ext_12659 ([identity profile] selenak.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] b5_revisited 2009-08-17 05:33 am (UTC)

III. Consequences

As opposed to Chrysalis, Morden doesn't show up on screen; it's not necessary, because Londo doesn't need to be tempted externally anymore, and certainly not unaware of just what is at stake. Since Points of Departure, he has known what kind of weapon he suddenly has at his disposal; and now, he decides to use it. When G'Kar catches up with him and buys him that drink, you can see the dawning horror on Londo's face. Like G'Kar, he hears words he never had thought he'd hear, and he knows they're sincere. But unlike G'Kar, Londo does not decide to act on this by reversing his previous behaviour. (Mind you, I don't think it would have stopped the war if he had - the attack was already proceeding - but if Londo had subsequently opposed the war, it might have ended very differently. See also the results he gets when he does decide to, err, make Refa change his mind in s3.) Londo, as opposed to G'Kar - who is a revolutionary at heart - is a traditionalist; acknowledging having been wrong about something basic and following up on this isn't impossible for him, but it will take far, far more for him to get there, and both the galaxy and himself will be the worse for it. For now, and for the rest of the season, he draws MacBeth's conclusion; he has steeped in blood so far that he has to go on.

"How will it all end?" the dying Emperor asks, and Kosh replies: "In fire."

(Sidenote: for the record, I take this as an indication Kosh is aware of the Vorlon idea of how to deal with Shadow-affiliated planets and people this time around, though he may already disapprove.)

Londo isn't the only fatalist around. However, there is one last irony waiting for them all, and that, too, is hidden in his dream. MacBeth might die full of sound and fury, signifying nothing; his death, brought about by the man whose children he killed, doesn't have any meaning for him (though of course it means a lot for the other people in his drama). Emperor Turhan, who realized that he let other people make the choices in his life, was robbed of the results of his own last choice; his death is a part of the last thing he would have wanted, another war with the Narn. G'Kar's choice to try peace seems to be flung back in his face, and his second important choice - to stop his rampage and listen to Sheridan - will take a while to bear fruit. Meanwhile, Londo's choice has immediate results, the ones he wanted (as empty as they already feel), and long-term wise, his choices seem to be the one winning out over the others, leading to that final image he sees in his dream, a death carried out in mutual hatred.

And yet: Turhan's words - "The hatred between our people can never end until someone is willing to say, 'I'm sorry' and try to find a way to make it right again, to atone for our actions" - will be prophetic in a two-fold way. (Vir's "I'm sorry" this very season and his subsequent actions, for one; Londo's entire s4 and 5 relationship with G'Kar, and again, that crucial phrase, spoken out loud in public to a Narn, by the head of the Centauri Republic, nearly three years after Turhan wanted to say them.) G'Kar's willingness to make an incredible leap of faith regarding one particular Centauri will result in freedom for his people. And by the time the last part of Londo's dream catches up with him, the meaning will have changed, changed utterly.

A terrible beauty was born.


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