The 'Great Bulwark of Water'
Rom, and the definition of water
Throughout the haunting history
of Yhranam and all factions within, a common theme has become utterably
prevalent. Lakes, great lakes: 'bulwarks of water', as multiple sources
account. But what is a bulwark? A defensive wall or a person, or a thing that
acts in defence. How can a lake, or any body of water act as a bulwark? Through
this question we will uncover what significance these 'lakes' hold, and how the
terse wording of such entities veils their true nature.
'Great volumes of water serve as a
bulwark guarding sleep, and an augur of the eldritch truth' - all
variants of the Lake rune.
With this quote we procure both a
definition of these lakes and two strange adjectives - the bulwark and the
augur. Firstly, however, we tackle the phrase 'guarding sleep'. In Bloodborne,
sleep may reference the Dream, or Dreamworlds as a concept. Sleep,
notwithstanding its incorrigible relation to dreaming as a concept, has
been explicitly referenced as an access point to a dream. In the alpha, grand
chairs replaced the lamps - transporting you to the dream once your character
has dozed off, not unlike how we find Micolash. 'Lullaby for Mergo' - a
lullaby: sing to (someone) to get them to sleep, Megro - the perpetrator and
possible creator of the Nightmare of Mensis; this lullaby in turn could be a
means to sustain the nightmare, or access a new one. So in effect, these lakes
may be halting either mankind achieving the wanted ascension to a dream
(guarding sleep), or possibly acting as a barrier to protect those insightful
from what horrors lie within.
But to be able to bar access to
something, mustn't the place be a point of passing by default? Well, that is
for later down the line - but to answer a previous question, I believe that
these 'bulwarks of water' act as both the barrier and the protector at the same
time. To evidence this we look at the first reference to lakes acting as a
bulwark, which can be traced back to Byrgenwerth where coincidentally we find
Rom deep down beneath a lake. But who is Rom, and what is her purpose?
Rom is not a great one, she is a kin -
and owing the in-game description of 'the Byrgenwerth spider', she can be
assumed to have a strong tie to the place, as no disciple of either the college
of Byrgenwerth or later the Church would assume a great one to be produced or
associated with anything man had built out of sheer religious reverence. There
is also the fact of scientific progress to 'line a brain with eyes' that haunts
the old college in the form of Gardens of Eyes. Micolash also refers to Rom as
being blessed with eyes, by the great Kos (or some say Kosm) no less - of which
we have no doubt is a certified great one.
So Byrgenwerth achieved partial
ascension and created Rom, but what purpose does she serve? Once Rom is
defeated the Blood moon rises, and the veil is finally lifted for those not
insightful enough to ponder. Rom was halting the progress of the blood moon,
and in turn either protecting or slowing whatever practices were happening in
Yahar’gul. She was created for the sheer purpose of blanketing out the Moon
Presence's influence from Yharnam and considering that Byrgenwerth was the
closest faction to actually obtaining ascension - maybe contacting the great
ones wasn't such a good idea after all.
Perhaps it was a mistake, perhaps they were scared; Provost Willem himself points you towards his creation, knowing you will dispose of her. Maybe it wasn't meant to be, and Rom was the outlier. But notwithstanding the outcome, she was originally created to protect, to be a shield against the wall of dreams. That is the definition of a bulwark, and what ties the nature of the 'lake' has to the purpose of Rom seem eerily coincidental.
Maybe the bulwark isn't the lake
itself but what lies within, as all other examples of 'lake' seem to less of
directly halt passage instead of coincide with a separate being or event that
serves the job instead. There is also the fact of Japanese translation, whereas
the original text describing the 'lake' could refer to it as more of a wall, or
a barrier than a defensive measure; this theory coincides well to the logic of
how they operate. More examples of the 'lake' will be noted later on.
That brings us to the augur: a
religious official that translates the signs of the gods and talks their will
to man. Bloodborne likes the augur, and in its case the gods are the great ones
of the officials are whatever they want to be. The augur of Ebrietas for
example - a slimy phantasm that opens up cosmic portals to allow Ebrietas
partially through, thus 'translating' the great ones presence to a physical
form. The lakes act similarly: they allow contact with the dreamworlds and the
great ones who reside - the means of which will be explained later.
So now we understand that lakes are
indeed simultaneously a bulwark and an augur, but what is there to be said
about the true nature of these 'great volumes of water' - how can a simple lake
provide access to the realm of the gods? Are the great ones in fact sea
creatures, are dreamworlds Atlantean cities which lie at the bottom of the
ocean?
Well, yes, if you are the Church.
__
The research hall and how they got it
all wrong
I previously stated that the first
reference point for the lake as an eldritch concept was found at Byrgenwerth,
and that is correct - but we see in the Old Hunters expansion that this science
is only a reflection of their first contact, or a study on what conditions
those old Byrgenwerth Scholars found
'When the carcass of Kos washed up on
the coast, its insides were teeming with tiny parasites, unlike any found in
humans.' - Kos Parasite
We know that somewhere down the line
Provost Willem heard of a giant sea beast washing up on the shore of a faraway
fishing hamlet - and in their curiosity for ascension they sent Gehrman, Maria
and other old hunters in search for eyes or any evidence of contact with their
proposed 'higher lifeforms' at the location. Now, we aren't exactly sure what
happened to Kos, but we know she was dead before the hunters arrived. Theories
exist that she was actually killed by the fishing hamlet off in the water as
most residents carry spears and there are numerous whaling boats around the
ocean line, but that is not relevant. What is relevant is the host of parasites
that lay inside Kos, and what happened to the residents that came into contact
with them.
Phantasms, as they are sometimes
called - 'augurs' of the great ones. It was true that these parasites carried a
bit of otherworldly power within them, as before the hunters even arrived the
town was overtaken. Men were twisted into strange fish-folk and women became
entombed in snail shells. They all suffered, yet universally throughout they
revered the great Kos - treated her like a mother, prayed at her corpse. It may
have been fear, or even the same understanding that the church will once
procure - but they wept when the hunters came and took her child. The Orphan of
Kos may have been dead when the hunters found Kos (after massacring the
villagers for eyes) or they may have killed him themselves. But they took
whatever remained, left Kos on the beach and founded one of the core beliefs
that would one day run in circles through the Healing Church and its twisted
corridors.
The ocean, a universal starting point
for higher understanding; the knowledge of 'lake' was presumably formed from
Kos, and her sea-like form. Byrgenwerth may have discovered the use of 'great
volumes of water' as one of these augurs, but the Healing Church positively
obsessed over it later down the line. They created the Research Hall, a
subsection of the church dedicated purely to the study of water. Patients were
dragged off the streets in a manner not unlike the later developed orphanage
and tested on. They were to listen to the drip-drop of water and translate
inhuman mutterings of the great ones through the medium of 'lake'. And they
were so close, but so far from the truth. Both Provost Willem and the Healing
Church had misinterpreted Kos, and the truth was never to be properly
understood.
To see the truth that they could not,
we must find the medium. The Choir looked to the cosmos; the Research Hall
looked to the sea. The Choir succeeded in contacting the higher plane, yet...
so did the Research Hall, in a less evolved way. But how can they both be
right, if their areas of study were so differentiated?
The Choir, even in their twisted
understanding, almost, almost reached the proper conclusion, but Yharnam fell
to the beasts before any truth came out of it.
'The sky and the Cosmos are one' - The
Choir
Each faction held a facet of the
truth, but not the whole. The sea, and the cosmos - are one: these 'bulwarks'
'great volumes of water' the 'lake', inexplicably intertwined with the cosmos,
the sky.
Dreamworlds, the true meaning of
'lake', it is found in the clouds.
__
Evidence for madness
Our main example of this is obviously
what we can see in the fishing hamlet: Yharnam, or the Hunter's Nightmare
(which in of itself is simply a past state of Yharnam), lies beneath the sea.
You can also see a snail lady fall from the sky while in the Hunter's Nightmare,
and the fishing hamlet is quite literally accessed by ascending a tower and
exiting at cloud level. But this new truth is not only found in the Old Hunters
but evidenced all throughout all dreamworlds.
The Hunter's Dream - what lies
beneath, and partially above? Clouds, an all-encompassing layer. In the
Nightmare Frontier you see the same, except even the masts from the Fishing
Hamlet, as well as the Nightmare of Mensis can be seen at different levels. You
see a parallel from Mensis, looking back towards the Frontier. And Rom, who
lives on a lake beneath a lake: what do you see once you fall through the upper
surface? Clouds, one whole layer with no sky. A lake in the sky, there is no
real ground. This understanding of the metaphysical dream existing as different
layers of clouds ties to the exactness of 'lake', and explains a simple
misunderstanding of 'great volumes of water'. The bulwark, the passing point
and the land of the gods, are the clouds - in any volume or place they may
reside. That is the true meaning, and with it we see so much that could have
been achieved, but never was in the world of Yharnam.
Tells you something of purpose, and
false goals.
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