Tag Archives: act 3

In Cauda Venenum

In Cauda Venenum
We’re biting our tongues, (biding our time)
An apparition; awoken
With an urge to own and occupy
Who ever said this was easy?

A majesty’s massacre floods the fields of red
Blood to your body naturally rushes the blood to your head
To your head!

And now, with our hands in line, these arms move tonight

And we cry (whoa) “we can not allow this, this is terrible!”
With ideals, we’re idle as they lust for more
Whoa, if we settle the score
We’ve never been so excited to see you before!

In the cradle we are helpless
But on our feet we are fatal
How we evolve and grow into
(Twisted beasts with a desire for disorder)

Oh! What a terrible, terrible game we play
Replacing a pawn for a body and the players
Politicians, who say what they need to say

Now, with hands aligned, arms move tonight
Here, with abrasive eyes, pain in plain sight

And we cry (whoa) “we can not allow this, this is terrible!”
With ideals, we’re idle as they lust for more
Whoa, when we settle the score
We’ve never been so excited to see you be…

Oh, when I think about your eyes
Oh, when I think about your smile
Oh, when I dream about your lies
Traveled all this way just to find love

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Hunter, now a trained soldier, is deployed to the battlefront on a counter-offensive after an attack on allied territory. Distasteful of the tool his superiors have shaped him into, and uncomfortable with the cruelty of battle, he realises his true desire is to return to Ms Leading.

What’s in a name?
‘In Cauda Venenum’ — latin for ‘the poison is in the tail’, or ‘the worst is yet to come’. Though the experiences described here are already rough, it’s incomparable to the horror that will come.

Whose viewpoint?
Hunter. Get ready for a lot of him — sans the Oracles intro, he’ll be our narrator for the whole album.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:26 City Escape Reversed
Earthshattering. Nevermind Writing on a Wall, welcome to the real Act III.

So this is the opening riff from City Escape, but reversed. In City Escape, it described a chaotic situation in a familiar environment. Here, it’s a chaotic situation in an unfamiliar environment. This is pandemonium, disorientation, destruction, adrenaline… yeah, this is a war.

Can’t help but envision those loud DUH-DUH-DUHs as bombs detonating. Shot in my mind is like watching planes high over the territory dump their payloads, and buildings below exploding, before the ‘camera’ redirects to Hunter’s camp, with his superiors in a fervour as news of the attack comes in and countermeasures are hastily planned (0:18 – 0:26).

>We’re biting our tongues, (biding our time) / An apparition; awoken / With an urge to own and occupy
So first of all, what’s Hunter’s situation? There’s been a timeskip since he reached Europe, but how much has happened offscreen? Has he been deployed anywhere yet?

Going backwards, I’ll answer with my impressions of, ‘no’, ‘training’, and ‘he’s at camp, about to ship out into battle for the first time’. We can certainly hear that Hunter’s a lot less cheery or optimistic as he was in VVV, and also has some opinions about war, a subject he should be clueless about, and that he’ll form new opinions about once we see him in the field; so some Sergeant’s drilled these rhetorics into him. I’m sure he’s had ambient exposure to what war ‘is like’ from the rigorousness of his training and second-hand tales from or about other soldiers, but for now his opinions are either party line or telephone.

‘We’re biting our tongues’ -> News of the attack has come in. The soldiers are nervous as the enemy is growing bolder, and consciousness of the urgency of their side to respond is growing. Very soon, it feels, the relative safety of camp will be gone. Though this anxiety is strong, the soldiers do not voice it.

‘(biding our time)’ -> Rather, their nervousness is instantly recontextualised into an expression of power rather than fear. They aren’t trembling kids! They’re trained soldiers, ready to fight on the word ‘go’, simply waiting for the perfect moment to launch into a devastating counter-offensive.

‘An apparition; awoken with an urge to own and occupy’ -> The apparition here is enemy faction — Germany and its allies. Though all the soldiers have been told about the enemy, and how they need to fight the enemy, and must be prepared to die in battle against the enemy, as yet this enemy has been something of a ghost that everyone knows is doing things but hasn’t intruded into this squadron’s life. This attack changed that. The threat now feels extremely close, real, and hungry to dominate the territory near (or on) where Hunter is posted.

>Who ever said this was easy?
Well, fuck, thinks Hunter, but instantly dispels that thought with reminders from his training. It’s war! He shouldn’t mourn the easy ride he could have gotten if his post stayed uneventful. He’s tough, he’s trained, he is posted here to go to the battlegrounds.

>A majesty’s massacre floods the fields of red / Blood to your body naturally rushes the blood to your head
Hard lines. The majesty’s massacre could be a direct allusion to the killing of some specific figure, but could also be a more general idea of national rulers being these avatars of bloodlust considering all the slaughter going on in their name and by their orders. I think this is Hunter considering the casualties of the recent attack and angrily envisioning the culprit behind it: the enemy leader.

‘Blood to your body naturally rushes the blood to your head’ -> Unsure. Vibe I get is that Hunter is extending his sense of self (body) to include the unit that got destroyed in this most recent attack; he is taking the attack on that unit as equivalent to an attack on himself, (his self is his entire faction; rather, his self is a cell of the greater organism that is his faction), and is personally infuriated, bloodthirsty, and vengeful at the deaths of these soldiers.

Could read as some physical action here that gets him in the mood to fight. Maybe he’s recovering corpses at the scene of the attack (literally getting their blood on his body. Feels kinda stretch), hence provoking his animosity?

I think if he can describe the fields of red, then he was sent out to the scene of whatever attack just happened, so if he hasn’t been issued to fight yet, then I suppose a recovery mission makes sense. Sure we’ll go with that.

>And now, with our hands in line, these arms move tonight
Hunter’s unit is formally ordered to deploy and engage on the offensive.

‘Hands in line’ — evocative of a salute, but also of all the soldiers taking the same coordinated action and adhering to their orders obediently.
‘These arms move’ — evocative of a march, but probably carries the dual meaning of ‘arms’ as ‘weapons’, ie the soldiers are both equating themselves as weapons (these arms = we soldiers) and saying they will stage an attack on the enemy.
‘Tonight’ — It’s not happening yet. They first need to either wait for night or travel to the battleground.

>And we cry (whoa) “we can not allow this, this is terrible!” / With ideals, we’re idle as they lust for more / Whoa, if we settle the score
‘We cannot allow this, this is terrible!’ -> The thing about war is, you can’t just go into war with no justification for it, and especially with no moral justification for it. While this is a principle that matters more for politicians and higher-ups, who need to be conscious of foreign relations and keep domestic support, than footsoldiers who simply need to be obedient, it’s unsurprising that the rhetoric would leak down to Hunter’s squadron. Hunter feels not just a moral justification, but a moral duty to defeat the wicked enemy.

‘With ideals, we’re idle as they lust for more’ -> Hunter’s side is the ‘good side’, preoccupied with things like propriety and doing the right thing, which includes not invading others. But by that logic, being good leaves you as a sitting duck for malevolent actors. Hunter is agitated that this attack happened, agitated that the enemy hasn’t been squashed yet, is antsy to do something about it, and blames it on his side being too restricted by morals to be an aggressor, which means the enemy is super-evil for being the invader and needs to be stopped — they will only continue to destroy if left unchecked; morals will have to go in the bin for the greater good.

‘Whoa, if we settle the score’ -> Now that Hunter’s side has been attacked, they have justification to exact vengeance and properly defeat the evil.

>We’ve never been so excited to see you before!
Is this a variation on the build up of ‘it’s just that easy / pick yourself up’ in Evicted? Very much get that impression; certainly is illustrating Hunter’s experience meeting his recruiting officer when he first enlisted. I get the image of this very well-groomed man in impeccable attire and shiny white teeth, holding his hand out in a handshake… a bit like TP&P.

Because there’s obvious irony here, right? The officer’s excitement is happiness that Hunter is pledging to die for the cause, while we know Hunter signed up because he was in a painful place and desperate to find something happier. He probably wanted to take this welcome at face value, and feel like he found someone invested in him. As he recognises, though, the investment was in the tool the officers could mold Hunter into. Hunter seems frustrated about this, but still compliant, finishing the officer’s words.

>1:41 – 1:54 Instrumental
The counter-offensive occurs. Hunter’s side is successful.

>In the cradle we are helpless / But on our feet we are fatal / How we evolve and grow into / (Twisted beasts with a desire for disorder)
Interesting perspectives to be hearing from Hunter. Ostensibly it’s a comment on human nature, and how people will grow to be destructive and power-hungry once they have the means to dominate or oppress others… but Hunter hasn’t naturally grown to have any such inclination. We’ve seen him have violent desires before, but they’re certainly not from a desire for chaos — they’re from a desire for stability. If he thinks of himself as adapted to these chaotic circumstances, that is the result of methodical training designed to scour him of his hesitance.

So for him to recognize himself as deadly, and changing, suggests he has some battle experience now.

‘Twisted beasts with a desire for disorder’ -> This is not Hunter’s voice speaking. This is the party line of what Hunter’s superiors would want him to be, and what peer pressure is telling him to be; a bloodthirsty monster that thrives in the pandemonium of war, eager for new engagements where he can destroy the evil enemy. Hunter can see that this mindset is twisted, and is uncomfortable with becoming such a thing, but knows that’s the role the military has nurtured him towards and what he’s conforming to.

>Oh! What a terrible, terrible game we play / Replacing a pawn for a body and the players / Politicians, who say what they need to say
Accurate. Hunter is aware of how expendable his existence his is to his masters, and how his actions are under their absolute control, but also doesn’t seem to resist it. Rather, even he seems to accept that all the people involved on the ground are just resources, making the moves they do as proxies for their commanders who have no honour and face no risk.

>2:25 – 2:48 Instrumental
Not sure of any scene specifically but sure sounds cool. Another battle?

>2:49 – 2:58 Faster/Save Me Reprise
I think that’s what this is at least. Hunter seems to be pretty dejected about the place he’s gotten himself in. Specifically, what’s bothering him here is a problem on the ‘systematic’ level more than any specific personal experience: he feels used and unloved by the institution he’s chosen to trust himself to, but also feels like he can’t leave it.

Probably why this song has so much focus on the rationales behind war, monarchs, leaders, morals, politicians, people’s lustful desires to power, so on so on all in the collective ‘we’ and not too much description of Hunter’s individual thoughts and feelings on fighting itself (we’ll get these in What It Means To Be Alone). This is the stuff Hunter’s been thinking about, what he’s become as a cog.

Putters out very pathetically. Hunter’s quite resigned.

>Repetition: Now, with hands aligned…
More pained/aggressive this time. Starting off an active battle.

>Here, with abrasive eyes, pain in plain sight
Hunter’s peering out from cover… strains to find targets, fires, and sees the enemies drop. His takeaway of this isn’t a feeling of success though, but of having inflicted obvious hurt in a way he’s not really proud about. Alternatively he could just be getting a better view of the battlefield now and can see the obvious devastation that’s happened here; bodies, broken buildings, injured survivors… and knows this isn’t the better future he was looking for in VVV.

‘Open eyes, young man’. Moment of revelation.

>Chorus Repetition
Again more aggressive, spiteful, angry… some of that anger may be falling on the leaders who ordered this moreso than on the enemy soldiers, now.

‘We can not allow this’ -> We can’t allow scenes like this to exist; if looking at Hunter specifically, might have a tenor of ‘I can’t let this be my future’.
‘With ideals we’re idle as they lust for more’ -> Though the soldiers may know what they’re seeing is wrong, and that what they’re committing conflicts with their morals, their superiors will order them to keep going anyway.
‘When we settle the score’ -> So never, you mean? The commanders ordering this will never fall or understand what the battlefield’s like.

>We’ve never been so excited to see you be…
Hunter was able to obediently toe to the words of his superiors last time we heard this line; though his attitude through the whole last chorus repetition has been far more furious and hateful, this time, instead, he…

>Oh, when I think about your eyes / Oh, when I think about your smile / Oh, when I dream about your lies
HUNTER I SEE YOU’RE USING AN ‘I’ NOW! HELLO! GOOD BOY!

Yeah, instead of taking some kind of vengeful riposte at the people who put him in this situation, his real desires of comfort come out. Fighting has made him realise that he doesn’t want to be here and that he’d rather be back with Ms Leading.

‘When I dream about your lies’ -> just wanted to note the callback to ‘we fall beneath the sea of dreams’, with lies being a double entendre again.

>Traveled all this way just to find love
What a line. Hunter, Hunter, Hunter…

Hunter came here looking for belonging, safety, stability, comfort, all those things which we could sum up in the word ‘love’. He recognises now, finally, finally, that he won’t find it here. Nobody cares about him here, he doesn’t like what he’s becoming, and the chaos is horrible. Everything he wants he’ll find more ably by simply turning right around and going straight back to the City and straight back to Ms Leading, which he realises now is where he truly wants to be — because whoops, now that he’s not freaking over his ego out so much, and has a better sense of scale between ‘being an immature jackass’ and ‘being a weapon of the state’, he loves her.

These fantasies of being with her again are holding him together though the stress and demoralisation of this life as a soldier. I figure he is imagining that, when this is all over, he’ll listen to the love in his heart and zoom right back to her — debatable whether he actually would do this without getting cold feet again, but it’s a pleasant goal for him to look towards.

Have our Black Sandy Beaches ‘ee-ee-EEE-ee-EEE’ again, the ‘smiling through the pain’ theme. He might actually be in battle again by the end of this song but is zoned out thinking of Ms Leading lol.

Writing On A Wall | Act III | What It Means To Be Alone

Writing On A Wall

Writing On A Wall
Come away, young man, where the ground is red
And you need a mask to breathe
Oh it’s been so hard, but your luck could change
If you’d just roll up your sleeves
We had tried our best to warn before
But it didn’t get you far
Now we’re here again with a wish to mend
Your agonizing scar

Open eyes, young man, vigilante hands
And a heart prepared for pain
You will lose much more in this vicious war
Past and present stay the same
But the time to come can be altered some
If you listen to our song
But we sing in vain and the fact remains
There is no thing can be done

🌲🌲🌲

What happens?
Coming off the boat, Hunter again encounters the Oracles. They warn him not to involve himself in the war, as it will give him nothing he desires while only hurting him further. But does Hunter heed this advice? Of course, he does not.

What’s in a name?
‘Writing on a Wall’ — aka, ‘Things Are About To Go As Bad As You’d Expect, DUHHH’. Hunter is imminently going to enter an active warzone and will be heavily scarred by the experience. Given we know how sheltered he is, and have the benefit of our extremely negative post-Vietnam cultural perspective on war (something Hunter doesn’t have — it’s the 1910s), only Hunter doesn’t understand how serious of a situation he’s gotten himself into.

The phrasing, ‘writing on the wall’ hearkens to the prophetic but ultimately ignored nature of this warning (mene mene tekel upharsin; a prophecy of destruction from God), with the substitution of ‘the’ for ‘a’ being an extremely minor thing that emphasises Hunter’s ignorance — this wall is not even a prominent enough wall to be the wall to him, central in his thoughts, when it should be.

Whose viewpoint?
Oracles, speaking to Hunter.

🌲🌲🌲

>0:00 – 0:25 ooOOooOOooOOOooOO
OooOOOOOOooooOOOOoooo

Welcome to Act III, soldier! As will become convention over the remaining acts, we’re greeted into the story by our friends the Oracles, who will both give us a primer of what this chapter of the story is all about, and try to talk some sense into Hunter! As we can guess, and as they know, they’ll fail — but it’s nice that they try.

Before getting into anything else, let’s establish the setting. Hunter is now in his early 20s, the year is the mid-to-late 1910s, and he is in Europe to imminently fight in WW1 (The Great War, before there were 2 of them) on the Western Front (’hints of a higher hand / lost on the Somme’). Taking the chronological read of events as still true, the last thing that happened was Hunter’s ship came into port. We don’t have any location landmarks to guide us in this song, but I like to figure this dialogue happens either as he leaves the ship, or shortly after.

So were the Oracles on the ship? I mean it seems they can appear anywhere Casey wants them to appear, but why not? Sure.

Anyway, the song. This a-capella singing will come to be a sort of calling card for the Oracles, with their multiple voices.

>Come away, young man, where the ground is red / And you need a mask to breathe
Man, we’re already not in Kansas anymore with this tonal shift. Happenings here will be much more precarious and much more grave than they were in Act II. Musically I mean. Before even touching the lyrics.

‘Where the ground is red’ -> Foreshadowing a battlefield where the ground is saturated with blood from all the slaughtered soldiers; probably specifically implying The Tank.

‘And you need a mask to breathe’ -> Foreshadowing the Mustard Gas that Hunter will encounter, and hinting which war this specifically is — WW1 is the war that truly showed the devastating potential of chemical weapons — especially mustard gas — leading to their banning through the Geneva Convention in 1925.

Anyway — we’ll be going into war and the Oracles are telling Hunter to turn away from these horrors while he still can.

>Oh it’s been so hard, but your luck could change / If you’d just roll up your sleeves
The Oracles sympathise with the hardships Hunter has faced thus far, that being his loss of Ms Terri and his breakup with Ms Leading. However, they also advise that these problems are not so horrific as to be unfixable. Hunter still could find quite a peaceful and happy life for himself if he’d just concentrate on something other than running from pain, by being more honest with Ms Leading predominantly, but perhaps even by just settling down and grounding himself properly in the communities he’s fled.

Either way, his problems are still within his power to address; he’s just been too scared to.

>We had tried our best to warn before / But it didn’t get you far / Now we’re here again with a wish to mend / Your agonizing scar
Explicit confirmation that the speakers are the Oracles, and that they have an invested interest in Hunter’s wellbeing.

Why do the Oracles care so much about Hunter? It’s them being mouthpieces for Casey again, and Casey (presumably) cares about Hunter.

>Open eyes, young man, vigilante hands / And a heart prepared for pain / You will lose much more in this vicious war / Past and present stay the same
WOWWW that uptick with the whole military march thing going on. Seriously cool.

Anyway, the Oracles. Wait hold on these lines are actually nuts?

So they’re simultaneously listing qualities that Hunter already has, but alluding to how these qualities will be lost, or damaged, by his experiences over the act.

‘Open eyes’ -> What he already has is naivety and innocence; what he will develop is the revelation of the secrets Ms Terri kept from him, damaging that innocence and making him hate himself. Could also be a general thing of him seeing true horror over the war, and a command for him to pay attention. ‘Open-eyed oversight led me to here’.

‘Vigilante hands’ -> What he already has is the intention to kill in the name of good; what he will develop is him becoming a murderer through the killing of a horrible man, the General.

‘A heart prepared for pain’ -> What he already has is the conception of himself being sensitive and desperate for love, hence liable to get hurt; what he will develop is… ‘develop’ is the wrong word for this, but he will experience so much pain that it snaps him. Love will be the last thing on his priority list so much as quite literally killing people so that he doesn’t have to get hurt or live his terrible life anymore. (And once again, as he was in leaving the Lake, he’s confident he’s already survived such a devastating pain with Ms Leading that he fancies himself hardened enough to take whatever pain war can throw at him.)

‘You will lose much more in this vicious war’ -> And those three qualities are just the start of the things he’ll lose. He’ll lose his worldview, his faith, his morals, his squadmates, his brother…

‘Past and present stay the same’ -> Hunter came to war looking for a better future. He will not get a better future. Instead he’ll get more of what he already has: pain.

>But the time to come can be altered some / If you listen to our song
Hunter has not been deployed to battle yet, or at least hasn’t faced the real horrors of war yet. He still has the chance to escape them.

>But we sing in vain and the fact remains / There is no thing can be done
Unfortunately, the Oracles, equipped with Casey’s knowledge, know that Hunter isn’t going to turn back. Once again, he was let off his chain to hear this advice but naturally gravitates into the oncoming disasters anyway.

Vital Vessels Vindicate | Act II
Act III | In Cauda Venenum

Act III: Life and Death

Act III: Life and Death

Song Index | Overview

What happens?
Hunter deploys into WWI as an infantryman. Though he gains experience across numerous deployments as a loyal soldier, he finds himself discomforted by the dehumanizing military environment and unsettled by the weapon he is becoming. Aware he has made a mistake in coming here, Hunter admits he would like to return to Ms Leading, and conceives to return to the City at the first opportunity.

He gets no such opportunity. Instead, a string of particularly horrific encounters with a tank, a poisoner, a thief, and mustard gas progressively expose Hunter to the worst aspects of war. Each erode his idealistic worldview and jade him morally. He sustains grievous injuries in a mustard gas attack, and is left to die.

Hunter is rescued by an allied soldier who looks remarkably like himself. This soldier is the Son of the leader of this unit, who is the General. While Hunter is recovering at their camp, in the downtime, the General tells the unit the story of how he raped a hooker at a brothel called the Dime. This hooker’s name was Ms Terri.

Hunter is furious. Alongside the disgraceful uncovering of Ms Terri’s secret, he deduces that the General is his father, and that he resembles the General’s Son because he is also the General’s son. He is doubly furious, and gobsmacked, when the unit’s reception to the story is uniformly positive.

Hunter snaps. Ashamed of himself for profaning and betraying Ms Terri’s memory, regretful of having ever pursued her secret, and tortured by the knowledge of what he is, Hunter falls into deep self-loathing. He begins to contemplate abandoning his life to assume a new identity, and restart himself as someone better and happier than Hunter.

The unit fights in the Battle of the Somme. The General’s Son dies in the battle. Seeing an opportunity, Hunter swaps his dogtags, clothes, and possessions for the Son’s, deciding to steal his identity and live as him instead. Particularly, he thinks he can fool the Son’s Mother into doting upon him, but not that he can fool the General. To this end, he kills the General.

With no obstacles between him and a happier new life as the Son, Hunter greets the end of the war, eager to return to the City and put his plan into motion…

What is the purpose?
unshelter hunter

What’s in a name?
get to it later

Song Index
Writing On A Wall
In Cauda Venenum
What It Means To Be Alone

The Tank
The Poison Woman
The Thief

Mustard Gas

Saved
He Said He Had A Story
This Beautiful Life
Go Get Your Gun
Son
Father
Life and Death