The tempest sync theme reminded me of a hymn that confused me as a child:
Master, the tempest is raging!The billows are tossing high!The sky is o'ershadow'd with blackness,No shelter or help is nigh;Carest thou not that we perish?How canst thou lie asleep,When each moment so madly is threat'ning,A grave in the angry deep?The winds and the waves shall obey my will,Peace, be still.Whether the wrath of the storm-tossed sea,Or demons, or men, or whatever it be,No waters can swallow the ship where liesThe Master of ocean, and earth and skies;They all shall sweetly obey thy will,Peace, be still. Peace, be still.They all shall sweetly obey thy will,Peace, peace, be still.
I've bolded the two words that were the main source of my confusion: billows and demons.
Demon is not part of the usual Mormon vocabulary -- it's always "the devil and his angels" -- and so I knew demons only as creatures in fantasy games like Hack. This hymn always made me want to ask an adult, "Wait, are demons real?" but for some reason I never did. (Hack is a link to "Minor sync: Omelette and Mormon tempest" because we kids always pronounced it "Omelette of Yendor." My mother tried many times to correct this to "am-yoo-let," but we thought that was just her Southern accent and wouldn't fly in New Hampshire.)
I didn't know what billows were but could only infer the meaning from context -- namely, the context of the Dr. Seuss book I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew. As it happens, it matched that of the hymn pretty well. The narrator is caught outside in a terrible storm called the Midwinter Jicker, and "a chap in a slicker" offers him shelter in his house. He spends the night there, finally falling asleep at quarter past five, and when he awakes, the whole house is "crashing downhill in flubbulous flood." While he is thus sleeping through a raging tempest, like Jesus in the hymn, he dreams he is "sleeping on billowy billows / Of soft silk and satin marshmallow-stuffed pillows."
Thus in my mind, billows represented not an aspect of the raging tempest but the most comfortable thing imaginable to sleep on. I imagined Jesus sleeping in similar marshmallow-stuffed luxury, so soft that, to the disciples' astonishment, he managed to stay asleep even as his silk-and-satin billows were "tossing high" in the tempest -- much as the narrator in Solla Sollew wakes up only after his whole house has been carried away in a flash flood.
Another church song that I grossly misunderstood as a child was "Book of Mormon Stories." This was always sung with hand gestures, including an undulating movement for "Long ago their fathers came from far across the sea." The roundness of the movement was sufficiently different from the way I drew ocean waves (with pointed crests) that I didn't make the connection but instead associated it with "billows," which I had begun to think of as what people slept on when they were on boats. Then there was this verse:
Lamanites met others who were seeking liberty,And the land soon welcomed all who wanted to be free.Book of Mormon stories say that we must brothers be,
Giv'n this land if we life righteously.
Lamanites were universally understood to be American Indians back then, and the accompanying gesture was to hold two fingers up behind one's head, representing feathers. Very culturally insensitive, I'm sure. It was for this reason that I naturally turned to The Indian Book for light on this mysterious figure, "the Landsoon Welcome Doll, who wanted to be free." I knew that monsoon referred to heavy seasonal rains, and I figured that a landsoon must be something similar -- maybe heavy rains that happened inland, far from the coast. The Welcome Doll apparently had something to do with these rains. Well, I knew from The Indian Book that "it was the kachinas (kah CHEE nuhz) who sent rain" and that "Hopi men carved dolls that represented magical beings called kachinas." So, I imagined the Welcome Doll looking something like this (the ones with the crocodile-like muzzles), but with its arms outstretched in a gesture of welcome:
As I recall all this now, I realize that it syncs pretty well with "Ariel." Ariel is the spirit who causes the titular storm in Shakespeare's The Tempest. Just as the Welcome Doll "wanted to be free," Ariel responds to Prospero's question, "What is't thou canst demand?" with, "My liberty."




