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Like his 'servant', Death, Azrael does have a personality, evident by his act of mercy at the end of the events of {{RM}}, after Death's argument of "{{death|what can the harvest hope for, if not for the care of the Reaper Man}}?"   
Like his 'servant', Death, Azrael does have a personality, evident by his act of mercy at the end of the events of {{RM}}, after Death's argument of "{{death|what can the harvest hope for, if not for the care of the Reaper Man}}?"   


Essentially trapped within his prison of a 'billion years', Azrael is bored. Just like Death he can even remember the future, ("''premembering''", as [[Lobsang Ludd|the current incarnation of Time]] calls it,) so there is nothing new for him. "''I remember''," he says at the end of {{RM}}, "''when all this will be again'' (which seems to support the Golems' belief that time is toroidal)." He is also the keeper of The [[Universal Clock]], the logical opposite of a clock, in that it tells Time what it is and not the other way around, and whose big hand only goes round once, ticking off the moments until the end of everything.
Essentially trapped within his prison of a 'billion years', Azrael is bored. Just like Death he can even remember the future, ("''premembering''", as [[Lobsang Ludd|the current incarnation of Time]] calls it,) so there is nothing new for him. "''I remember''," he says at the end of {{RM}}, "''when all this will be again''" (which seems to support the Golems' belief that time is toroidal).  He is also the keeper of The [[Universal Clock]], the logical opposite of a clock, in that it tells Time what it is and not the other way around, and whose big hand only goes round once, ticking off the moments until the end of everything.





Revision as of 19:30, 31 January 2016

The Being of whom all lesser Deaths are mere reflections, the Ultimate Reality
THE BEGINNING AND THE END
Name Azrael
Race the Great Old Ones
Age immortal
Occupation Death of the Universe
Keeper of The Universal Clock
Physical appearance known only to Death and the Auditors
Residence effectively everywhere
Death happens to other people
Parents none
Relatives other Olden Ones?
Children no
Marital Status none
Appearances
Books Reaper Man
Cameos Soul Music


Azrael, one of the Eight Old High Ones, is none other than the 'Death of Universes': an entity of unthinkably enormous scope and size — so vast that entire nebulae of galaxies are merely the glint in his eye and who speaks like

this.

While not a God, Azrael is an 'Old High One', existing nonetheless despite not being worshiped. Azrael is the Ultimate Reality. Just as the Death of Rats is an offshoot of Death (i.e.the anthropomorphic personification of Death) who has been permitted an existence independent of Death, both Death and the Death of Rats are themselves in reality just offshoots of Azrael himself. Azrael is the Being from whom all lesser Deaths are mere reflections or aspects.

His sheer size suggests that Azrael may, in fact, be the universe itself.

Like his 'servant', Death, Azrael does have a personality, evident by his act of mercy at the end of the events of Reaper Man, after Death's argument of "what can the harvest hope for, if not for the care of the Reaper Man ?"

Essentially trapped within his prison of a 'billion years', Azrael is bored. Just like Death he can even remember the future, ("premembering", as the current incarnation of Time calls it,) so there is nothing new for him. "I remember," he says at the end of Reaper Man, "when all this will be again" (which seems to support the Golems' belief that time is toroidal). He is also the keeper of The Universal Clock, the logical opposite of a clock, in that it tells Time what it is and not the other way around, and whose big hand only goes round once, ticking off the moments until the end of everything.


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