Cyclomite

Joe Varo reports, on Pynchon-l regarding Cyclopropane:

"At first I thought that this was just something the TP made up. But just for the hell of it I looked it up and found that it is an explosive with anaesthetic properties, or vice versa."
Wikipedia entry

Quoting page 184, Varo also asks:

"'From then on, whenever a dynamite blast went off, even far away out of earshot, something concurrent was triggered somewhere in Lew's consciousness...after awhile even if one was only about [italics in original] to go off. Anywhere.'"
Am I missing something or reading too much into it? Or does this make cyclomite akin to another pynchonian compound?" Is Cyclomite somehow related to Imipolex G?

Anville Azote responds to Varo:

[...] There's a darkly comic scene hinging on this property in the first episode of James Burke's series "Connections" (1978), wherein the Great Northeastern Blackout strikes just when a woman is giving birth to twins — under cyclopropane anaesthesia. In the darkness, a nurse walks into the room with a lighted candle... [...] [1]

One should perhaps note the triangular shape of cyclopropane. Indeed one should! Only just took the trouble to look at that Wikipedia entry, and follow the definitions for Cyclopropane/ tetrahedranes/ tetrahedrals:

"Cyclopropanes taken to the extreme are tetrahedranes and propellanes."
"Tetrahedrane is a hypothetical hydrocarbon with chemical formula C4H4 and a tetrahedral structure."
"A tetrahedron (plural: tetrahedra) is a polyhedron composed of four triangular faces, three of which meet at each vertex."

So no wonder Lew falls in with the T.W.I.T. (True Worshippers of the Ineffable Tetractys):

"The Tetractys is a triangular figure consisting of ten points arranged in four rows: one, two, three, and four points in each row. As a mystical symbol, it was very important to the followers of the secret worship of the Pythagoreans."

And this is all yet aother instance of the 4 motif. Great stuff.

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