Let me say it from the outset: this post will discuss last nightโs episode, the finale of the penultimate season of LOST. If you donโt want to learn what happens in that episode just yet, or you donโt want answers to some of the questions viewers of that episode were left with, then read no further. SPOILERS AHEAD!
Let me begin with a translation (kindly provided by Chris Jones) of the answer to the question/riddle โWhat lies in the shadow of the statue?โ The answer was spoken by Richard Alpert and is โIlle qui nos omnes servabitโ. We all heard that, but those of us who never studied Latin, or didnโt catch it, were still left wondering. And so hereโs the translation: โHe who will protect us all.โ
But letโs back up a bit. The episode began in the shadow of the statue, as it were, just as the Black Rock was drawing near to the island. There on the shore we see Jacob wearing white, speaking to another man wearing black โ returning us to the duality of two sides, dark and light, that John Locke spoke of at the beginning of the first season, explaining both Backgammon and the showโs underlying mythology. Whether the background is more Zoroastrian (two eternal opposing powers) or Mormon (two siblings, both sons of God, in conflict) weโve yet to discover. But I will say this: even though the white hats/shirt vs. black hats/shirt symbolism seems straightforward, that very simplicity leaves me suspicious. As Frank Lapidus said in the episode, those who find they need to emphasize their status as โthe good guysโ are rarely the good guys. And so, for all Jacobโs gentleness, I canโt help but wonder if there isnโt greater complexity to the showโs mythology than โlight vs. darknessโ might initially suggest.
Jacob, at the start of the episode, is weaving. There are heiroglyphics on the tapestry that I canโt help with, but there was also Greek writing. The top line is a quote from the Odyssey: โSoi de theoi tosa doien osa fresi sesi menoinasโ: โAnd for thyself, may the gods grant thee all that thy heart desiresโ. The bottom line says โtheoi de toi olbia doienโ: โMay the gods give thee blessingsโ.
His weaving is a metaphor. He has apparently been trying to persuade the other man on the island that he is wrong for some time, bringing people to the island who inevitably follow the same path of conflict and destruction. And so Jacob goes out into the world and begins weaving together the lives of various characters we have come to know and love. But to what end? Presumably convinced that this time he can demonstrate what he has failed to in the past. We also learn at the start of the episode that Jacobโs interlocutor wants to kill Jacob, and is looking for a loophole. By the end of the episode, in what may be the most shocking moment on LOST so far, he seems to have found it. The โrulesโ of the โgameโ they are playing still need to be fully unveiled. Might it be that here we have two opposing forces playing a game, with humanity as the playing pieces?
Tonight we also learned what was in Ilanaโs box, and that was the โmost shocking momentโ ever on LOST that I mentioned earlier. In the box was the body of John Locke, which had never left the cargo hold of the plane. Jacobโs opponent was impersonating him this whole time. Here too we find a complication of the showโs use of religious imagery. It was shocking to discover that the apparent resurrection was a counterfeit. And there was still more religious imagery from the Bible, not only as Ben said that โJohnโ was ushered into Jacobโs presence like Moses, but also as Ilanaโs group carried their box on poles in a manner reminiscent of the ark of the covenant. The idea that God (or Jacob) is weaving the details of our lives towards a greater purpose is one that many today resonate with, but here too we must be wary of assuming we know who the โgood guysโ are.
We also discovered that whoever Ilana and company were looking for in the cabin, he wasnโt there and hadnโt been for a long time. They further state that someone else had been using it. Was it Christian Shepherd? Or someone impersonating him? Those are but a few of the questions we were left with after tonightโs episode. The most obvious question is what the results of the detonation of the bomb will be. But also unanswered is what happens now that Jacob was stabbed and burned, what the significance of the ring of ash around the cabin was, and the fact that Ilanaโs group found it had been broken, and what Jacobโs (final?) words were (it sounded like he said โKarnakโ before adding โTheyโre comingโ), and what they meant. Also an important question is the relationship between Jacobโs counterpart and the smoke monster. Since the smoke monster takes varied forms, and told Ben to do whatever Locke tells him to, my guess is that perhaps the โother manโ at the start of the episode is the smoke monster. Notice how the monster doesnโt come to Ben until Locke is out of sight.
The episode ended with a negative, as it were, of the familiar logo: black on white rather than vice versa. Has the polarity between the two opposing forces changes as a result of what has happened so far? Weโll find out, presumably, in 2010. In the mean time, I will soon begin blogging my way through the recent book Lost and Philosophy: The Island Has Its Reasons edited by Sharon M. Kaye. I hope that will help provide a tiny bit of relief to those suffering from LOST withdrawal over the coming months.










