Underneath The Skin - Orochimaru Essay

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Orochimaru - The Serpent of Mythology



Orochimaru. He is the first truly major antagonist introduced into the series, and a moving force that has affected many lives throughout the Narutoverse. A master of deceit and trickery, Orochimaru works behind the curtains like a puppeteer. Everyone knows what drives Orochimaru, why it is that he does what he does. However one thing that might be easily overlooked by the general fanbase is the possibility of what exactly went into Orochimaru's character. In the same stride, what can be considered careful and methodical planning on Kishimoto Masashi's part can also be considered pure coincidence. After all, the serpentes has quite the infamous reputation in legend, so it would be no wonder why Orochimaru can fit certain myths so well.

There is irony, though, in that most of these myths are not very becoming of the snake. They are often depicted as creatures of evil and malice, when in fact a snake is more liable to be afraid of you than you are of it. Frightful and harried creatures, they are more likely to run than to attack. This is not the case demonstrated in many tales, however. Set before you, the reader, is a list of ten interesting links that Orochimaru has between himself and different mythological figures, spanning varying sources. Whether these are coincidence or done completely on purpose by the mangaka is up to debate. However, the similarities are striking nonetheless. Here is a brief outline of what is to follow:

I. Yamata no Orochi - The Eight-Headed Serpent (Japanese)
II. Yashagoro/Orochimaru - The Serpent Mage (Japanese)
III. Ouroboros - The Tail-Devourer (Greek)
IV. N??h?ggr - The Gnawer of Roots (Norse)
V. Gorgon - The Face of Terror (Greek)
VI. Nāga - The Cobra Deity (Buddhist/Hindu)
VII. The Lernaean Hydra - The Beast of the Lake (Greek)
VIII. J?rmuŋgandr - The World Serpent (Norse)
IX. The Devil - The Eternal Adversary (Christianity, various)

Three notes before you continue. This essay is quite lengthy and it has a great deal of pictures, including two animations at about one megabyte each. Just thought I should give you fair warning. Second, there are spoilers galore from the manga. I have not spoiler-tagged anything but most images, so if you continue, you are on your own as far as avoiding spoilers are concerned. Finally, I am no scholar. I am no expert. I'm not even perfect, as surprising as it may be. I make mistakes, and I make misinterpretations, and I don't doubt that it is entirely possible that throughout the course of this essay that this has occurred. So, if you are someone in a position of a wealth of knowledge and find a mistake in my writing, whether it be misinformation or a grammatical/spelling error, please let me know. Those who contribute in such a manner (in a decent-mannered way) will be rewarded with rep from me, and those who make major contributions of correct information on any of the mythological figures will be credited in this post.

Thank you, and enjoy. (Note: This is an extension, or rewrite in a way, of my previous Orochimaru essay. The old one will be deleted. Also, I do not give two damns about the political correctness of putting The Devil under a classification of "mythology". Get over it.)


Yamata no Orochi


Better known, perhaps, as simply Orochi, Yamata no Orochi is an eight-headed serpent from Japanese mythology. Before recent events, the relation between this creature and Orochimaru was a popular theory based around the possibility of Orochimaru being the Jinchuuriki to the eight-headed serpent Bijuu, according to the creature's description.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
The monster is described as having eight heads and eight tails and eyes as red as winter-cherries. It is so long its body extends over eight valleys and eight hills, its belly is always bloody and inflamed, and its back is covered with hikage (clubmoss), hinoki (Japanese cypress), and sugi (Japanese cedar).
Perhaps a very valid reason for fans having linked these two, besides the obvious, deals with the Yamata no Orochi's destruction at the ends of Susa-no-Ō. According to the the Kojiki or Furukotofumi, the oldest surviving book in Japan, the beast was killed when it was intoxicated by a trap of eight vats filled with sake. Once the serpent's defenses were lowered due to its state of impairment, Susa-no-Ō proceeded to cut Yamata no Orochi into pieces. However, upon cutting the middle tail, Susa-no-Ō's sword was chipped due to the presence of the legendary Kusanagi-no-Tsurugi, held protectively inside the snake's body, much like with Orochimaru, who kept a sword known as the Kusanagi within his body. Orochimaru would expel this sword by having a snake's head slither from within his mouth and the hilt of the sword would then protrude from the snake's mouth.

Orochimaru's Kusanagi:


Recently revealed in chapter 392, Orochimaru eventually emerges from Sasuke using the actual Yamata no Orochi. The eight-headed serpent breaks free, though seven of the eight heads are quickly struck down with Itachi's use of his Susa-no-Ō Mangekyou. Orochimaru himself comes from the final head and retrieves his Kusanagi blade in the normal fashion, only to be smote by Susa-no-Ō's own sword, the very same that defeated the other seven heads. This occurrence clearly parallels the story of the Yamata no Orochi above all, including the creature's demise.


Yashagoro/Orochimaru
(Picture Currently Unavailable)

Jiraiya Goketsu Monogatari, or The Legend of the Gallant Jiraiya, told the tale of a man from a clan known as the Kyushu clan by the name of Jiraiya, a practitioner of "toad magic". This Jiraiya eventually fell in love with and married a beautiful woman and practitioner of "snail magic" by the name of Tsunade. However, as most stories go, there is a villain to this story.

This villain was a man named Yashagoro, a student and follower of Jiraiya. Yashagoro was seduced and manipulated by the power of a serpent, becoming a skilled user of "serpent magic". It was at this time that Yashagoro became known as "Orochimaru". The snake magician attacked Jiraiya and his wife, Tsunade in a heated battle, though it was Orochimaru who was victorious. Both Jiraiya and Tsunade were poisoned by his venom and succumbed to its toxins.

However another follower of Jiraiya appeared, one whom was once saved by the toad magician, to rescue Jiraiya and his wife. It is at this point that the tale comes to a sudden halt, leaving the ending open-ended and mysterious. Aside from the obvious naming reference of the character Orochimaru in Naruto, there is one very fine detail here that can be applied to both Orochimaru characters: Their fates are unknown. Jiraiya Goketsu Monogatari ends abruptly before we can find out what happens to Orochimaru, and although Tsunade, Jiraiya and Akatsuki have all stated specifically that Orochimaru is dead, we know for fact that some part of Orochimaru continues to live on.

The Plague of Orochimaru:


Yakushi Kabuto, as a loyal follower, continues to carry on Orochimaru's will inside of him, but to what extent? Orochimaru's will, his very being, seems to be like a virus. A disease. Spreading through and tainting his body, slowly corrupting it to make it his own.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yakushi Kabuto, Chapter 357, Page 03
That said, it's truly an amazing life force! I may have integrated it, but it's now trying to take over my body!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hyuuga Hinata, Chapter 357, Page 03
What's... that? It has already taken over nearly a third of his body...
Even though Orochimaru has been classified as "dead", an inanimate part of his body when put into a living creatue immediately tries to strive and take over. This is a clear sign that it is by no means the end of Orochimaru. Just like Yashagoro, the end of Orochimaru is ambiguous at best.

Ouroboros


Ouroboros (or one of its many other incarnations) comes from the Greek ουροβ?ρος, meaning "tail-devourer". It depicts a serpent devouring its own tail, as the name suggested, causing its body to form a complete circle (in most cases, at least). The image of the Ouroboros spread far and wide to have representations in Gnosticism and Hermeticism, and more. For example, it served as an image of eternity in Gnosticism. Norse mythology had its own interpretation of the Ouroboros, known as J?rmungandr (see J?rmungandr for more information).

One of its biggest references, however, is in that of alchemy. Carl Jung, a Swiss psychologist, made perhaps one of the most relevant points of the Ouroboros and its relationship with alchemy.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Carl Jung
The alchemists, who in their own way knew more about the nature of the individuation process than we moderns do, expressed this paradox through the symbol of the uroboros, the snake that eats its own tail. ouroboros, has been said to have a meaning of infinity or wholeness. In the age-old image of the uroboros lies the thought of devouring oneself and turning oneself into a circulatory process, for it was clear to the more astute alchemists that the prima materia of the art was man himself. The uroboros is a dramatic symbol for the integration and assimilation of the opposite, i.e. of the shadow. This 'feed-back' process is at the same time a symbol of immortality, since it is said of the uroboros that he slays himself and brings himself to life, fertilises himself and gives birth to himself. He symbolises the One, who proceeds from the clash of opposites, and he therefore constitutes the secret of the prima materia which [...] unquestionably stems from man's unconscious.
I have taken the liberty of bolding the truly relevant points of Jung's comments. Anyone who knows anything about Orochimaru knows his goals. To learn every Jutsu is a simple one, one of omnipotence. However, the most obvious goal of Orochimaru's is that of immortality. The manga uses the reference of a white serpent as a sign of rebirth. The snake sheds its skin, its skin used as a symbol of a rebirth and it was to this point that Orochimaru took strongly. Experimenting on himself, trying to become an ever-rebirthing creature, one of immortality in a way... even in death, he would become life once more, just like the Ouroboros. A never-ending cycle.

Though one could also see the Ouroboros as a sign of self-destruction. In attempt to make oneself immortal and everlasting, they are truly slowly killing themselves. This assessment also fits Orochimaru quite well. In his attempts to become a Godly being, he has abandoned his old body, polluting and corrupting himself into a different form, one of that of a giant white snake with scales made of smaller snakes.

The White Serpent:


As Uchiha Sasuke states so obviously...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Uchiha Sasuke, Chapter 344, Pages 08-09
You wanted to take over other peoples' bodies so badly, you experimented on your own... now you're a pathetic shell of your former self.

N??h?ggr


The tale of N??h?ggr, better known as Nidhogg, is not a very well-known one. Naturally, it would be unfair to assume that people have never heard the name as it is usually referenced in other fictional material. N??h?ggr is usually portrayed as a great serpent or dragon, and in Norse mythology, the N??h?ggr was indeed a great dragon. It would spend its time gnawing upon the roots of Yggdrasill, The World Tree. It was particular to one specific root, the one placed over the land of Niflheimr. However, there was another little-known fact about N??h?ggr.

The poem Gr?mnism?l, from which much of the information of N??h?ggr is taken, also tells tale of an eagle that remained perched upon the very top of the tree. Included in this tale is a squirrel by the name of Ratat?skr that would exchange messages between N??h?ggr and the eagle. As it is stated, "[t]he squirrel called Ratat?skr runs up and down the length of the Ash, bearing envious words between the eagle and N?dh?ggr". With Sasuke's frequent equation to a bird of prey, particularly a hawk, one can actually see quite well the relationship between N??h?ggr and the eagle as the same between Orochimaru and Sasuke.

It is no secret that Orochimaru is greatly envious of the Uchiha's Sharingan. It has been something he's strived after for a number of years. But in the same stride, Orochimaru has something that Sasuke envies... power. After all, Sasuke left behind all he knew to seek out the power of the Cursed Seal that Orochimaru had, the power he knew how to control, that Sasuke had no hope to control without the aid of Orochimaru. Unlike the tale between N??h?ggr and the eagle, the tale of Orochimaru and Sasuke is composed of compromise and betrayal but the initial aspects of it are startingly accurate.

Another rather amusing aspect between N??h?ggr and Orochimaru comes in its reputation, in a way.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Eysteinn Bj?rnsson
?ar k?mr inn dimmi
dreki flj?gandi,
na?r fr?nn, ne?an
fr? Ni?afj?llum.
Berr s?r ? fj??rum
- fl?gr v?ll yfir -
N??h?ggr n?i -
n? mun hon s?kkvask.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Henry Adams Bellows
From below the dragon
dark comes forth,
Nithhogg flying
from Nithafjoll;
The bodies of men
on his wings he bears,
The serpent bright:
but now must I sink.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Dronke
There comes the shadowy
dragon flying,
glittering serpent, up
from Dark of the Moon Hills.
He carries in his pinions
?he flies over the field?
Malice Striker, corpses.
Now will she sink.
Seemingly associated with the deaths of many, this is a fact that bears upon Orochimaru. As it stands, as far as we've seen, he is actually the character who has caused the most deaths. His record of causing the death of fifty-nine infants alone beats out any other character that we know of, especially if his other experiments were even half as horrific. And that is not even taking into account his history as a ninja on missions. He could very well make an assassin like Momochi Zabuza look like a saint, and he was even evil enough to strike fear in Morino Ibiki.

Morino Ibiki's Fear:


The N??h?ggr was sometimes acknowledged as the herald of Ragnar?k, which was ultimately the destruction of many of the Gods and mortals in Norse mythology. Much like the N??h?ggr, Orochimaru's appearance comes as an ill or unsettling feeling. An ill-omen, if you will.

Tsunade's Bad Feeling:



Gorgon


The Gorgon is a most infamous creature from Greek mythology, possibly best known as the specific Gorgon named Medusa. The term Gorgon is taken from the Greek Γοργών which translates literally to gorgos, meaning "terrible" or "loud-roaring". Although the Gorgon is depicted as being a strictly female creature, everyone knows that Orochimaru has no qualms with bearing a body of the female gender.

The Gorgon has made its stake in popular culture, spreading to vast amounts of literature and media and they all have one thing in common. That is the portrayal of the Gorgon's infamous stare. Although the details can vary, the end result is ultimately the end of one's life, whether it be an immediate death or petrification into a statue. This is very much like an ability that Orochimaru once used upon a helpless Sasuke and Sakura in the Forest of Death, while in the guise of a kunoichi from Kusagakure (a female ninja... ironic).

Orochimaru's Deadly Gaze (Animated):


I am sure that this was rather predictable. So predictable, in fact, that normally I would not have bothered to add this (in fact it was this reason I did not add this in my initial essay). However, upon some research I found another interesting link. Greek mythology states that blood taken from the left side of the Gorgon acted as a fatal poison that could kill instantly. However, it also states that the blood from the right side of a Gorgon was such a potent healing elixir, that it was capable of bringing the dead back to life. Enter Orochimaru's infamous Jutsu, Edo Tensei, which uses a sacrifice to resurrect the dead.

Edo Tensei:
 
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Nāga


The name Nāga is, most likely, derived from the Sanskirt nāgaḥ, which is a specific type of cobra. The Nāga is found in Hindu and Buddhist references, acknowledging the Nāga as a deity that takes the form of a large snake. They were, oftentimes, a bane in tales, viewed as evil or deceitful. An appropriate and fitting trait for Orochimaru. Hindu tales state that the Nāga were holders of an elixir of life and immortality in their bodies. This is, of course, a no-brainer. Orochimaru has strived for immortality, eternal life, even destroying his own body in the process just to further that goal. However, the most unique trait relative between the Nāga and Orochimaru is one that I find rather fascinating.

This is depicted in an epic tale known has Mahabharata, where the Nāga are disliked in favor of the mythical bird-man known as Garuda (Who, in this tale, ironically provided them with the elixir of life). Those of you who remember Deidara's fight with Uchiha Sasuke well might recall Deidara's techniue, the C4 Garuda. An appropriate relation, as Deidara seemed to have an animal affinity toward birds.

Of course, this information alone seems rather trivial, doesn't it? It does delve a bit deeper, however. In the tale of Mahabharata, the Garuda was known as a nemesis of the Nāga. Through a series of unfortunate events, the once friendly Garuda and Nāga parted ways. Garuda considered them enemies, and food. This references the relationship between Deidara and Orochimaru in which Deidara seemed to obtain a rather random and almost unexplicable dislike and distaste for Orochimaru. He relished on the thought of killing Orochimaru, to the very point of wanting to smite Uchiha Sasuke for performing the act before he could.

Deidara's Disappointment Part 1:


Deidara's Disappointment Part 2:



The Lernaean Hydra


Other times known as the Hydra of Lerna, or simply the Hydra, the creature was named such for its location; the Lake of Lerna. Heracles (Hercules to the Romans) was tasked with the necessity to defeat this creature as the second of his Twelve Labours (perhaps what had made the mythological figure of Heracles most well-known). Ironically enough, the Lernaean Hydra was the offspring of two other Greek mythological creatures; Typhoeus (Typhon) and Echidna, both of which had serpentine features to them.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Typhoeus (Typhon)
The inveterate enemy of the Olympian gods is described in detail by Hesiod[2] as a vast grisly monster with a hundred serpent heads "with dark flickering tongues" flashing fire from their eyes and a din of voices and a hundred serpents legs, a feature shared by many primal monsters of Greek myth that extend in serpentine or scaly coils from the waist down.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Echidna
The goddess fierce Echidna who is half a nymph with glancing eyes and fair cheeks, and half again a huge snake, great and awful, with speckled skin, eating raw flesh beneath the secret parts of the holy earth. And there she has a cave deep down under a hollow rock far from the deathless gods and mortal men. There, then, did the gods appoint her a glorious house to dwell in: and she keeps guard in Arima beneath the earth, grim Echidna, a nymph who dies not nor grows old all her days.
This fact aside, the Hydra was known for its most prominent feature, and this was its countless heads. Poets once claimed that there were so many heads, that there were more than vase-painters could paint. One would not know how this could possibly apply to Orochimaru, unless they recalled the man's true form - that of the monstrous white snake, whose body was actually comprised entirely of countless snake heads.

The Many Heads of Orochimaru:


Whether the snake heads of Orochimaru's white serpent body regenerate like those of the hydra is unknown. Sasuke is seen severing the heads for several of them when attacked, using his own Kusanagi sword. However, after this point, no exterior damage is shown done toward Orochimaru with the exception of his entire body being severed into pieces. The previous heads that Sasuke had sliced off were shown back in place. This could, however, be something as simple as an error on part of the artist. One could note, however, that Orochimaru was still alive and capable of speech and movement while his body was cut into pieces. He was even still able to perform his body changing Jutsu upon Sasuke afterwards. Orochimaru has also been sliced in half (by the fourth tail form of Kyuubi in the body of Naruto), and managed to fully repair and heal himself.

Orochimaru's Uncanny Regeneration (Animated):


It is possible to relate these unique healing capabilities (of which Sasuke gained when he absorbed Orochimaru) to the Hydra. In spite of what is commonly believed, a snake is not capable of actual regeneration, or not the type of regeneration that is believed. Snakes are capable of regenerating a broken tooth or severed tongue, but no other wounds are capable of truly being healed at a substantially increased rate. It is theorized that the shedding of the skin is to help move along the natural healing process, but there is no solid proof of this.

The countless heads and regeneration were not the only known feature of the Hydra creature, however. It was also known for its deadly poisonous breath.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Pseudo-Hyginus, Fabulae 30
He [Herakles] killed at the spring of Lerna the nine headed Lernaean Hydra, offspring of Typhon. This monster was so poisonous that she killed men with her breath, and if anyone passed by when she was sleeping, he breathed her tracks and died in greatest torment.
The mere presence and the subtlest breath of the Hydra had most adverse affects. The same could be said of Orochimaru's true form.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Orochimaru, Chapter 345, Page 04
Finally feeling the effects, are we? The humors of these white snakes can even taint the air with their paralyzing venom
Although the venom of Orochimaru's true form was quite different from that of the Lernaean Hydra, the potency of its effects and how quickly they spread through the air are startlingly alike.

J?rmuŋgandr


J?rmuŋgandr has gone by several names. J?rmungandr, Jormungandr or The Midgard/World Serpent. According to mythology, J?rmuŋgandr was a sea-serpent and one of three children to the Norse God Loki and the giantess Angrbo?a. It is said that Odin took the three children of Loki and disposed of them by varying means. J?rmuŋgandr was thrown into the ocean, though he grew to such large proportions that he was able to surround the very Earth itself so that it could take its tail into its maw (much like the previously-mentioned Ouroboros). It was for this reason that he came to be known as The Midgard Serpent (or The World Serpent). Over the course of time, J?rmuŋgandr came to be known also as the nemesis of the God Thor.

One of the greatest feats of J?rmuŋgandr was the fact that, as pointed out, it came to the point that he was able to encompass Midgard entirely. Although J?rmuŋgandr's sense is a very literal meaning, one can see a more metaphorical sense of surrounding the world from Orochimaru. From an early time, he became a threatening force to many. Orochimaru assassinated the Yondaime Kazekage of Sunagakure, and portrayed himself as the Kazekage as part of his diabolical plan. Once after manipulating Sunagakure, he had an all-out attack launched on his former home of Konohagakure, a battle which undoubtedly killed many lesser-known shinobi, and also forced the death of the beloved Sandaime Hokage.

These facts aside, Orochimaru was also once part of the infamous criminal organization, Akatsuki. Comprised of ninja from all around the world, it is not unreasonable to believe that he effected and influenced various ninja in the other villages as well. We know, for fact, that one of his bases was taken in Kusagakure, where he held Genyuumaru and his clan (whether Genyuumaru and his clan were from Kusagakure is questionable):

Genyuumaru's Request:


As shown throughout his various bases (it can be assumed he had at least four bases; northern, southern, eastern, and western, as two of these are mentioned by Sasuke), he had ninja from other villages captured for experimentation, as well. For example, Houzuki Suigetsu, a shinobi formerly of Kirigakure.

Another Kirigakure Orphan:


Another rather interesting thing to note about J?rmuŋgandr was his rivalry with ??rr (Thor), the God of Thunder in Norse Mythology. ??rr was known for his use of a hammer named Mjolnir, a weapon that was capable of literally throwing lightning bolts at ??rr's will, allowing for a manipulation of lightning, in a way. In the course of Ragnar?k, legend says that ??rr will do battle with J?rmuŋgandr, eventually killing the monstrous serpent. However, ??rr will meet his own death only a mere nine paces away, where he will fall dead from the poison of J?rmuŋgandr.

Uchiha Sasuke, God of Thunder and Lightning?:


A colored two-page spread in chapter 341 of the Naruto Manga showed this image of Uchiha Sasuke over a backdrop of the Japanese god of Thunder and Lightning, known as Raijin. Although more likely a situation of convenience, it does seem almost too convenient that a character who becomes a representation of the God of Thunder (like ??rr) becomes the enemy of the characterization of a monstrous serpent (like J?rmuŋgandr) in a fight to the death.

The Battle:



The Devil


The Devil. Satan. Beelzebub. Lucifer. Belial. Abbadon. Asmodai. All names that have been attributed to this entity (whether they are accurate or not is up to debate). And there are plenty more. If anything, The Devil has become more of an idea than a real person. The idea of a seducer of men and women alike and the very embodiment of sin. The previously mentioned entities may very well all be entirely different... but one could say that they are all devils. Devil originates from the Greek διάβολος, or diabolos, meaing "the slanderer/liar/false accuser". Whatever the source, The Devil is considered the antagonist, the villain, the one not to be associated with. To be associated with The Devil means you are tainted, and the very same could be said of Orochimaru. Let us look first at the representation of The Devil in mainstream Christianity.

The Devil is often referred to as Satan (from the Hebrew word meaning "adversary") or Lucifer (a Latin word meaning "light bearer"), though whether The Devil is truly Lucifer is still a debate had to this day. What we do know is that The Devil, or Satan, was once an Angel of the highest rank who rebelled against God Himself. As it is said, The Devil was a prideful creature, not unlike Orochimaru himself, and refused to bow down to God, much as Orochimaru refused to bow down to the Sandaime, Sarutobi (heralded as The God of Shinobi), and his decision for the Yondaime Hokage. Satan was known as a tempter of man, and Orochimaru is no different. Orochimaru has a large degree of followers and if his attempts to sway Sasuke are any sign, there is no doubt that the seduction of power to his subordinates is the meaning behind their loyalty, however much they may have.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Uchiha Sasuke, Chapter 218, Page 17
So do I get any stronger staying with those... "comrades"? ... I'm going to Orochimaru!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Uzumaki Naruto, Chapter 218, Pages 17-18
Orochimaru was the one who killed the third and tried to crush the Village of the Leafs! You think he's just gonna give you some power for free!? He just wants your body to use as his container!! You might not come back! You might get killed! I can't let you go somewhere like that!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Uchiha Sasuke, Chapter 218, Pages 18-19
I don't care... all I care about is that I accomplish my objective. I can't help it if you're gonna get in the way.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kaguya Kimimaro, Chapter 199, Pages 07, 17-18
I've realized recently... that everyone is given life for a reason. Everyone has something important to accomplish. The question to discover what that is... is the only freedom God has given us humans. ... I must agree... I no longer have the capacity for the metapsychosis... in fact, it's quite difficult to discover my purpose now that I've lost everything. However, I finally understood. Although he may not be me, I will bring in the new "container" here... even if it costs me my very life. This is how I show my thanks to Orochimaru-sama... and my way of repaying my uselessness.
Though Orochimaru has not only served as a tempter for those who eventually bent to his will (or at least temporarily). There have been others who he has failed, like The Devil, to sway.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Orochimaru, Chapter 156, Page 10 (to Tsunade)
I can bring the brother and man you love most back to life... with the forbidden Jutsu I developed.
It was in the book of Genesis that The Devil took the form of a serpent and persuaded Adam and Eve partake of the forbidden fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Like The Devil, Orochimaru is clearly capable of coercing some people (but not all) into acts that others would find disfavorable, or they themselves know are not to be done. It is in during this seduction, typically, that The Devil has come to be able to possess and control humans, much like Orochimaru takes the bodies of his followers when it suits his needs (or wants). Whether one can say if a piece of will or the soul remains inside while possessed by The Devil, like the body taken by Orochimaru, cannot be said for sure, though it is not an impossibility.

A brief, and quite interesting, point I want to make is a relationship between Orochimaru and the characterization of The Devil in Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy. The Devil is shown, in the poem of Dante's Inferno, in the Ninth Circle of Hell, the final Circle of Hell dedicated to traitors. Upon arriving in the final "zone" of the Ninth Circle, Judecca, the characters of Dante and Virgil are met with The Devil himself, encased waist-deep in ice. One of the most interesting facts of this characterization of Satan is that he is seen frequently (if not constantly) crying, like the other sinners trapped in Hell, often a sign of remorse or regret. This brings to memory one moment with Orochimaru, in reference to the betrayal of his sensei, in which we saw an awkward almost tender side of Orochimaru that was quickly brushed aside, and never spoken of again.

Reptile Tears?:


Whether these tears were real, or if Orochimaru's rather... inane excuse is true has yet to be seen. But Dante Alighieri demonstrated that even The Devil is capable of sadness and remorse.

The end. Take of this what you will.


not my credit somene elses
just passing it along
 
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