The Butcher's Knife Cares Not that the World is Hollow and I Have Looked for par'Mach in All the Wrongs Darker than Death or Night Terrors.
I wish they'd come up with a better name for the battle than "Battle at the Binary Stars." At least a third of all star systems are binary or multiple, so calling something "the binary stars" does not even begin to narrow down a specific location. It's like calling something "the Battle of the Hill." Also, a two-star system is conventionally called a binary star rather than binary stars.
I figure it took place in a binary system, like the one Janeway flew her ship through in Scientific Method.
I think you mean Dr. Bashir.oh man, my favorite line of dialogue from DS9 was when Captain Sisko went all "inter arma enim silent leges" on Admiral Ross' ass
I'm just floored by the fact that we're actually having episode titles which are COMPLETE SENTENCES. Have we ever had that since, I dunno, "For The World Is Hollow And I Have Touched The Sky"?![]()
I noticed it too. And the Butcher's Knife title sounds extremely grim. I expect much death.
Well, yes, that was clearly stated in dialogue and shown in numerous VFX shots throughout the first two episodes. There's no mystery to that. It's just that binary star systems are so incredibly common that it's too vague a location designator.
I think it was Starlog or one of the other magazines with Trek coverage that did a grid which had TOS episode titles, then what they would have been in TNG, DS9 and VOY. It was funny, because when you look at the VOY column, they were all one word titles.For what it's worth, I'm liking the titles of the eps so far (even if they don't actually appear on screen). I always found the more flowery TOS titles more memorable than the dull one-word titles that were so common on the latter-day shows: "Cathexis," "Divergence," "Descent," etc.
I still think the reference to lambs' cry and butcher's knife is an allusion to William Blake's "Auguries of Innocence." Perhaps the poem will figure into the episode somehow.
...sound a lot like what Stamets was saying about the theory underlying the Spore Drive.To see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour
"Choose your pain" was said in the episode, as if there was any doubt.
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