much the opposite of murder
Cabeswater mentions that the life-for-a-life sacrifice would only be possible for itself if it created itself a human shape. Let’s go with this. The rest of the chapter is Cabeswater not understanding humans but trying it’s best at creating authentic life
7.1) Cabeswater has no idea how humans are supposed to be
7.2) Cabeswater is going away to create its new life
7.3) Cabeswater keeps coming back to remember what humans are like, which likely results in life that is not quite what it’s supposed to be like but it’s close enough
7.4) It takes Ganseys wonder and regret, his humanity and puts it inside the new life. I will read this as Cabeswater copy and pasting it and not outright stealing it
Cabeswater has a very calming effect on Adam
This is just a collection of facts (with a few of my comments thrown in) so now let’s get to the things we know about Persephone to start connecting them:
Persephone is described as odd due to her youthfulness being side to side with her old wisdom (taken from the Raven Boys Wiki)
She has a concept of right and wrong but it differs very strongly from the “rulebooks” of the Others
Her physical appearance is almost unnatural, especially her eyes. They are described as black, but they turn out to be every color at once. I’m 80% sure that’s biologically not possible
3.1) It could be that her physical appearance is the result of her being a psychic, but she would be the only psychic in the Raven Cycle to have an altered appearance due to her psychic-ness
Maura and Calla meeting was a coincidence (as long as you believe in coincidences, Persephone meeting them was not
Persephone seems to be a sort of mediator of Foxway, she’s pretty much the only calm presence in the books
She taught Adam despite never taking initiative
She dies while scrying
7.1) She can not only see the past, present, future through scrying, she can participate. See: the scene before the discovery of her body in Foxway. She was with Adam one second and the next one she was gone. The cashier said that she was never there. She was projecting herself
So let’s start connecting dots, shall we?
In the chapters just before Cabeswaters chapter the focus lies on Adam and Noah.
Noah's chapter focuses on his life after death and the “time is a circle” theme that has been in every book of the Raven Cycle. Noah goes “back in time” to save Gansey, it turns out he was the one to rescue Gansey, he is the one who started his search for Glendower (which is something I could maybe write another essay on ). So Noah sacrifices his life for Gansey a second time, the first time when he dies, the second time when he moves on.
Adam meanwhile is scrying, getting back his autonomy from the demon. While scrying he sees Persephone, who is dead, and she tells him to take back control. As far as i know (could research) scrying is believed to do three things:
see the past, present and future
give visions coming from the subconscious and imagination
give visions coming from gods, demons and/or spirits
It seems to me that the scrying in the Raven Cycle is based on point 1 since there are multiple occasions where the characters use scrying as a medium to locate the present location of others.
That would not, however, explain the presence of Persephone while scrying.
What Adam is doing can’t be a vision from his subconscious since he is in Cabeswater, he sees how little is left of it.
It could be argued that she too is a projection of Cabeswater, but at that point it’s too weak to do anything, much less create a whole human being while continuously being destroyed.
There is no reason for Persephone to be there, no way for her to be there. Unless she’s part of Cabeswater.
If we start at the beginning (or the end, really) it goes like this: Cabeswater is dying and Gansey saves it. Gansey died and the Others wish for him to be alive again. Cabeswater, being the wish fulfilling forest it is, does everything to do exactly that:
Cabeswater can’t kill itself and a sacrifice would only work if it created itself a human form to inhabit to be sacrificed.
We know that time is not linear, so Cabeswater goes back a few years, and it creates Persephone. It uses up the last of its power to create itself new (always remade, reborn; see facts about Cabeswater point one) and makes itself Persephone.
Persephone is an odd person with eyes that shouldn’t be and who is young yet old and who knows so much about Cabeswater and knows how to help Adam when he is having problems with communicating with Cabeswater.
She takes Adam as an apprentice despite being often described as almost never taking the initiative and as soon as she starts teaching Adam, he stopped having his anger outbursts (See facts about Cabeswater point 8, “Cabeswater has a calming effect on Adam”).
They want Gansey to live so Cabeswater makes itself a person to help his magician help the Others get to the point where they are now (without Adam they would have never gotten to the point of finding Glendower and stopping the demon). So Cabeswater/Persephone gives Adam back his eyes and hands and Adam gives back the idea to trade Cabeswater for Ganseys life in return and Gansey lives. It's a full circle.
But wait! In Facts about Cabeswater point 2 “can’t trade Cabeswaters immortal life for Ganseys mortal one” this theory would be disproven. That's the second purpose of Persephone (the first one being making sure Adam gets to be present for Ganseys death so he can give the idea):
Persephone is the life that gets taken. Her life is the one that gets sacrificed on the leyline so Gansey can live. And one might argue about her dying before Gansey did but I would like to draw attention to two things.
Persephone died while scrying, she went too far out of her own body and never returned.
Adam saw her mere minutes before Gansey died, also while scrying
So Persephone looked into the future and she stayed there, she fulfilled her role as Adams “mentor” and she fulfilled her role as sacrifice for Gansey, giving her soul (not her body) and she never returned to Foxway, dying in the process (see facts about Persephone point 7.1)
This was her purpose, this is her something more that every significant character in the Raven Cycle has.
Obviously Gansey’s quest and sacrifice, Adam’s connection to Cabeswater, Ronan’s dreams.
Noah’s sacrifice for Ganseys life, Neeve’s role in the demon's uprising and end, being the third one in the Maura-Calla party to make it a good number.
Persephone’s something more was to be a sacrifice and she knew it. In that one scene she’s talking to Adam and he asks if she can see her own death and this is her response: “Everyone sees it. Most people make themselves stop looking, though”. She dies in the chapter following this scene, so he knows exactly what she’s doing, that she is going to die and she does it willingly because the Raven Cycle is all about working toward your something more.
Persephone also knows about her origin. She knows about her “connection” to Cabeswater (her being it, really) and it gets “addressed” in the very same scene.
Here a scene:
But Persephone just said in her tiny voice, “But I see now that it could never be. You’re like me. We’re not really like the others.”
Other what? Humans?
[...]
“We’re really better in our own company,” Persephone said. “It makes it hard, sometimes, for others when they can’t understand us.”
^^^The only really “inhuman” thing about Adam is Cabeswater, which implies that Persephone also has a connection to Cabeswater (again, my point here is trying to prove that she is Cabeswater, so that would be the connection) and the talk about not being able to understand them would only prove that further since Adam and Persephones whole relationship started because of communication problems between Cabeswater and Adam.
Here’s the “short” version:
When Gansey died Cabeswater made itself Persephone (with the help of some time warping and circling and stuff) and Persephone/Cabeswater fulfilled her two purposes (it’s just one, really): To make sure that Adam gets to the point of Gansey’s death to share the idea that will save his life and to be the life that is sacrificed.
Her/It’s whole purpose was to give Gansey life and that’s exactly what happened.
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