Bullet Points Commentary on Seven Soldiers
By David Faust
Seven Souls and Seven Soldiers
The ancient Egyptians postulated seven
souls.
Top soul, and the first to leave at the
moment of death, is Ren the Secret name.
This corresponds to my Director. He
directs the film of your life from
conception to death. The Secret Name is
the title of your film. When you die,
that's where Ren came in.
Second soul, and second one off the
sinking ship, is Sekem: Energy, Power,
Light. The Director gives the orders,
Sekem presses the right buttons.
Number three is Khu, the Guardian Angel.
He, she or it is third man
out...depicted as flying away across a
full moon, a bird with luminous wings
and head of light. sort of thing you
might see on a screen in an Indian
restaurant in Panama. The Khu is
responsible for the subject and can be
injured in his defense - but not
permanently, since the first three souls
are eternal. They go back to Heaven for
another vessel. The four remaining souls
must take their chances with the subject
in the land of the dead.
Number four is Ba, the Heart, often
treacherous. This is a hawk's body with
your face on it, shrunk down to the size
of a fist. Many a hero has been brought
down, like Samson, by a perfidious Ba.
Number five is Ka, the double, most
closely associated with the subject. The
Ka, which usually reaches adolescence at
the time of bodily death, is the only
reliable guide through the Land of the
Dead to the Western Lands.
Number six is Khaibit, the Shadow,
Memory, your whole past conditioning
from this and other lives.
Number seven is Sekhu, the Remains.
-William Burroughs, The Western Lands
The above lengthy quote was taken
from the last novel by William S.
Burroughs, The Western Lands. It was
published in 1987 and is the third part
of a trilogy that essentially summarizes
Burroughs' life, his philosophy, and his
literary and cultural influences. From
reading Grant Morrison's Doom Patrol,
The Invisibles, and various interviews
over the years, I found that Burroughs
was a significant influence on his work.
It was pure happenstance that I was
reading both The Western Lands as well
as Seven Soldiers around the same time.
I was also listening to a lot of
Material, an avant-garde funk band whose
1989 album Seven souls featured William
Burroughs reading sections from the
novel. But now that I think about it,
was it happenstance or was it something
else? This is Morrison and Burroughs
we're talking about so it's hard to
dismiss magical calling outright. The
texts and music could very well have
acted as a kind of hyper sigil charged
with meaning and connections.
So I set out first to connect the seven
souls of man with the seven soldiers of
the DC universe:
Ren--Zatanna
Sekem--Frankenstein
Khu--Shining Knight
Ba--Klarion
Ka--Bulleteer
Khaibit--Guardian
Sekhu--Mr. Miracle
Ren--"Top soul, and the first to leave
at the moment of death, is Ren the
Secret name. This corresponds to my
Director. He directs the film of your
life from conception to death. The
Secret Name is the title of your film.
When you die, that's where Ren came in.”
This more or less corresponds to Zatanna,
at least with regards to the director
aspect. It's Zatanna who ultimately
unites the seven soldiers into a single
purpose, though they themselves don't
know it.
Sekem--"Second soul, and second one off
the sinking ship, is Sekem: Energy,
Power, Light. The Director gives the
orders, Sekem presses the right
buttons.”
I put this with Frankenstein. He was
brought into existence with energy.
Khu--"Number three is Khu, the Guardian
Angel. He, she or it is third man
out...depicted as flying away across a
full moon, a bird with luminous wings
and head of light. Sort of thing you
might see on a screen in an Indian
restaurant in Panama. The Khu is
responsible for the subject and can be
injured in his defense - but not
permanently, since the first three souls
are eternal. They go back to Heaven for
another vessel. The four remaining souls
must take their chances with the subject
in the land of the dead.”
The flight aspect is analogous to
Shining Knight, simply because of the
horse. She also sustained the odd injury
or two and her appearance (with the
bound breasts) is of someone wounded.
Ba--"Number four is Ba, the Heart, often
treacherous. This is a hawk's body with
your face on it, shrunk down to the size
of a fist. Many a hero has been brought
down, like Samson, by a perfidious Ba.”
The treacherousness of Ba follows with
Klarion, who takes control of
Frankenstein and becomes the leader of
the Sheeda, also, the animal/witch-folk
connection with the familiars as well as
the Horigal beast that is a combination
of the two.
Ka--"Number five is Ka, the double, most
closely associated with the subject. The
Ka, which usually reaches adolescence at
the time of bodily death, is the only
reliable guide through the Land of the
Dead to the Western Lands.”
Alix Harrower, before she became the
Bulleteer, was a teacher, specifically a
teacher for autistic children. Very much
a guide for children lost within
themselves. This in addition to her
looking after an infected Helen Helligan
(if that's not a Silver Age name I don't
know what is) and helping her to stop
her sister's marriage as well as taking
care of Sally Sonic by driving her to
the hospital, make the Bulleteer/Ka
connection seem a little more logical
(well, as logical as something like this
ever can be).
Khaibit--"Number six is Khaibit, the
Shadow, Memory, your whole past
conditioning from this and other lives".
Guardian is, if nothing else a man
haunted by his past. However, he
overcomes his doubt to become a true
hero.
Sekhu--"Number seven is Sekhu, the
Remains". Mr. Miracle. Dead, buried, but
risen again.
Ok, so what does all of this mean?
Well, I think, just as the seven souls
are part of man, the seven Souls
represented by the seven soldiers are
combined, the soul of the DC universe.
Of course the question has to be asked:
why not the big three--Superman, Batman,
and Wonder Woman? They more than any
other characters should be the not only
the soul but the heart of the DC
universe as we've been told so many
times.
Well, for me the true soul of the DC
universe lay with its secondary and
tertiary characters. Superman, Batman,
and Wonder Woman are icons, known all
over the world and known independently
from their comic origins. The DC
universe is populated with so many
diverse types of characters, from the
silly to the horrifying. What DC is all
about as a created universe can be seen
in these seven little-known characters.
Zatanna/Ren/The Director: The voice of
direction and continuity. Sometimes this
voice can get lost or the director loses
sight of the goals or objectives. But in
the end, the course is set and all
doubts are cast aside.
Frankenstein/Sekem/Energy, Power:
Strength, determination, will. Physical
and mental characteristics required of
all heroes. Frankenstein does not stop
in his quest to destroy the Sheeda. He
pursues them to Mars and one billion
years into the future. It also doesn't
hurt that Frankenstein is a resurrected
character, both from the dead and from
obscurity. But more on that later
Shining Knight/Khu/Guardian Angel: A
knight is symbolic of a quest, and like
the characteristics mentioned above, a
hero without a quest to fulfill isn't
much of a hero. Justin also confounds
our expectations and adds a crucial
element to the superhero mythos by
having a concealed identity.
Klarion/Ba/Heart and animal instincts:
Klarion is guided by instinct and a
whimsical, care-free attitude. Like the
others of his race, he has a close
relationship with his animal familiar, a
totem from which he can draw great
power. Like so many other heroes in the
DC universe, this connection to an
animal is important both for the
strength it gives as well as its power
as a symbol.
Bulleteer/Ka/Guidance: The Bulleteer is
unabashedly feminine and embodies all of
the characteristics of the classic
female hero--strength, compassion,
beauty, and wisdom. She is the
embodiment of the feminine superhero
archetype, though she fights against it
at first, after all, it was the
fetishization of that archetype that led
to the death of her husband. But like
all true heroes, she accepts her calling
in the end.
Guardian/Khaibit/Memory, Legacy: Jake
Jordan inherits the mantle of the
Guardian, a trait unique to the DC
universe, where heroes can retire and
pass on their legacy to a younger
generation. Jake Jordan is also a
haunted man, haunted by mistakes he made
in the past and tirelessly works for
redemption
Mr. Miracle/Sekhu/The Remains, Death,
Sacrifice, and Resurrection: Sacrifice
is expected of all heroes. So often the
ultimate sacrifice, death, is called
upon for a story. But true heroes hardly
ever stay dead. Occasionally a hero will
die and pass their legacy on to another,
but more often than not, the hero simply
rises from the dead and continues
fighting. Shilo Norman inherited the
name of Mr. Miracle, and in his story he
makes the ultimate sacrifice for the
good of humanity, only to rise again.
In conclusion I just want to thank
you for reading this far. Seven Soldiers
had a profound impact on me as I'm sure
you can tell. In it, Grant Morrison has
crafted a near-perfect statement on the
possibilities of superhero comics as
well as its rich history, and has done
so using characters that, while largely
unknown or forgotten, embody all of the
archetypes of heroic fiction--the soul
of the DC universe.