There All the Honor Lies

####Overview

Sheridan is in hot water when he kills a Minbari warrior in self-defense.
####Guest Stars

Caitlin Brown as Guinevere Corey. Sean Gregory Sullivan as Ashan.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/036.html
####Backplot

Minbari clans are like close-knit families. One surrenders some of one’s identity to the clan, and in return the clan is expected to shoulder the responsibility for one’s actions. Despite this, clan leaders sometimes engage in secret plots without the knowledge of the clan members at large.

Sheridan’s tactics in the Earth-Minbari War (cf. [[Points of Departure]]) are considered completely without honor by many Minbari; he used a fake distress signal to lure the Black Star into a minefield.

Vir was considered a failure by his family. He was sent to Babylon 5 at their behest, mostly to get him out of their hair. There was little competition for the post, which was thought to be something of a joke.
####Unanswered Questions

What was Sheridan supposed to learn from Kosh’s lesson? (see Analysis)

How did Kosh know what Sheridan would find in the chamber?

Who were the people living there?

Will Vir’s family take him up on Londo’s offer?

What fate awaits the teddy bear?

Who was the human who stole Sheridan’s link? Did he have an ulterior motive for helping with the setup, or was he simply doing it for money?
####Analysis

Considering her dramatic entrance, Sheridan’s lawyer didn’t actually do much of anything. Who sent her, and what was she supposed to be doing for Sheridan?

One interpretation of Kosh’s lesson is that he was teaching Sheridan to give humanity the benefit of the doubt. Even in what Sheridan considered the most dangerous, nasty place on the station, one can find beauty. If Kosh’s pledge in [[Hunter, Prey]] to teach Sheridan “about you” is taken broadly to mean “about your kind,” this is at least a plausible scenario.

Another possible interpretation: Going to the darkest, dingiest, “worst part” of B5 was an analogy to Sheridan’s current very “bad” situation. This is partly confirmed by Kosh’s statement that having a “bad day” was perfectly appropriate for the lesson he had planned. What Sheridan saw there was “beauty… in the dark”, which was exactly what he needed. He was obviously relaxed and feeling much better after the experience, and he thanked Kosh for helping him.

The lesson? When things are at their absolute worst, don’t simply satisfy your basic needs (eating, sleeping), take time out to enjoy something that will make you feel better despite the conditions. It will help you deal with adversity. Alternatively, the lesson is that even in some of the worst places/situations, there can still be beauty if you allow yourself to look for it.

Why the monastic chant? Sheridan said in [[Points of Departure]] that he had met the Dalai Lama in Tibet. The chant wasn’t Tibetan — it is a Gregorian chant, part of the Christmas Mass. The entire incident may have been projected into Sheridan’s mind by Kosh or by someone else. The fact that Sheridan could see it might also be related to his dream in “All Alone in the Night.”
####The Latin lyrics:

Puer natus est nobis et filius datus est nobis;

cujus imperium super humerum ejus;

et vocabitur nomen ejus,

consilii Angelus.

Cantate Domino canticum novum;

quia mirabilia fecit.

####One English translation of which is:

Unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given;

on whose shoulders the world’s dominion rests;

whose name is;

He who was sent to us from the great

Heavenly Wonder-Counselor.

Sing unto the Lord a new song. He has made wonders.

####There are two quotes here, one from Isaiah 9:6, the other from Psalm 98:1:

For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given:

and the government shall be upon his shoulder:

and his name shall be called

Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God,

The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.

O sing unto the Lord a new song;

for he hath done marvellous things:

his right hand, and his holy arm, hath gotten him the victory.

Whether this particular chant has any bearing on the story, or was just selected because it sounds good, is an interesting question, but a couple rather tenuous connections can be made:

  1. The second verse mentions a “hand” being victorious; recall that Sheridan was told, “You are the hand,” in [[All Alone in the Night]].
  2. The fourth issue of the comic series, dealing with Sinclair’s appointment to the Minbari homeworld, is titled “The Price of Peace,” one letter removed from the description of Jesus above. (That one is probably just a coincidence.)

It’s also worth comparing Kosh’s lessons to his encounter with Talia in [[Deathwalker]]. When she asked what his negotiations meant, he advised her to “listen to the music, not the words” — advice that might apply to Sheridan’s lesson as well.

The plight of the teddy bear mirrors the story Sheridan told to Delenn; if the bear is really supposed to represent Sheridan, is its fate perhaps a foreshadowing of Sheridan’s?
####Notes

Londo’s mention of “a certain Minbari” lying is probably a reference to Lennier’s lie in [[The Quality of Mercy]].

The Centauri expect their dolls to be anatomically correct.

“Honour and shame from no condition rise; Act well your part, there all the honour lies.” – Alexander Pope, “An Essay on Man” Epistle IV, 1733-34

Possible Ranger sighting: When Vir and Londo are talking in the Zocalo, a man in what looks like a Ranger uniform walks by twice. Once as Vir says, “Centauri Prime is sending a replacement,” and again as he says, “It’s my problem, not yours.”

The bear is from the Vermont Teddy-Bear Company. It’s a “twenty inch” with “JS” embroidered on the front and “Ba-bear-lon 5” on the back.
####Peter David says:

Specifically, on page 13 of their 1994 Winter Collection Catalogue, they have the Custom Embroidered Bears. Ordered with a baseball shirt and hat (NOT jacket), he’s 20 inches high and his fur color is ‘Pockets (thick milk chocolate)’…

I should point out that ordering the bear for Joe was my wife’s idea. She’s a big bear fan. At present she’s hard at work on a Minbeari…

Caitlin Brown, who plays Guinevere Corey, played Na’Toth in season one.

The Minbari text Delenn showed Lennier can be deciphered using the Minbari alphabet as rendered on the B5 trading cards. Replacing Minbari characters with their corresponding Latin ones yields the English text, “Chester is very spoiled. I guess it’s my fault. I loved him too much.”

Hunter, Prey

####Overview

A fugitive with sensitive information about the Earth government flees to Babylon 5. Tony Steedman as Dr. Everett Jacobs. Bernie
####Guest Stars

Casey as Derek Cranston. Richard Moll as Max. Wanda De Jesus as Sarah.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/035.html
####Backplot

After the victory over the Dilgar, the Earth Alliance experienced a period of rapid expansion bolstered by a general sense of optimism, a sense that the future was bright. Somewhere along the way, that was lost — Dr. Franklin says the future was like waiting for that special toy for Christmas, and when you get it you find that the reality doesn’t measure up to your expectations.

Dr. Franklin studied medicine at Harvard. One of his teachers, Dr. Everett Jacobs, went on to become then-Vice President Clark’s personal physician. Dr Franklin says, “A lot of us looked up to him as a role model. He’s the best there is.”

Dr. Jacobs examined Clark before and after the “accident” on Earth Force One that killed President Santiago — and found no evidence of the viral infection Clark used as an excuse to leave the ship shortly before it was destroyed.
####Unanswered Questions

How and when will Dr. Jacobs’ data be used?

What did Kosh and his ship say to each other after Sheridan and the others left the docking bay?

What did Kosh teach Sheridan?

How did Sheridan convince Kosh to allow his ship to be used to save Dr. Jacobs?

What did the ship “sing” to Dr. Jacobs?
####Analysis

Why was the fact that Kosh’s ship is alive such a surprising thing to have confirmed, when a simple “scan for life forms” was able to detect it? In all their surface probes while the ship sat in the docking bay, it seems odd that nobody thought to scan for life, especially since it was already known or at least suspected that Vorlons use organic technology (cf. [[Infection]].)

Sheridan mentions to Kosh that there’s a council meeting to discuss the Narn refugee problem. That might be related to the smuggling operation started in [[Acts of Sacrifice]] — has it been revealed already? (Not necessarily, of course; there are probably thousands, if not millions, of refugees who have nothing to do with that operation.)

Kosh speaks to his ship, and it displays some text in an unknown script, presumably the Vorlon written language. That implies that Kosh and his ship are not in telepathic contact, or at least not when he’s not on board — somewhat remarkable, considering that Kosh and the ship have both demonstrated telepathy or something like it (Kosh in [[All Alone in the Night]] and the ship in this episode, both with Dr. Jacobs and, more importantly, the maintenance workers referred to by Ivanova.)

There may be a Ranger (cf. [[The Coming of Shadows]]) in this episode, though it’s very subtle. As Sheridan and Garibaldi reach the bottom of the stairs, just before Sheridan sees the red ribbon, a man walks by the two of them, wearing the same outfit as the Ranger from the aforementioned episode. Which might be coincidence, except that Garibaldi notices the man, even turns and watches him climb the stairs, before looking back at Sheridan, who is meanwhile occupied with the ribbon.

A couple viewers have commented that Sheridan looks a bit too smug as he gives the data crystal to his co-conspirator at the end, almost as if that isn’t the real crystal. Is it? Does he trust her? Is he up to something other than what the General thinks he is? (Recall that we never heard his answer in [[All Alone in the Night]].) Also, he doesn’t give her Dr. Jacobs’ code to unlock the data, though of course he could simply be giving her an unencrypted copy.

On a related note, did Sheridan keep a copy of the crystal for himself?

Sheridan confronts Kosh twice. The first time a bit tentatively, the second time directly. Amazingly, he engages Kosh’s interest and actually begins what may develop into a dialog (or at least a monologue) with Kosh.

Also of note, the first time Sheridan confronts Kosh he says that Kosh “called to him.” This is a reference to the dream sequence in [[All Alone in the Night]]. Kosh replies, “I sought understanding. I listened to the song. Your thoughts became the song.” Sheridan asks, “Has this ever happened before?” and Kosh says, “Once.” When was that? One possibility is Talia Winters (cf. [[Deathwalker]]) — Kosh told her to “listen to the music, not the song.”

Kosh’s second conversation with Sheridan, of course, bears close analysis, especially given its relation to Sheridan’s dream in [[All Alone in the Night]].

  1. Sheridan: “You wanted to see me?”
  2. Kosh: “You wanted to see me.”
  3. “Well, I guess everybody does. See what you really are, inside that encounter suit.”
  4. “They are not ready. They would not understand.” Analysis: It’s not obvious exactly who he means by “they.” At least one person was ready to see Kosh, namely Delenn (cf. [[Chrysalis]].) Of course, it begs the question once again: what is Kosh, that one might not “understand” when one saw him? (And why does he care whether people understand?)
  5. “Am I ready?”
  6. “No. You do not even understand yourself.” Analysis: Is Kosh speaking in a general sense here — “You aren’t self-actualized” — or is there something specific about Sheridan that Kosh knows and Sheridan doesn’t?
  7. “Could you help me to understand you?”
  8. “Can you help me to understand you?”
  9. “Well, I can try. Is that what you want? An exchange of information? I tell you something about me, you tell me something about you?”
  10. “No. You do not understand. Go.” Kosh turns away.
  11. “Dammit, what do you want? What do you want from me? You know, ever since I got here I’ve had the feeling that… that you’ve been watching me. The records show you hardly ever went to council meetings until I showed up. When I was captured… it was you who reached out and touched my mind. Now you call me here… why? Just to throw me out? Are we just toys to you? Huh? What do you want?”
  12. Kosh spins around to face Sheridan again. “Never ask that question.” Analysis: Almost undoubtedly a reference to Morden’s question in [[Signs and Portents]] — but it raises another question of its own, namely, why does that question mean anything special to Kosh? How does Kosh know what Morden asked of the various ambassadors? Perhaps it’s what the Shadows always ask, since Kosh seems to know about them. Perhaps the Vorlons were, themselves, asked that question a thousand years ago.
  13. “At least I got a response out of you. So what’ll it be, Ambassador?”
  14. “I will teach you.”
  15. “About yourself?”
  16. “About you. Until you are ready.”
  17. “For what?”
  18. “To fight legends.” Analysis: Two interpretations are immediately apparent: “to fight the Shadows” (who are legendary to the Narn and probably others) or “to dispel myths.” The first seems too obvious, given Kosh’s tendency to be cryptic. The second interpretation suggests that the Vorlons aren’t revealing themselves because they feel they’ll be associated with something from mythology. Once Sheridan learns to combat those preconceptions, he will be ready. (See Notes.) Alternately, it could refer to Sheridan himself; he’s a legend of sorts to the Minbari, possibly an obstacle to the joining of humans and Minbari as envisioned by Delenn (cf. [[All Alone in the Night]].)

Do we now have a clue to the telepathic abilities of the Vorlons? This reference to “the song” and Sheridan’s thoughts “becoming” the song during his dream sequence hint rather strongly that telepathy is the Vorlon’s primary means of communication. If so, then this confirms that Sheridan’s dream wasn’t altogether a dream, and that he may have some latent/budding psi skills himself.

Further note: The constant jabber that occurs when Kosh speaks. It sounds like there are…many “voices” in it. If telepathy is common to Vorlons, then they may have some equivalent to a “hive mind”, or at least constant and unbounded access to each other. If so, then why does Kosh periodically return to the Vorlon homeworld? Further, does the same physical “Kosh” return? Still further, if each Vorlon is to a greater or lesser extent all Vorlons, does it matter which physical Vorlon is present? Taken to the extreme, the tag “Kosh” is simply a convenient referent supplied by the Vorlon hive-mind to the folks at B5. (Of course, it may well be the ship that needs to return home, not Kosh at all.)

In this episode we see that the ship is an independent entity, in essence a living creature. It shows up as a non-human life form, even though we are shown that Kosh himself was not on board. Further, Doctor Jacobs says that the ship “sang to him” while he was unconcious and aboard. This hints strongly that the ship shares “the song,” which means that it’s part of the Vorlon community mind.

If the ship is part of the Vorlon super-entity, and if the ship is itself organic technology, then this implies that the Vorlons can create any kind of physical creature they want, with that creature sharing the community mind. That means that the ship is nearly as much or as much a Vorlon as Kosh.

A number of readers have speculated that the ship is actually Kosh, and the encounter suit just a remote probe or a servant. That seems unlikely, though, given the events of [[The Gathering]], in which the Vorlons were ready to start shooting over an attack on what was in the encounter suit. But it’s worthy of mention.

A Biblical reference that might be relevant, or might just be a coincidence: During Sheridan’s secret meeting, Sarah tells him “Whatever you do, I suggest that you do it quickly.” This is the same thing Jesus Christ said to Judas Iscariot immediately before Judas went out to betray Jesus to the Sanhedrin. If this isn’t a simple coincidence, the implication is that Sheridan will eventually betray someone. The victim isn’t clear, though. His cadre on B5 are obvious candidates, as is the cabal he and Hague are members of. But for that matter, it might be the Psi-Corps (though his betrayal could be for the Psi-Corps, cf. [[All Alone in the Night]] and Bester’s comment at the end of [[A Race Through Dark Places]].)

A more whimsical connection is that the actress speaking the line is named Wanda de Jesus.
####Notes

A relevant reference might be “Childhood’s End” by Arthur C. Clarke (though the shape of the Vorlon encounter suit suggests the opposite association from the one in the book.)

When Franklin and Garibaldi stop to eat, it appears they’re actually munching on Kellogg’s NutriGrain Breakfast Bars (though the scene doesn’t provide a close enough look at the bars to tell for sure, so it probably doesn’t count as product placement.)

During Sheridan’s meeting with Sarah, they are in what looks like an equipment room. She sets up two devices, presumably to defeat any bugs or scans. The problem is that she leaves them there when she leaves. During their next meeting they are not in evidence at all, and again she isn’t shown retrieving them before she leaves. Of course, Sheridan could have taken them. (See jms speaks.)

In addition to its ants (cf. [[Mind War]]) B5 has roaches.

Sheridan has what he considers very good shielding on his office. He talks to Ivanova quite openly there immediately after Agent Cranston leaves.

Kosh’s comments to Sheridan bear some resemblance to the Dalai Lama’s observation (cf. [[Points of Departure]],) namely, “It will be even better when you begin to understand what you do not understand.”

Minor continuity glitch: when the station’s scanners are configured to look for Dr. Jacobs, the display reads “Dr Evert Jacoby,” not “Dr. Everett Jacobs.”