Lexicon Urthus errata
Lexicon Urthus (second edition, corrected 2014) errata
Errata revised November 2020
brown book (p. 56) listing for “The Boy Who Hooked the Sun,” comment “(alluded to: V, chap. 33, 232)” [cut this parenthetical material]
brown book (p. 58) last listing [Change] “A possible quote” to “A quote from “The Tale of the Student and His Son” (II, chap. 17, 152).” [via Marc Aramini]
erentarii (p. 123) [Addition] cite “Hands and Feet” in Castle of Days (232) for the definition. James Wynn suspects it is a persistent typo for “ferentarii,” a class of skirmishers in the ancient Roman Army, as mentioned by Stone.
narthex (p. 252) History section [Cut “of a crucifix shape.” This sigil is a golden seal, like the golden bull of Byzantium. It depicts a narthex, so probably it shows three doorways.]
notule (p. 257) [Change] citation (II, chap. 11, 101) => (II, chap. 12, title). After details [Add] (II, chap. 13, 110).
Palaemon (p. 271) [Change] [Move “(I, chap. 1, 18)” to end of first line)] [Add “(I, chap. 3, 29)” to end of second line, the optical bit.] [via David Fitzgerald]
Second House (p. 315) [Add first use citation] (II, chap. 20, 183).
Synopsis (p. 392) [bad hyphen at bottom of page “antecham-ber”]
Synopsis (p. 398) [missing a few chapters in the lazaret (12), (13)]
Afterward, Severian meets a slave of the Pelerines named Winnoc, originally from Nessus. Thirty years before, Winnoc had been whipped for some crime. Shortly after the punishment, Winnoc sold himself to the Pelerines (12).
Foila tells a story, entering the contest with a magical tale about an armiger’s daughter and her three suitors (13).
Synopsis (p. 399) line 6 “know as the Last House” => known
Errata revised November 2020
brown book (p. 56) listing for “The Boy Who Hooked the Sun,” comment “(alluded to: V, chap. 33, 232)” [cut this parenthetical material]
brown book (p. 58) last listing [Change] “A possible quote” to “A quote from “The Tale of the Student and His Son” (II, chap. 17, 152).” [via Marc Aramini]
erentarii (p. 123) [Addition] cite “Hands and Feet” in Castle of Days (232) for the definition. James Wynn suspects it is a persistent typo for “ferentarii,” a class of skirmishers in the ancient Roman Army, as mentioned by Stone.
narthex (p. 252) History section [Cut “of a crucifix shape.” This sigil is a golden seal, like the golden bull of Byzantium. It depicts a narthex, so probably it shows three doorways.]
notule (p. 257) [Change] citation (II, chap. 11, 101) => (II, chap. 12, title). After details [Add] (II, chap. 13, 110).
Palaemon (p. 271) [Change] [Move “(I, chap. 1, 18)” to end of first line)] [Add “(I, chap. 3, 29)” to end of second line, the optical bit.] [via David Fitzgerald]
Second House (p. 315) [Add first use citation] (II, chap. 20, 183).
Synopsis (p. 392) [bad hyphen at bottom of page “antecham-ber”]
Synopsis (p. 398) [missing a few chapters in the lazaret (12), (13)]
Afterward, Severian meets a slave of the Pelerines named Winnoc, originally from Nessus. Thirty years before, Winnoc had been whipped for some crime. Shortly after the punishment, Winnoc sold himself to the Pelerines (12).
Foila tells a story, entering the contest with a magical tale about an armiger’s daughter and her three suitors (13).
Synopsis (p. 399) line 6 “know as the Last House” => known
Published on November 13, 2020 14:55
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gene-wolfe, new-sun
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