Daniel Hall - Fictional Character History

Fictional Character History

Daniel's father, Hector, was already dead when Brute and Glob used his ghost and planned to make him the ruler of the Dreaming in Morpheus's absence. Lyta and Hector's ghost lived together in the dreams of a child, Jed Walker, for two years. Upon Dream's return to the Dreaming, he went looking for Brute and Glob and destroyed the barrier that they had created around the child's mind that cut him off from the real Dreaming. He later banished the two. Once Hector Hall's ghost was sent to carry on its journey in Death's realm, Dream freed Lyta Hall from the illusion that she was under. Dream revealed that someday he would return to take Daniel (her unborn child), as he had spent the majority of his gestation in the Dreaming and hence he rightfully belonged to Dream.

Lyta and her child returned to the waking world and she resumed her normal life but now bore a hatred for Dream whom she erroneously blamed for her husband's death. Before Dream went off to face Lucifer, he paid another visit to the two, and named the child Daniel, a name to which Lyta took a liking.

As Daniel grew up, he started to enter the Dreaming while he was asleep. In one of the issues in Fables and Reflections, he was regaled with stories by Cain, Abel and Eve, while Matthew watched. He returned to Earth clutching one of Matthew's feathers in the same issue.

Later in the Kindly Ones saga, Lyta incorrectly believed that Daniel had been 'abducted' by Dream. She came to this conclusion because that night was the only time that she had left the child from her watch in the last three years as she had to attend a job interview. A deranged Lyta convinced herself that Dream was responsible for all the losses in her life and took her grievances to the Furies (after a long and arduous journey both in the real world and in her imagination) who told her that since Dream had killed his own blood, they are able to exact revenge for her if she agrees to be the vehicle for their instrumentations. Lyta accepts the offer and subsequently she, with her allies, wages a war with Dream and goes about destroying his realm ultimately causing his downfall.

Daniel was in fact abducted by the Norse god Loki, who Dream had freed in exchange for an unspecified service in Season of Mists, and Robin Goodfellow. Dream earlier charged a reinstated Corinthian to take Matthew and retrieve Daniel. The two succeed and bring Daniel back to Dream's castle wherein, before his end, Morpheus transfers his power to an Eagle Stone and has a final conversation with Daniel. After the death of this "point of view" of Dream, Daniel Hall then assumes the identity of Dream (although he is not a child anymore).

Daniel, as the new Dream, is an amalgam of a child and the entity from the Endless who he represents. His speech is largely unchanged but it is drawn with black font on a white background (as opposed to the direct contrasting style of the former self). He is still referred to with the honorific, 'Dream of the Endless' but he does not accept the title of 'Morpheus'. In a substory in "The Wake", he explains that he is another version of himself to Master Li (while travelling amidst the soft places). He is inexperienced in certain matters and relies on the raven, Matthew, for advice. This is similar to a number of portrayals in the Bible such as 'Daniel' relying on 'Matthew', the Raven of 'Eve'. Daniel is a gentler and more merciful lord than Morpheus as characterised by how he touches the Hippogriff guardian at his gate who confesses that his former self had never done so.

Daniel was named in accordance with Neil Gaiman's decision to give the Endless names or titles beginning with the letter 'D', and after the Biblical prophet who interpreted dreams. Whereas Morpheus almost always wears black, Daniel robes himself in white. Morpheus' garments also tended to be styled with a flame motif, while Daniel's are often adorned with floral patterns. Daniel is also unable to convince Fiddler's Green to return to the Dreaming but aside from this he largely recreates the entire land, including its populace, as it was before.

Read more about this topic:  Daniel Hall

Famous quotes containing the words fictional, character and/or history:

    It is change, continuing change, inevitable change, that is the dominant factor in society today. No sensible decision can be made any longer without taking into account not only the world as it is, but the world as it will be.... This, in turn, means that our statesmen, our businessmen, our everyman must take on a science fictional way of thinking.
    Isaac Asimov (1920–1992)

    Note too that a faithful study of the liberal arts humanizes character and permits it not to be cruel.
    Ovid (Publius Ovidius Naso)

    No cause is left but the most ancient of all, the one, in fact, that from the beginning of our history has determined the very existence of politics, the cause of freedom versus tyranny.
    Hannah Arendt (1906–1975)