The Fall of Night

####Overview

As the Centauri war escalates, a Narn warcruiser seeks help from Babylon 5. Earth takes a position in the war. Keffer makes a terrifying discovery. Kosh takes a drastic step to save a life.
####Guest Stars

Roy Dotrice as Frederick Lantze. John Vickery as Mr. Welles. Rick Hamilton as Mitch. Robin Sachs as Na’Kal.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/044.html
####Backplot

The Ministry of Peace has been recruiting other high-level B5 staff members for its Nightwatch program.

Vorlons appear as angelic, winged beings of light, whose appearance is different to each observer. They can fly. (But see jms speaks)
####Unanswered Questions

Is Keffer mercifully dead, or might he reappear as “worse than dead” — a tool of the Shadows a la Morden?

What will be the ramifications of Zack’s turning the shopkeeper in to the Nightwatch?

How far will the Centauri expansion push?

Why did Londo see nothing when he looked at Kosh? (see Analysis)

Who was behind the bombing of Sheridan’s tram? Who were the young Centauri taking orders from, if anyone?

What ramifications will there be to Kosh’s appearance, since it was such a closely kept secret before?

What will happen to the Narn cruiser?

What other forces do the Narn have that were not caught by the Centauri?

Where did the cruiser go?

Have the Centauri made any arrangements with the Minbari, or are they relying on their non-interference in the affairs of other races?

Will Sheridan’s planned apology be enough to satisfy his superiors at Earthdome, or is he in danger of losing his position?

What effect will the open transmission by ISN of Keffer’s recorder log have on the Shadows’ plans? Will it force them to show their hand?
####Analysis

Night has indeed fallen. As the Centauri government continues to expand by attacking other races like the Drazi and the Pak’ma’ra, the Earth government has entered into an appeasement pact with them. Meanwhile, the inward-turning Earth government is using their “Nightwatch” as a means to silence dissent. However, Keffer’s last flight has made the presence of the Shadows in hyperspace known to all of Earth, relayed to them via ISN.

It’s interesting that Kosh risks revealing himself to save one life – the same criterion for saintliness/being the Chosen that the Inquisitor established (cf. [[Comes the Inquisitor]].)

Vir and Lennier are both feeling the pressures of knowing a great deal about what is going on but not being involved in the planning and decision making stages. That they have found each other to talk to is somewhat ironic, since each is working for masters who have taken opposing sides – Light and Dark – in the coming battle.

“We will, at last, know peace in our time.” This phrase, given by Lantze when he announces the Earth-Centauri non-aggression pact, is very similar to a phrase used by Neville Chamberlain after signing an appeasement agreement with Hitler in 1938 just prior to the invasion of Czechoslovakia, an agreement that failed to stop Hitler’s expansionist policy. The choice of words is probably intended to highlight the futility of such a pact with an aggressive party and a foreshadow of future events. There are other parallels with Nazi actions (divided between the actions of both signatories,) but the motivations of the Earth government are not race related nor moving towards the domination/submission of other groups.

NightWatch openly tries to recruit highly placed individuals, not appearing too concerned if they refuse. This suggests that they feel confident about circumnavigating these people with a strong sense of loyalty at a later date, replacing them with a more easily manipulated individual.

Had Sheridan refused to apologize publicly and been replaced, it would have been with Ivanova had she accepted Welles offer to work with the NightWatch. Otherwise they would have brought in an easily manipulated person to command Babylon 5, as Welles indicated.

This episode shows the new defense grid (cf. [[GROPOS]]) in action for the first time. As promised it is an even match for a heavy battle cruiser. The battle doctrine for the B5 universe is one of fighters engage fighters, heavy ships engage heavy ships. During this combat sequence we see what happens when a heavy ship ignores the fighters and fails (for whatever reason) to deploy its own fighters. While not capable of inducing complete destruction of a heavy vessel in the short term, the fighters can strip a heavy vessel of its offensive/defensive armament since such weaponry is small compared to the ship and necessarily exposed in order to be effective.

Lantze is a dreamer and idealist, taking any steps to ensure peace for Earth. He is someone who feels that the ends justify the means so long as it does not involve Earth. This is a direct expression of the anti-alien feelings present at the moment on Earth. That Lantze is not directly involved in the NightWatch suggests that, while he understands the aims of the NightWatch, his concience is not capable of handling the individual betrayals involved. Perhaps the ideal politician.

Welles, on the other hand, is very much caught up in the management of the NightWatch. He has no conscience pangs about the betrayal of individals. While he is a co-director of The Ministry of Peace, he probably has more real power than Lantze because of what he is managing. He is also gifted with the art of manipulating people as shown with both Zack and Sheridan (although the latter is more aware of the manipulation and capable of defending against it.)

The Narn cruiser will probably use other races threatened by the Centauri for assistance, perhaps acting as a mercenary. Or it may find somewhere quiet to lie low until it can be called into the service of homeworld. The Minbari cruiser Trigati managed to avoid capture for over ten years (cf. [[Points of Departure]].) The Shadows did not destroy the recorder marker dropped by Keffer. Either they failed to detect it (they aren’t omnipotent,) or they chose to ignore it (they are confident it would make no difference, or were unaware of the contents.)

Keffer’s recording log has been transmitted by ISN. This is exactly what Delenn and Sheridan wanted to avoid. Will it force the Shadows’ hand now that they have been seen? Or will it push the forces of Light into even greater efforts?

The commentary by ISN at the end of the episode suggests that the events on Earth are not being manipulated by the Shadows. Of course this could just be a politically expedient newscast.

Kosh’s rescue of Sheridan is like a blessing from the heavens. This will no doubt be taken as a sign of Sheridan’s worthiness to lead the forces of Light, as it has already been taken to indicate that Babylon 5 is blessed.

When Kosh left his encounter suit only Delenn was present. She has already seen Kosh. The other ambassadors only saw a being of light rise up and rescue Sheridan. Kosh also landed in an empty part of the Zen garden before returning to his encounter suit. The conversation in the Zocalo between the Narn and the Drazi suggests they are not aware it is Kosh. What would the reaction be if these races were to find out that the Vorlons had been interfering (apparently benevolently) in the development of their race? Would religions collapse under the revelation that their supernatural beings were simply ancient aliens?

Does each Vorlon appear as a particular entity to each type of observer, an entity that remains the same over time? If so, could Kosh be the original G’Lan, and thus be at least a thousand years old?

Londo failed to see Kosh when he revealed himself. Does this extend to all Centauri, or is it peculiar to Londo? If it is the former then it suggests that either the Vorlons have not openly visited the Centauri (why?) or that their worship of their deceased Emperors as gods has diminished the effect of exposure to Vorlons. If it is the latter then it must be because of Londo’s association with the Shadows. If this is the case then what would be the response of other Centauri on seeing a Vorlon? (see jms speaks)

Carrying the above a step further, are Vorlons invisible to Centauri and/or to anyone of a race they haven’t dealt with before? That suggests the possibility that the Shadows might be the same way, visible to some people and not to others.

Perhaps the Vorlons did visit the Centauri homeworld in the past, but manipulated the Xon ([[The Parliament of Dreams]]) instead of the Centauri.

Delenn seemed somewhat taken aback by Sheridan’s unflattering appraisal of the Vorlons’ motives; she seems willing to regard them as, if not completely good, at least altruistic, and is clearly awed by them. It’s plausible she has perceived Kosh as a Minbari religious figure from the start, which has colored her perceptions of him in exactly the way Sheridan describes.

Might Sheridan’s less starry-eyed view of the Vorlons be due in part to the training he’s been getting from Kosh, the point of which (for a while, anyway) was to help Sheridan and Kosh understand each other? Put another way, has Sheridan learned to fight the legends he believes Kosh’s appearance is intended to evoke?

Why do the Vorlons appear as the particular religious figures they do? Each of the figures we saw was an idealized version of the race in question. Perhaps this is to make themselves seem less alien, more familiar and therefore less threatening. The fact that they feel the need to do this suggests that their true appearance may be very alien indeed.

When Sheridan mentioned to Delenn that everyone saw something different in Kosh, Delenn replied that each person saw something “according to his or her type.” That choice of words can be interpreted in a disturbing way, to suggest that the Vorlons have organized other sentients into categories.

Might the Shadows’ appearance also be subjective? What do they look like to Morden, for instance? It may be that the Shadows feel no need to deceive others about their appearance, as it might not advance their goals (whatever those goals might be.) Clearly the Shadows prefer not to be seen, to work through others, but that might be the result of small numbers or caution as much as anything else.

Kosh’s true form is probably smaller than what everyone saw; for one thing, his encounter suit is shorter than he appeared to be. When he was behind the screen in [[Midnight on the Firing Line]] he appeared to be much smaller as well. But he probably does have a physical form of some kind, since he was able to touch Sheridan (if it were just telekinesis, presumably he wouldn’t have needed to leave his suit.)

Zack is having second thoughts about the NightWatch. Up until now he has been happily accepting their money in return for just wearing the armband and giving in few reports. He misunderstood their intentions and now realizes that should he try to leave he will be branded in the same way as the shopkeeper in the Zocalo. The fear of being taken out of society and branded as a traitor is greater than the urge to stand up for what he believes to be right. Zack’s dissatisfaction with the NightWatch might be useful at a later date.

The signal for the Centauri weapons lock on to Babylon 5 sounded like that of a submarine sonar. It represents an active weapons lock (ship sending out signals to locate its target) rather than a passive lock (ship detecting emmissions from its target.) It brings a tension to the situation inherited from the submarine warfare genre of films.

How compatible is an Earth Alliance career and raising children? Ivanova’s conversation with Lantze suggests that women do bear children while actively continuing with their careers. Another hint from JMS that the military at least are an equal oppourtunities employer.

The celebration of Winter Solstice described by Lantze is a pagan festival. The celebration of Christ’s birth, though important in Christian teaching, was not begun until the 4th century. The time of year was chosen to counter the celebration of the Winter Solstice. Presumably the reference to the public celebration of the solstice indicate a more open tolerance of religion on Earth in the 22nd century, and that there are other religious groups that celebrate the same period for different reasons.

It’s Keffer’s obsession with the shadow ship he saw in hyperspace in [[A Distant Star]] that leads to his demise.

Kosh has now offered his hand to Babylon 5’s commander twice, both times with potentially disastrous results.

The exchange between Lennier and Vir might have been more than mere comic relief. Perhaps they were actually passing information back and forth using a code of some kind — Vir now appears strongly motivated to do something like that.

Ivanova’s lighting of candles at the end of the episode had a deeper meaning than may initially be obvious. In Orthodox Jewish tradition, Chanukah (the Festival of Lights) celebrates both the victory over the conquerors of Jerusalem and the victory of those who wanted to uphold traditional values over those who wanted to assimilate with the enemy, an internal struggle which is also arguably the main theme of the episode. (See jms speaks, here and in [[The Long, Twilight Struggle]])
####Notes

The character “Corwin” is no doubt named after Norman Corwin, JMS’ friend and mentor.

Ivanova’s comment about Sheridan being weightless depends on one’s point of view. In a strict, pedantic sense, everyone on Babylon 5 is close to weightless, since weight is defined as the force with which a mass is gravitationally attracted to another mass, and B5 achieves the illusion of weight by rotation, not by gravity. (Leaving aside, of course, the gravity of the planet below the station.)

Sheridan’s movement away from the station’s axis is due to three factors. First, the tram wasn’t exactly at the axis, so it was revolving at some speed. Just as a rock flies in a straight line if you swing it on a piece of string then let go, Sheridan would have moved toward the ground even if he’d just stepped gingerly out the door.

Of course, he didn’t; he leapt. Depending on whether the door was facing into or against the station’s spin, this might have either accelerated his descent or slowed it. The fact that he appeared to not leap very hard suggests that the door was facing spinward and he wanted to stay in the air as long as possible.

The final factor is the atmosphere, which rotates in the Garden along with the ground and everything else. As Sheridan fell, he would be pushed along by air revolving at speeds closer and closer to the speed of the ground; this would tend to accelerate his fall, since it would cause him to revolve more quickly. So the longer he fell, the faster he would be going. That effect would probably be fairly weak for most of the fall, so it might not have accelerated him to high enough speed to cause serious harm when he hit the ground.

Unfortunately, his inertia would keep him from achieving ground speed even with the push of the wind, so as Ivanova said, he would have hit the ground as if he’d fallen out of a car on the freeway, even if his rate of descent alone wouldn’t have been enough to hurt him seriously.

In any case, Sheridan is probably quite glad Kosh chose that moment to make an appearance.

Comes the Inquisitor

####Overview

G’Kar tries to rally the Narn on Babylon 5. Kosh tests Delenn’s allegiance by summoning an ancient inquisitor.
####Guest Stars

Wayne Alexanderas Sebastian. Jack Kehler as Mr. Chase.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/043.html
####Backplot

The Vorlons have visited Earth in the past, as recently as the nineteenth century, and have even taken humans to their homeworld.

Garibaldi maintains friendships with people he knows are dealing in illegal smuggling operations.
####Unanswered Questions

How did the Rangers get the message from Narn in 24 hours? (See Analysis)

Exactly how long have the Vorlons been visiting Earth, and for what purpose?

How did they discover Sebastian, and what made them choose him as their inquisitor?
####Analysis

All of the key players on the side of light have now had their commitment and loyalty to their cause tested. Sheridan, Garibaldi, Ivanova, and Franklin in their battle against the current Earth Alliance administration (cf. [[Divided Loyalties]].) And now Delenn and Sheridan as the “spirit” and “warrior,” respectively, of the Army of Light. The pieces seem to be falling into place on the side of light.

G’Kar preaching about what the Centauri will do next is somewhat chilling. Most people just don’t want to believe it. Yet in [[The Long, Twilight Struggle]] we heard that the Centauri have already annexed several non-Narn worlds. JMS has said that G’Kar is his Cassandra character, gifted with the power of prophesy yet heeded by none. The fact that it was a human who argued against G’Kar may be an indication of things to come.

Based on Sebastian’s comments, Sheridan determines that he is most likely Jack the Ripper. Sebastian’s final comment also appears to confirm this. The murderer killed five prostitutes between August 7th and November 10th of 1888 in the East End of London (Sheridan stated the West End, but got the date correct), and was never caught. He stalked the streets at night, slitting his victims’ throats and then mutilating their bodies.

The nickname “Jack the Ripper” reportedly came from several letters sent to the police, but their authenticity has been questioned.

The Vorlons have been to Earth on many occasions, and all over the galaxy in general. This is quite likely part of the reason why Kosh will be recognised by everyone if he(?) steps out of the encounter suit.

This marks the second time a major, secretive power has sent a human representative to Babylon 5 to ask a question: the Shadows with Morden and “What do you want?” and the Vorlons with Sebastian and “Who are you?” Why do the Vorlons, in particular, feel the need to act through a third party? Delenn obviously knows about Kosh already, so why couldn’t Kosh have conducted the interrogation? Perhaps he simply chooses to remain aloof and let others do his dirty work, or perhaps for some reason he felt he wouldn’t have been as effective as Sebastian was.

Sheridan and Garibaldi have given the Rangers their first trial in a combat zone, on behalf of G’Kar. They succeeded in the allotted 24 hours but we are given no information on how. Perhaps they are able to penetrate the Centauri communications network. Or perhaps it involved two “hit and run” jumps into the Narn homeworld system. The first to deliver the message to search for this family (there must already be Rangers on Narn,) and the second to pick up the required transmission. This runs the risk of being detected and caught by Centauri forces patrolling the system (a jump point presumably has a very bright characteristic energy signature on scanners). While the search might have been initiated via telepathic contact (cf. [[The Coming of Shadows]], specifically the Centuari Emperor’s telepaths, who can communicate over interstellar distances) this is unlikely, and telepathy almost certainly cannot transmit the contents of a data crystal. Another possible explanation is that there are Centauri Rangers.

Vir’s encounter with G’Kar indicates the depth of the hatred that the Narn feel for their oppressors. An apology is no longer possible in G’Kar’s eyes, only the release of his people from their occupation and the destruction of the Centauri along the way. Something inside Vir might well give soon; he has already stood up to Morden (“In The Shadow of Z’ha’dum”) and tried to tell Londo of the consequences of his actions – what next?

Vir’s dismissal of the Centuari businessman, “I have already told you the Ambassador can do nothing for you.” Is that a polite way of telling the businessman to go away, or has Londo’s sphere of influence been reduced by his refusal to involve the Shadows again?

There’s an interesting parallel between the main storyline and Garibaldi’s talk with G’Kar. Both Garibaldi and Sebastian go into their respective conversations expecting a certain outcome, but allowing room for the other person to act otherwise. The difference is that Garibaldi is an optimist — he expected G’Kar to do the right thing — while Sebastian expected to be disappointed as he so often had been in the past.

This isn’t the first reference to Jack the Ripper on the show. In [[Mind War]], Ivanova accuses Psi Corps of having “all the moral fiber of Jack the Ripper.” Whether that’s just a coincidence remains to be seen.

Given the fact that Delenn was a member of the Grey Council, the choice of Grey section (by Sheridan) as the place for the inquisition was rather interesting. In addition, some elements of the lighting inside Grey 19 (the circles of light on the floor, arranged in a circular pattern, with Delenn in a center circle) were reminiscent of the Grey Council, especially the last time she was in their presence.

On a more speculative numerological note, the number nineteen (the inquisition occurred in Grey 19) is composed of the digits “1” and “9.” Taking the analysis to an extreme, perhaps the “9” represents the Grey Council and the “1” represents the chosen one.
####Notes

One of the Narn in the meeting with G’Kar is played by Dennis Michael, a CNN reporter who was doing a story on B5’s makeup group, Optic Nerve, and was made up as a Narn as part of his news story.

Was someone named Sebastian an actual suspect in the murders?

In the original UK broadcast, the scene between G’Kar and Vir was edited to not show G’Kar cutting his hand. The edit is obvious once you know it’s there.

One of Sebastian’s closing remarks resembled a Biblical quote, John 15:13: “There is no greater love than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”

The Long, Twilight Struggle

####Overview

The Narn-Centauri War reaches a turning point. Sheridan is contacted by a powerful ally, who offers assistance.
####Guest Stars

John Schuck. W. Morgan Sheppard as Warleader G’Sten. William Forward as Refa.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/042.html
####Backplot

The new Centauri emperor, Cartargia, is acting mostly as a figurehead, a front for Refa and his compatriots.

A treaty among all the aligned worlds outlawed the use of mass drivers as a weapon of war, similar to the Earth treaties outlawing the use of chemical and biological weapons.

Draal says he has found other beings on Epsilon 3, ones who take care of the great Machine Draal is at the heart of. One of them is a fellow named Zathras (cf. [[Babylon Squared]].)

Delenn has been in charge of all the Rangers on Babylon 5. She now shares that command with Sheridan.

Sheridan does not know that Sinclair is behind the Rangers.

The Centauri seem to have gravity control technology. Londo watches as the Centauri bombard the Narn homeworld, standing — seemingly in gravity — aboard a motionless ship. (Either that, or they have magnetic shoes.)
####Unanswered Questions

What’s Zathras doing on Epsilon 3, and how did he get there? If the planet has been undisturbed for at least the past 500 years ([[A Voice in the Wilderness part 2]]) is he that old?

Where was Zathras such that Draal, with sight that extends across light-years, couldn’t find him? Perhaps he wasn’t in another place, but another time (see [[Babylon Squared]].)

Will the great machine be involved in pulling Babylon 4 through time?

Now that Londo has stated he no longer wishes to associate with the Shadows, his usefulness to Lord Refa is at an end. How will Refa handle this?

What exactly was G’Kar told to do in the Kha’Ri’s last message? Ask for sanctuary, obviously, but anything else?

What other technology do the Shadows have that we haven’t seen yet?

Have the Narn unwittingly discovered a weakness of the Shadows? (see Analysis)

Now that G’Kar has been stripped of his homeworld and position on Babylon 5, what can he contribute to the battle against the Shadows?
####Analysis

Londo is now convinced that his associates are far too powerful for their motives to be solely for his benefit. He realises that he has become a pawn in their larger game, and that his personal quest for more power has lead to the death of esteemed friends and many innocents. While convinced of this, and that he has allowed himself to be maneuvered at every turn by the will of others, he still carries through with his role as a paper tiger politician/ambassador.

The Shadows show some new weaponry. It appears that each ship can “give birth” to a cluster of forty or so of the smaller fighters G’Kar encountered at Z’ha’dum in “Revelations.” We are not shown that these fighters are re-assimilated at the end of the confrontation, and it is also unknown how many times each Shadow can do this.

The second weapon has the ability to disrupt a jump point so that it is fatal for any ship to attempt to use it. Once an attack against the Shadows begins it appears you can leave only when they so allow it.

The Shadow “wounded” during the battle is thrown off course by the loss of one of its spines. After the battle is finished, a second Shadow joins with it as if to assist it. The broken spine is clearly visible on the ship that does not move during the docking procedure. It suggests that the damaged Shadow was unable to function as effectively, perhaps because it was in pain.

With Draal offering the resources of the highly advanced technology at his command, it appears that Babylon 5 is one of the few places that may withstand a Shadow assault. That it can become the base of operations for the Army of Light is now clear.

Perhaps more importantly, Babylon 5 can probably also withstand a frontal assault by Earthforce, though they might prefer to destroy it from within.

The Centauri use of mass drivers flauts all previously signed conventions, and it appears (cf. [[And Now for a Word]], where the Centauri are discovered using Babylon 5 to transport mass drivers and energy weapons) that they have been planning this kind of assault on the Narn homeworld for some time.

A mass driver uses a heavy object (such as a small asteroid) launched from orbit toward a planet’s surface at low speed. As it falls through the planet’s gravity well it gains considerable momentum. On impact the immediate area becomes a crater, and huge quantities of dust are thrown up into the atmosphere, blocking out sunlight and causing something like a nuclear winter. E. E. “Doc” Smith’s Lensman series, written from 1937 to 1948, is the first literary SF work to use mass drivers as weapons for planetary bombardment as shown in this episode. (If you know of an earlier work, send me mail!)

All of the major governments (with the exception of the Vorlons) are now under serious internal stress. They are either introspective (Earth,) skeptical of present danger (Minbari,) overextended (Centauri,) or occupied (Narn). It appears that the Shadows have achieved, either directly or indirectly, effective destabilization of every major power that might stand up to their forces.

Ambassador Kosh openly lets the Rangers know of his involvement.

It appears that Garibaldi’s friendship with Londo has strained to the breaking point.

Sheridan now has access to the Rangers. This appears to be fulfilling the dream induced by Kosh (cf. [[All Alone in the Night]]) where he is described as being “The Hand.” Presumably this reference is to his role as someone who will help lead the forces of light as the right hand man of “The One.”

A fully prepared numerically superior Narn task force is easily destroyed by the Shadows. Unless more effective combat techniques are discovered, the battle with darkness will have to involve more subtle tactics.

Londo hasn’t forgiven Refa for the death of his friend Urza Jaddo ([[Knives]].)

Londo’s cough in the council chamber scene sounds suspiciously like the one in his dream in “The Coming of Shadows.” Could he be coming down with something? (See jms speaks)
####Notes

JMS premiered this episode at the Chicago Comicon on July 1, 1995.

W. Morgan Sheppard also appeared in the first season episode [[Soul Hunter]] as the title character.

The episode’s initial airing, in the UK, was 50 years, almost to the day, after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima during World War II.

Considering the obvious parallels between the Centauri use of mass drivers and the American use of the atomic bomb, that’s a serindipitous, if unintentional, bit of timing.

“Now the trumpet summons us again: not as a call to bear arms, though arms we need; not as a call to battle, though in battle we are; but as a call to bear the burdens of a long, twilight struggle–year in and year out, rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation–a struggle against the common enemies of man–tyranny, poverty, disease, and war itself.” –John Fitzgerald Kennedy. An audio version of his speech is available.

In the first Londo-Refa scene, just before Refa sits, what looks like a wooden duck with its wings outstretched is visible on a shelf beside the throne. Perhaps it’s a Centauri cat (cf. [[Chrysalis]].)

Candles are used subtly to represent hope, here and in previous episodes (see jms speaks.) At the beginning of G’Kar’s prayer scene, the shelf behind him is filled with burning candles — but by the end, as his people’s last hope is destroyed by the Shadows, they’ve all gone out.

Likewise, when Londo and Refa are talking, they’re both cloaked in shadow — until Londo expresses misgivings about his associates and emerges into the light.

The battle sequence was directed by Mojo of Foundation Imaging; the mass-driver sequence was directed by John Teska. The episode has more effects footage than any previous one, nearly five minutes’ worth. The effects took almost a month to produce.

Divided Loyalties

####Overview

Lyta Alexander, the station’s first telepath, returns with a warning that one of Babylon 5’s officers is an operative for a top-secret government organization. A long-held secret of another Babylon 5 officer is revealed.
####Guest Stars

Patricia Tallman as Lyta Alexander.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/041.html
####Backplot

Lyta Alexander is part of a secret movement against Psi Corps. She’s evidently been a dissident since she probed Kosh ([[The Gathering]].) When Lyta probed Kosh, she felt something she then hid from the years of subsequent interrogations from Psi-Corps. She has been feeling drawn to Vorlon space and has desperately tried to get there. She knows a lot more than she has ever told anyone, including what Kosh is under his suit.

Talia Winters was programmed with a ‘sleeper’ personality by the Psi Corps. She is probably “Control” (cf. [[A Spider in the Web]].)

Ivanova is a latent telepath. She is able to block some scans, knows instantly if someone scans her, can pick up on some feelings, but has never been able to scan anyone except her mother. She claims, though, that her psi rating is “not even a P1.”

“Universe Today” has a section called ‘Eye on Minbari’ which Delenn uses to find out things about her homeworld she might not neccessarily have been told yet, in addition to learning human perceptions of Minbari.

Lyta spent some time with Psi Cops as part of her training, but left because she didn’t like it and became a commercial telepath instead.
####Unanswered Questions

Exactly how much does Talia’s new persona know? And what will this do to B5 in the future?

Is there really no chance of the old Talia recovering? If not, what good is the recording Kosh made?

How safe is Lyta’s escape? Will Psi-corps get her in the end? The fact that Kosh let her off the station suggests he’s prepared to risk Psi-Corps getting their grubby hands on whatever it is she knows from the scan.

What did Lyta see when she asked Kosh to reveal himself? Something with a halo of light, but what?

Dr. Kyle also saw Kosh. Has Psi-Corps learned anything from him that they didn’t learn from Lyta?

How involved are Sinclair’s rangers with the Mars resistance?

Was it Talia who attempted to kill Lyta?

How did (presumably) Talia get the lights in the security section to go out, being replaced with red backups? And how did she know that she had a chance to hit Lyta? She was being taken from one cell to another on orders passed from Garibaldi to Zack to two ordinary security people. Is Zack implicated in some way, perhaps by way of his involvement in Nightwatch? It seems conincidental that in the few minutes available an attempt was made on Lyta’s life.

What about Ironheart (cf. [[Mind War]]?) If he saw “everything,” would he not have known about the implanted personality, however deep it was?

What will Psi Corps do with Talia now that the Artificial Personality has taken control?

Was the ‘Control’ mentioned by Lyta the same one installed by Bureau 13?

Was Garibaldi really faking the transition to an artificial personality? And does he know more that he’s letting on? (see Analysis)

How will Sheridan and Delenn handle the growing feelings in their friendship?

Why is Babylon 5 seen to be so important to several unknown individuals/groups, and who are those people?
####Analysis

Whatever Ironheart did to Talia seems to have enhanced her powers enormously, and she seems to be growing more powerful. Psi Corps, at a minimum, now have the psychic assassin they were trying to create, and potentially much more. Assuming, of course, that Ironheart’s gift wasn’t erased when Talia’s original personality was destroyed.

Another possibility is that Talia wasn’t destroyed, that Ironheart’s gift allowed her to prevent Control from taking over, but she’s playing along as a means of continuing her own investigation into what’s going on with Psi-Corps (cf. [[A Spider in the Web]].)

Talia’s implanted personality was foreshadowed in [[The Quality of Mercy]]. After she was finished scanning Mueller, she was joined by Garibaldi in the Garden. As they talked about her experience, she commented to him, “Things that live inside us, Mr. Garibaldi. Terrible things. Terrible.”

Delenn’s choice of articles in Universe Today is a revealing one. This highlights the lack of information she is receiving now that she is no longer a member of the Grey Council. However, she is learning to gather information from other sources and to “read between the lines” more carefully. It appears that she is regaining confidence in her abilities.

During the attempted murder of Lyta while she is being transfered between holding cells, we see the hand holding the assailants PPG. It is wearing a black glove, very similar to those worn by Talia. However, the lead time between Garibaldi ordering Lyta to be moved, and the attempted assassination appears to be very short. So how did Talia know when to leave Ivanova’s quarters in order to intercept Lyta? And does Talia know how to kill the main lights in a section? Three possibilities present themselves:

  1. Coincidence. Talia, under the control of the artificial personality (AP), goes to hunt down and kill Lyta while Ivanova is out getting some air. The fact that Lyta was being transferred made the attempt much easier. Killing the main lights is knowledge that Talia has but we aren’t shown. However, in [[A Spider in the Web]], we are shown that Bureau 13 has cracked the station computer’s security, which presumably would allow Talia to discover both Lyta’s location and the time of the transfer.
  2. There is an additional agent provocateur on Babylon 5. Someone who does have the knowledge of Lyta’s movements, and would know how to kill the main lights in a section. This strongly suggests Garibaldi, but might be Zack or another member of the security staff. A trigger message is sent to Talia, who then attempts to kill Lyta.
  3. As above, there is an additional mole on Babylon 5, but it is this individual who knows about Lyta’s movements, knows how to short circuit the main lights, and attempts to kill Lyta. In this case, Talia is innocently caught up in the actions of another individual attempting to protect themselves. There is additional evidence that might be seen to support this (see below).

How does Talia know that Lyta Alexander is aboard Babylon 5? She may have guessed indirectly from a conversation with Ivanova and done some digging of her own, but Ivanova only asks if Talia knew Lyta – not telling her that she was aboard. Alternatively, she learnt of this through her PsiCorps contacts. Or Talia arranged (at the suggestion of the submerged AP) for her quarters to be out of use so that she could be closer to Ivanova. Once close enough, she could scan Ivanova and learn about the cell group, also learning about Lyta at the same time. When Talia wakes up (finding Ivanova gone) she has no gloves on. Physical contact may be used to intensify mental contact, and Talia might have done this while Ivanova was sleeping. Talia’s new personality indicates that there was an ulterior motive for getting close to Ivanova.

Garibaldi’s flashbacks refer to [[Deathwalker]], where Kosh uses a ViCaR (or VCR, an individual with an enhanced photographic memory) to conduct a strange negotiation, with Talia monitoring. A data crystal was also passed to Kosh from the ViCaR, and Talia doesn’t know what it contained. Kosh’s comments seem to indicate his awareness of Talia’s AP and what will happen when it is activated. So, has Kosh recorded a copy of Talia’s personality onto a data crystal? We have already seen that the Earth Alliance has the technology to wipe a personality and build a new one ([[The Quality of Mercy]].) Will this be a way for Sheridan to wipe out the AP and any knowledge that PsiCorps might pick up from Talia? It may not be so easy (see JMS Speaks).

Garibaldi believed Lyta and her story. Considering how strongly this goes against his previous behaviour, does he have an ulterior motive? This may tie in with some of the speculation about Lyta’s attempted murder. See also the following two points.

When Taro Isogi is killed by the modified Free Mars leader ([[A Spider in the Web]],) Control identifies Talia Winters (who witnessed the murder) as someone who should also be eliminated. Given that Lyta Alexander referred to the (then unknown) sleeper agent as ‘Control’, can we draw the conclusion that Talia was part of a Bureau 13 operation? Or are there different sections of PsiCorps treading on each other’s toes? It seems unlikely that Talia ordered her own execution, especially if Lyta is right about Control being programmed for self-preservation.

Garibaldi’s “faked” personality transition was taken by all the others as being a joke in bad taste. But consider an alternative explanation: Lyta stated that the AP would say or do anything to protect itself, and Garibaldi was behaving out of character. He also immediately turned everyone’s attention to Ivanova. Talia was caught unprepared for the sending of the password, but Garibaldi knew that the password would be sent. Garibaldi knew, or could easily have found out, when Lyta was slated to be moved, so could have pulled the trigger. And he was ready to bring Talia into the conspiracy, perhaps in order to expose it indirectly.

However, it is unlikely that two different sleepers would respond to the same password, and the events in the “flashforward” scene in [[Babylon Squared]] would suggest that Garibaldi’s loyalty is not in question.

Ivanova was also awake at the time, and unaccounted-for, making her a suspect.

How high up the chain of Psi-Corps command does this implanting go? There is every indication the it’s above Bester. Twice in the series Bester has suspected and even accused Talia of conspiring against the Corps. Why would he suspect or accuse her of this if he knew he had an ally inside her brain?

The Delenn/Sheridan relationship is growing stronger. Neither Delenn or Sheridan are making a strong attempt to hide their growing trust and respect for each other. After the events in [[Confessions and Lamentations]], Delenn has drawn emotional support from Sheridan. Her growing affection for him is something that she clearly shows in her face and actions while they are in the garden talking. Sheridan also appears to be happy that he has someone who he can turn to who will help him when all around is madness, and is wondering just where all this is leading.

The relationship between Talia and Ivanova is one that will attract much debate.

At the start of the episode, it seems clear that they are just friends. Talia would not hesitate to impose on Ivanova’s sleeping quarters if there were anything stronger.

During the episode, as Ivanova becomes more and more worried about revealing her (limited) telepathic ability, she relies on Talia during the expression of her feelings and doubts. There is an apparent emotional tension between them that might be interpreted as a “should I make the first move,” or as Talia’s giving support but hesitating to probe further, and Ivanova’s “should I trust her, even though she’s a telepath?”

When Talia wakes up in Ivanova’s bed, finding her missing, it is tempting to jump to the “obvious” conclusion. However we know that Ivanova’s quarters only has one cot (indicated in [[The Long Dark]] by Dr. Franklin.) Of course, Ivanova probably has a sofa/couch that might have been used.

When Ivanova has her final conversation with the dominated Talia, she indicates that it gave Talia the words that would get her close to all Ivanova knew. Just how much Talia knows about Ivanova is unclear, and we have no indication of just how close in addition to the emotional bond.

Had Ivanova and Talia had a physical relationship then Ivanova might have revealed her latent telepathy (“Do you know what its like when telepaths make love?” in [[Mind War]].) Since the alternate Talia didn’t goad Ivanova about this, then either Ivanova maintained a block, or they didn’t have a physical relationship.

Ivanova’s relationship with her mother is opened up further by her revelation of being a latent telepath, although this is not explored directly. Since Ivanova could initiate contact with her mother, she could obtain a clear mental as well as physical picture of her mothers deterioration under the PsiCorps telepathic suppression drugs. The drugs would of course prevent any attempt at contact initiated by her mother, and also of any blocking.

We now have a clearer understanding of how Ivanova developed her strong feelings against PsiCorps, and what she must have overcome in order to establish her friendship with Talia. This change in Talia (and the AP claiming to have directed the growth of their friendship) may have far reaching effects in her ability to trust again.

Sheridan has now seen a part of his Kosh-induced dream ([[All Alone in the Night]]) come true. In the dream he saw Ivanova with a black raven on her shoulder, and heard her say: “Do you know who I am?” At what point will other parts of the dream come true? (If they haven’t already.)

Why did Sheridan let Talia go so easily? He could have held her on charges of shooting two security guards, if nothing else. Perhaps he felt that doing so would draw too much attention to his covert activities.

Since a Ranger was involved in smuggling the data crystal to Lyta, Garibaldi may have been warned of her arrival.

Delenn appeared to be turning down closer relations with the Lumati (cf. [[Acts of Sacrifice]]) when Lyta called. Why? (Maybe their method of closing treaties is a bit closer than she’d prefer the relations to get.)

JMS says (see jms speaks) that originally, Takashima ([[The Gathering]]) was going to be the plant, and that that part of the storyline was transferred over to Talia with the cast changes between pilot and series. The other events in [[The Gathering]], combined with some revelations from the comic series (cf. comic 8, “Silent Enemies”) suggest some disturbing connections.

Psi Corps was working with Minbari dissidents to kill a Vorlon. The comic has also established a connection between Psi Corps and the Shadows, although this has not yet been seen on screen. If the comic is to be believed, there is a link through Psi Corps between the Shadows and elements of the Minbari warrior caste. The effects of that link on the coming war may be quite unfortunate for one side or the other.
####Notes

Zack is still wearing his “Nightwatch” armband (“In the Shadow of Z’ha’dum”) and Garibaldi is a little bemused by it. Clearly he doesn’t quite approve of the idea.

The Pak’ma’ra have separate toilet facilities. Oddly, the warning sign next to the door is written, among other languages, in Vorlon! Or at least, in a script identical to that displayed by Kosh’s ship in [[Hunter, Prey]].

At least one of the fugitives in the sewers on Mars was clearly a ranger. The other may not necessarily have been. Lyta arrived in a shot-up ship and knows that two men died for the information. Obviously she has links with the rangers.

Delenn lies yet again, and is caught immediately.

When Delenn is dictating her response to the Lumati, the computer screen shows the text appearing (whether this is Lumati writing or Minbari isn’t clear.) One odd thing about it is that it alternately flows in both directions, up and down, across the width of the screen from left to right.

Production gaffe: In the first live-action shot after the title sequence, as Sheridan enters the restroom, one of the production crew’s hands (likely the director’s) can be seen briefly at the bottom of the screen.

Confessions and Lamentations

####Overview

The outbreak of a fatal disease among the Markab population prompts a panic on the station; Dr. Franklin races against time to find a cure.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/040.html
####Backplot

The Minbari expect Valen, the holy figure who founded the Grey Council a thousand years ago (perhaps during the last conflict with the Shadows) to return some day — or at least, they have a religious ceremony suggesting so.

A deadly virus appeared on an isolated island on the Markab homeworld several hundred years ago, wiping the entire population out. The inhabitants of the island were known for what was widely considered sinful behavior, and the virus came to be viewed as divine retribution by the Markab.

Dr. Franklin visited the Markab homeworld once while he was hitchhiking on starships in his youth.

Keffer has been taking trips into hyperspace in his spare time, looking for the mysterious ship (a Shadow ship) he saw in [[A Distant Star]].

When Delenn was a small child, she was separated from her parents in an unfamiliar Minbari city. Eventually she found refuge in an old, apparently unused, temple, where she waited for hours. Then, just before her parents found her, she saw a vision of a figure, bathed in light, who told her, “I will not allow my little ones to come to harm in this place.”
####Unanswered Questions

Was the virus created artificially? If so, who did it and why? (See Analysis)

How many Markab are still alive?

What’s going on between Delenn and Sheridan?

Will someone lay claim to the dead Markab worlds? Who?

Was Delenn’s story about the temple true, or just a story to comfort the lost Markab child? If true, who or what appeared before her? (See jms speaks)

Will the disease spread among the Pak’ma’ra as well, or will Franklin’s treatment stop it from wiping them out?
####Analysis

This episode’s plague theme meshes with the story and ritual practice of Passover. The Minbari dinnner ceremony Sheridan, Delenn, and Lennier participate in is a ritualized meal, like Passover: foods must be eaten in a particular order, and a table setting is left for a revered historical figure (Elijah, Valen) who is supposed to return some day. As the Markabs enter the de facto “quarantine” chamber, the Markab ambassador suggests that if they pray and are pure, the plague will “pass over” them — a parallel with the original passover story, where a certain sign on the house door made a plague attacking the Egyptians pass over the Jews. Franklin’s discussion of the Black Death also mentions how Jews were unjustly accused of spreading the infection.

Franklin appears to have forgotten about the alien healing device he acquired in [[The Quality of Mercy]] and used on Garibaldi in [[Revelations]]. which he could have used to help his friend and thus increase the chance of finding a real cure. Or perhaps he knows enough about it now to know that it wouldn’t have worked on plague victims for some reason. (Obviously it wouldn’t have been of much use to the Markab population in general, since it only works on one person at a time and only with a donor.)

Babylon 5’s crew may have inadvertently helped the disease spread when they gathered all the Markab for blood tests; presumably some of the subjects would have remained in their quarters if they hadn’t been dragged out and tested in a room full of possible carriers.

Sheridan presumably ordered Keffer to stop his expeditions because he suspects Keffer’s mystery ship is a Shadow vessel. Will he let Keffer in on that information, or will he continue to keep it to himself and simply let the order stand?

Franklin’s frequent use of stims to stay awake while a medical crisis is going on (cf. “In the Shadow of Z’ha’dum”) may spell big trouble for him if he keeps it up. Doctors on stims are more likely to make mistakes (cf. Dr. Rosen in [[The Quality of Mercy]]) and it appears the Earth medical community doesn’t look kindly on the practice of doctors drugging themselves to stay awake — Dr. Rosen lost her medical license as a result.

Whatever his good intentions, his obsession with solving everything on his own may lead him into a regrettable situation down the road. There isn’t yet enough evidence to show that he’s actually addicted to the stims, though. (See jms speaks)

It’s been argued that the Markab did die for their sins — specifically, the sin of pride, by believing that they could keep the disease to themselves and not involve any outsiders. Had Franklin learned of the disease when it first hit the station, he (or another non-Markab doctor) might well have been able to save a billion lives.

Delenn seems to be coming apart at the seams in many ways, probably as a result of being made a pariah among her people. If she’s telling the truth, or at least part of the truth, about undergoing her change to help draw humans and Minbari closer together (cf. [[Revelations]]) it must be frustrating in the extreme to be reviled by her own kind, and resented by many humans (cf. “And Now For a Word.”) Especially if she believes that she’s special somehow, a unique player in an immense drama (cf. “Babylon Squared.”) This, in combination with the influence of her new biology, may explain why she’s reaching out to Sheridan now; he at least seems to respect her and relate to her as an equal, and she probably trusts him a lot more now that she sees he can be trusted with one of her biggest secrets (cf. “In the Shadow of Z’ha’dum”.) Or, of course, she could be planning something. She’s been trying to get closer to Sheridan for quite some time (cf. [[A Race Through Dark Places]]) and this could simply be the next step.

On a similar note, being locked in a room and helplessly watching thousands of people die all around can’t be good for Delenn’s emotional stability. It remains to be seen if this will have an impact on her personality; for many people it would be a profound shock. But Sheridan’s statement that Delenn wouldn’t be able to come back out if she entered the contaminated area doesn’t make sense, given that the plague was known to be airborne; she’d be exposed to it either way, given that the station’s air is recycled (as stated in the episode.) Presumably he was just trying to keep her from going in.

The timing of the plague’s reappearance, with all the other events going on, is suspicious. Of course, it might be a simple coincidence, as Franklin suspects, just a dormant disease whose time has come. But another interpretation is that the outbreak on the Markab island centuries earlier was an early biological warfare test on an isolated population, and the events in this episode were the real attack. If that’s true, who is responsible, and do they have any connection with the approaching Great War?

Note that the Markab did have some contact with the Shadows last time they rose up, as evidenced by the Markab ambassador’s speech in [[The Long Dark]] — perhaps someone (not necessarily the Shadows; maybe the man at the bar was right) didn’t want the Markab around to participate this time.

Franklin’s cure protects possible victims against attack, rather than eliminating the disease. B5, with its recycled air supply, now permanently carries the disease, which is dangerous to species with yellow and green blood-cells (or cells that perform a similar function, namely the manufacture of certain neurotransmitters) and might well mutate to endanger others. This could affect the willingness of alien groups to use the station in the future. Even species not vulnerable to the disease might keep away just to be safe.

When Sheridan wakes up from his nap in Delenn’s quarters, he mumbles, “In the memory of the nine and the one.” Presumably the nine refers to the Grey Council, and the one refers either to Valen or to The One, as mentioned in [[Babylon Squared]]. There’s also an echo of the story told in the Minbari ceremony in [[The Parliament of Dreams]].
####Notes

This episode features a previously unseen alien (or at least, a humanoid who’s presumably alien) wearing a suit with an elaborate helmet. The helmet bears a striking resemblance to the mask of Morpheus, the King of Dreams, from Neil Gaiman’s “Sandman” comic book. As “Sandman” is one of JMS’s favorite comics, this may be an intentional homage.

“Markab” is Arabic for “boat.”

Knives

####Overview

An old acquaintance requests Londo’s help. Sheridan is plagued by visions nobody else can see.
####Guest Stars

Carmen Argenziano as Urza Jaddo. William Forward as Refa.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/039.html
####Backplot

In his youth, Londo was a swordfighter of no small repute, and House Mollari was one of the most well-respected in the Republic.

Earth Force has confiscated all the files on the Babylon 4 incident (cf. “Babylon Squared,”) but Garibaldi had the foresight to make a copy first.

Refa and his associates on Centauri Prime are consolidating their power by having their political opponents declared traitors. Some of those opponents are well aware of his involvement in the assassination of the Prime Minister (cf. [[The Coming of Shadows]].)
####Unanswered Questions

What was the creature? Was it involved somehow in Babylon 4’s movement through time, or did it just happen by Sector 14 after the fact?

Will Londo’s support of Urza have an effect on Refa’s plans?
####Analysis

The fact that there’s still a spacetime rift of some sort in Sector 14 suggests that it may be possible to travel freely back and forth between 2259 and whenever the creature came from. Unless, of course, the creature was involved in Babylon 4’s time travel; in that case, its presence may have caused the rift to reopen.

Londo believes he has a destiny to fulfill. What exactly does he think it is? Is it based in part on his dream? (cf. [[The Coming of Shadows]]) Or is it a more general notion of bringing the Centauri back to power with the help of Morden, without any specific role for himself?
####Notes

The names of the last Centauri Emperor and Prime Minister, Turhan and Malachi respectively, just happen to be the first names of the actors who played those roles in [[The Coming of Shadows]].

Garibaldi and Sheridan were getting a large number of foul balls on the baseball diamond. Since the station is spinning, the Coriolis effect would make playing baseball an interesting proposition, to say the least, especially near the center of rotation — a high enough ball would pass beyond the axis and land on some other section of the interior, perhaps even the “ceiling!”

Visual gaffe: When Londo was knocked down and he dropped his sword, the sword fell and skidded on Londo’s left. But when he reached for the sword to deliver the fatal blow, it appeared that he reached to his right.

Effects glitch: In the closing shot of the station, the background starfield and part of Epsilon 3 are briefly visible through the docking bay, as if part of the station has just turned transparent.

The Centauri method of dealing with traitors — execution followed by confiscation of property — is similar to what the Romans used to do, and it apparently has the same effect. Romans who knew they were about to be convicted of treason often committed suicide to prevent their families’ inheritances from being seized.

In the Shadow of Za’ha’dum

####Overview

Sheridan discovers a connection between Morden and the death of his wife. The station is inundated by Narn refugees. A new Earth Alliance agency tries to recruit station personnel.
####Guest Stars

Ed Wasser as Morden.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/038.html
####Backplot

####Delenn and Kosh tell Sheridan about the Shadows and the Vorlons:

**D**: There are beings in the universe billions of years older than either of our races. Once, long ago, they walked among the stars like giants. Vast, timeless… they taught the younger races, explored beyond the Rim, created great empires. But to all things, there is an end. Slowly, over a million years, the First Ones went away. Some passed beyond the stars, never to return. Some simply disappeared.

**S**: I’m sure this is all very interesting, but what does any of this have to do with Morden?

**D**: Not all of the First Ones have gone away. A few stayed behind. Hidden or asleep, waiting for the day when they may be needed. When the Shadows come again.

**S**: Shadows?

**D**: We have no other name for them. The Shadows were old when even the ancients were young. They battled one another over and over across a million years. The last Great War against the Shadows was ten thousand years ago. It was the last time the ancients walked openly among us. The Shadows were only defeated, not destroyed. A thousand years ago, the Shadows returned to their places of power, rebuilt them, and began to stretch forth their hand. Before they could strike, they were defeated by an alliance of worlds, including the Minbari and the few remaining First Ones who had not yet passed beyond the veil. When they had finished, the First Ones went away. All but one.

**S**: There’s still one of them left. Where?

**D**: (indicates Kosh, to Sheridan’s great surprise) That is why Kosh cannot leave his encounter suit. He would be recognized.

**S**: Recognized? By who?

**K**: Everyone.

**D**: For centuries the Vorlons stood alone, the last remaining guardians. Watching and waiting.
####More

Delenn’s question to Kosh (cf. [[Chrysalis]]) was, “Have the Shadows returned to Z’ha’dum?”

The Icarus, an Earth exploration vessel carrying Anna Sheridan, arrived at Z’ha’dum in late 2256 (see Analysis.) A landing party, exploring a cave, inadvertently discovered the Shadows, awakening them. The Shadows destroyed the Icarus so its crew could not return to warn others, and killed the crewmembers who wouldn’t cooperate. Morden was one of the crew.

Delenn and Kosh knew about the reawakening of the Shadows immediately — maybe even witnessed it somehow as it was happening.

The Earth government has formed a new agency, the Ministry of Peace (nicknamed “Minipax” by its employees,) with the alleged goal of helping reduce internal tensions among the EA’s populace. Its first visible action was to establish a program called the Night Watch, paying people 50 credits a week to wear black armbands and report suspicious people to the authorities so that troublemakers can be reformed before they disrupt the peace.
####Unanswered Questions

Is Sheridan’s wife still alive?

What is the Ministry of Peace really up to?

Will Talia join?

Similarly, what significance is there in the fact that Delenn narrated Sheridan’s vision? Was she sharing it with him, or had she seen it before?

What kind of information did Morden bring for Londo?

What, if anything, happened to the ship that originally discovered the ruins on Z’ha’dum? Someone must have discovered them before the Icarus’ arrival, since the crew of the Icarus knew they were going to explore an ancient civilization.
####Analysis

Delenn’s opening remarks about the First Ones bear a striking similarity to G’Kar’s comments about the beings at Sigma 957 (cf. [[Mind War]].)

Could those beings also be First Ones? If so, are the Vorlons aware that they are still around in some form?

Her remarks also echo her comments about humans in [[Babylon Squared]] — suggesting that she believes humanity has the capacity to eventually rival the First Ones.

Delenn stated that all but one of the First Ones have gone away, and that the last one is Kosh. But does she mean that only one race remains, or only one individual? Or is there a difference where Vorlons are concerned? (See jms speaks)

If Kosh would be recognized by “everyone” because (as implied by Delenn) his race had once walked openly among lesser ones, it’s plausible that Kosh may resemble something from legends thousands of years old — an angel, perhaps, since the Shadows bear some resemblance to demons and Kosh’s suit seems to have room for wings. This would tie in with Kosh’s statement in [[Hunter, Prey]] that Sheridan must be ready “to fight legends” before Kosh will reveal himself — otherwise he’d be mistaken by some as a divine being rather than an alien. Of course, angels and demons are far from the only figures in the human pantheon, let alone alien mythology, and Kosh may be something else entirely.

Or the encounter suit may allow Kosh to control who gets visions like Sheridan’s; if he took it off, everyone who tried to look at him would see something different, something personal. (See jms speaks.) This brings up a potential connection to the flashes in [[Babylon Squared]]; perhaps the Vorlons were involved in Babylon 4’s time travel, and the flashes were a side effect of that.

Why did Delenn demand to see Kosh in [[Chrysalis]] before she was willing to undergo her change? She seems to know enough about Vorlons that she would have had some idea what he looked like. Did she simply want to verify that Kosh was one of the First Ones mentioned in the Minbari history books? Or does his appearance have something more directly to do with her wanting to become partially human? That’s assuming he was showing himself to her at all, rather than sending her a dream sequence.

How did Kosh know what happened on Z’ha’dum? Or was he just inventing the scene he showed Sheridan based on what he figured must have happened? Perhaps he gleaned it from his meeting with Morden in [[Signs and Portents]], though Delenn claims she and Kosh have known about it for the past three years.

The Icarus expedition seems to have set forth in late 2256. In [[Revelations]], which is set in early 2259, Sheridan’s sister says that it’s been two years since Anna’s death. In this episode, Delenn implies that the Shadows were awakened three years earlier. Late 2256 makes sense if both of them were rounding.

The Shadows on Z’ha’dum may have been awakened in 2256, but they weren’t the first. The creature in [[The Long Dark]] awoke during the Earth-Minbari War and was headed for Z’ha’dum. What caused it to wake up before its masters did, assuming its masters are the beings the Icarus discovered?

Delenn’s question was, “Have the Shadows returned to Z’ha’dum?” That implies they were elsewhere; if so, where? Perhaps the same thing that drew the abovementioned creature to Z’ha’dum also drew the Shadows there. In that case, they may have already been awake before the Icarus arrived.

Sheridan let Morden go so he wouldn’t suspect that his true nature is known. But the damage may already be done; Morden and his associates are likely to be suspicious of his sudden release. The reason given to Morden — “it was all a mistake” — is going to seem especially suspicious; “the Centauri asked for your release” or “you’re right; we can’t hold you without charges” seem like they would have been better excuses. Of course, the latter may be what Zack told Morden.

The Night Watch armbands seem more a tool of terror than of peace, reminiscent of the armbands worn by Nazis and other tyrannical regimes, a constant reminder to everyone that they’re under observation. The program seems designed to cause people to turn in their neighbors, and it’s probably naive to believe that people accused of suspicious behavior (or worse, suspicious “attitudes”) will simply be put into therapy and released shortly thereafter. Combined with the Ministry of Public Morale (cf. [[And Now For a Word]]) it suggests the Clark government is more interested in keeping the citizenry under its thumb than anything noble.

If it’s true that the Night Watch considers thoughts dangerous, they may well be involved with Psi Corps somehow; certainly it would make sense for them to try to involve telepaths in rooting out undesirables. Or, perhaps more likely, they’re simply another of Psi Corps’ machinations.

The Shadows aren’t the only ones inhabiting places of power. Londo observed that the technomages (cf. [[The Geometry of Shadows]]) were usually cloistered in their places of power. And now the technomages are headed for the Rim, or beyond it, because of a great darkness approaching; what do they hope to achieve?

Unless the holding cell cameras are very advanced, the Shadows’ invisibility is not all that good. Presumably there are aliens on the station who can see well into the infrared or ultraviolet; the Shadows would be easily detected by such beings in any public area. Perhaps that’s how Kosh knew who Morden was in [[Signs and Portents]]. On the other hand, it may simply be that some aliens have seen the Shadows with Morden, but didn’t think them remarkable enough to be worth mentioning; they’re probably far from the weirdest-looking creatures walking around the station.

Talia was able to detect the Shadows without even trying. That suggests that telepaths will be a valuable weapon against the Shadows — which leads to the suspicion that the Shadows are working to co-opt Psi-Corps behind the scenes so human telepaths will be less likely to work against them. It’s not clear whether her ability to sense the Shadows was typical for a P5 telepath, or a result of her enhanced abilities (cf. [[Mind War]].)

It’s also worth noting that Talia saw Morden darken the same way Delenn did in [[Signs and Portents]] — does this mean Delenn has some telepathic ability?

In [[Infection]], Franklin says the Ikarans built their war machines to fend off invasions, the last of which was 1000 years ago. Could they have been participants in the last conflict with the Shadows? Will the technology obtained by Earth in that episode be used in the upcoming war?

Morden’s triangular hand placement while he was in his cell is reminiscent of Lennier’s meditation posture. Perhaps there’s no connection, or perhaps there is.
####Notes

The name “Ministry of Peace” and its abbreviation Minipax are from George Orwell’s “1984.”

The convention mentioned by Talia is probably not the one described in the novel “Voices” because the novel takes place before [[The Coming of Shadows]].

Delenn’s narrative bears some resemblance to Gandalf’s description of the coming of Sauron near the beginning of the first book of “The Lord of the Rings.” In particular, this passage:

“The rumours that you have heard are true: he has indeed arisen again and left his hold in Mirkwood and returned to his ancient fastness in the Dark Tower of Mordor. That name even you hobbits have heard of, like a shadow on the borders of old stories. Always after a defeat and a respite, the Shadow takes another shape and grows again.”

And Now For a Word

####Overview

Babylon 5 is embroiled in a deadly conflict between the Narn and Centauri; an ISN reporter covers the story and tours the station.
####Guest Stars

Kim Zimmer as Cynthia Torqueman. Christopher Curry as Senator Quantrell.
####Lurk

http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/037.html
####Backplot

The Narn homeworld was invaded by the Centauri around 2110. The occupation lasted for approximately 100 years.

G’Kar joined the resistance after his father was executed by the Centauri.

41% of Earth Alliance citizens feel that Babylon 5 isn’t worth the time and expense.

The Centauri have been using the space around the station as a transfer point for weapons for the war effort.

Over 250,000 humans died during the Earth-Minbari War.

Back on Earth, the Clark government has formed the Office of Public Information and the Ministry for Public Morale — both very Orwellian names. (see jms speaks)

Senator Hidoshi, Sinclair’s main Senate contact in season one, is no longer in office.

Sheridan received the EarthForce Silver Star for valor during the Earth-Minbari war.
####Unanswered Questions

How long have the Centauri been using Babylon 5’s space to move weapons?

Will the news report affect the public’s perception of Babylon 5, and if so, will the station become more popular or less?
####Analysis

Delenn’s emotions seem to come to the surface much more readily now than they did before her change. (see jms speaks)

The Earth-Minbari War wasn’t very devestating at all in terms of loss of life. 250,000 dead is tiny compared to, for example, the tens of millions killed in World War II. Since most of the war was probably fought in space, in ships with relatively small crews, that’s understandable — in fact, that many dead probably means that Earth’s combat fleets were nearly eliminated in their entirety — but the war seems to have had an impact on Earth far greater than warranted by human losses. Human pride may ultimately have been the bigger casualty.

The fact that the Narn cruiser destroyed a similarly-sized Centauri ship in a one-on-one battle suggests that the two are fairly evenly matched technologically. If the Centauri are indeed crushing the Narn military, as denied by G’Kar, they must have far superior numbers, or frequent help from the Shadows.

One reason for keeping Babylon 5 around was conspicuously absent from Senator Quantrell’s list: the planet below the station is one of the most strategically valuable places in the known galaxy, considering what lies beneath its surface (cf. “A Voice in the Wilderness”.) Given that the planet’s contents were entrusted to the Babylon 5 Advisory Council, it’s in everyone’s best interest to keep the station up and running.

Earth would probably prefer to keep the planet a secret to keep people from trying to take it (and Babylon 5), so it makes some sense that Quantrell didn’t mention it; but given the battle that took place over control of the planet, it must be a poorly-kept secret at best.

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.”