It may come as a surprise to
players of the game Assassin Creed Syndicate to know that the most pivotal
character in the game does not actually appear in the game. In fact, he is scarcely mentioned by
name. I refer of course to Ethan Frye,
the father of the game’s protagonists, the twins Evie and Jacob Frye.
Our story begins in February 1868
with the inaugural mission of the twins.
They are filled with the hope of youth, having just turned
twenty the previous November, and as their minds imagine the future possibilities
there is a shadow. Their father died of
pleurisy less than a month earlier and his death is still fresh in their hearts
as evidenced by their repeatedly references to him over the course of the game.
What would father say? What would father
do? It is what father would have
wanted. You sound just like father. The ghost of Ethan Frye lingers throughout AC
Syndicate.
The word syndicate means a joint
collaboration, but also has certain criminal implications, such as the mob or a
gang. On the surface, the game invokes
the underworld meaning, however the central theme and messages in the game
indicate the former. The collaboration
is the union of Evie and Jacob as the two halves of Ethan Frye. Each twin has a particular aspect their
father. Ethan was studious like Evie and
impetuous and daring like Jacob. In this
singular person it worked, but in two different people we see division and
hostility until the end when the two come together and vanquish the villain as
one. The name Syndicate works, but it
could just as easily have been called Synthesis. The story is about the reunion of Ethan Frye
through his children.
THE FAMILY FRYE
THE FAMILY FRYE
One of the hallmarks of the
Assassin’s Creed series is the use of names as Easter Eggs. For example, the
names Altair and Ezio both refer to eagles. Edward Keyway’s pirate ship and
Jacob Frye’s street gang are both named for members of the crow family, the
Jackdaw and the Rooks. In AC Syndicate,
the name Frye comes from the Old English meaning free, as in free-born. This is in keeping with the recurring theme
of freedom throughout the series.
Evie’s name is of course a
diminutive of the name Eve, from the Hebrew meaning life or to live, so Evie
Frye literally means live free. The name Eve appears also in the AC storyline
pertaining to the human uprising against "The Ones Who Came Before” where
Eve leads the rebellion with the implication that she was the basis for the
Biblical Eve and the beginning of the Assassin lineage. Whether the naming of the character Evie is
intended to be a direct reference to the ancestral Eve is unclear, however I
like to believe that Ethan knew the history and named his daughter after her.
Among of the most popular names
in Western Culture are variations of James.
Jesus had a disciple and a brother both called James. The name comes from the Hebrew name
Jacob. The original Jacob in the Bible
was the son of Abraham’s son Isaac. Like
Jacob Frye, the Biblical Jacob was a second-born twin, literally grasping the
heel of his brother Esau at birth. The
name Jacob means supplanter, someone who wrongfully takes the place of another. Jacob was born clutching the heel of his brother, as if he was attempting to
pull him aside to pass him in the birth canal to achieve first-born status.
As an adult, Jacob had a name change.
The story goes that he had a night long wrestling match with a
mysterious stranger who renames him Israel, meaning “he who wrestles with
God.”
The names Jacob and Israel share
a common theme. Both infer a refusal to
accept fate or one’s lot in life. In
this sense, the name reflects the second half of the Creed. Everything is permitted. We see this repeatedly in Jacob Frye as he is
constantly pushing possibilities regardless of how impossible or crazy they
seem to others.
Another recurring feature in the
Assassin’s Creed series is this tendency to include ethnic or national heritage
in their character creation. Three of
the Assassins featured in the games are of mixed race, Altair, Conor Kenway,
and Aveline, while Arno is described as being half Austrian and half
French. We know that Edward Kenway is
specifically Welsh but grew-up in England and of course Ezio Auditore is
Italian. Strangely, the ethnic or
national heritage of the Fryes is completely missing.
In examining these names, I
discovered that the names Ethan, Evie, and Jacob are all of Hebrew origin. Not to mention the choice to use the name
Jacob rather than the more common James or Jim.
There is a Jewish name Frye, but that comes into Yiddish through Russian
and refers to a sucker or a mark and does not fit the characters as well as the
English origin of the name does.
However, it is interesting to speculate the possibility that Ethan’s
wife Cecily was English and that Ethan was Jewish. The twins would not technically be considered
Jewish since their mother was not, but this would be in keeping with the
mixed-race themes in the series and give us our first half-Jewish
Assassins. It would also highlight the
important roles played by Jews in Victorian society, for example Prime Minister
Benjamin Disraeli was Jewish, and hints at the rise of anti-Semitism that would
come to London in the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries.
Finally, we see in Evie and Jacob
(and Henry Green) the first legacy Assassins in the series since Altair. I coined the term legacy Assassins to
describe Assassins who were born and raised within the context of the order by
one or both parents and have full knowledge of the Assassins. Ezio was raised by Assassin parents, but not
within the context of the Order or with full knowledge. Connor and Aveline came to the Assassins as
children, but were not born into it or guided by their parents. Edward Kenway, Adewale, and Arno Dorian all
came to the Assassins as adults. As for
Haytham Kenway, his father Edward took a similar approach to child rearing as
Ezio’s father, Giovanni. The children
were taught skills and concepts, but without full disclosure as to why they had
sword training when other children did not.
This gives us an interesting
picture of the Fryes as a family of Assassins. Ethan was likely a legacy Assassin judging by
how young he was on his first mission. His
wife, Cecily, was an Assassin, though she was not born into it. The twins were raised as Assassins, and so was Jacob's son and his grand-daughter, Lydia. There is no telling if the legacy continues
after Lydia, but there is a passing reference to an Emmett Frye in the modern day. So there is the possibility that the Frye Assassins cover over two-hundred years of history.
Legacy Assassins pose an ethical
dilemma concerning how we raise children.
For the Assassins, freedom is the highest value, and yet they raise
their children in a way that removes their freedom. As Altair points out, he never had a choice
in becoming an Assassin. It was all that
he ever knew so he could not can compare other options. Ethan describes it this way in the novel
Underworld.
What we are doing is right. My doubt, lies in the application of that ideology, and this doubt is what keeps me awake at night, wondering if we fail our children by moulding them into our image, when in fact we should be teaching them to follow a path of their own.
Every parent wants to impart to
their children the right way to live.
For a Christian parent, this means raising your child to be a
Christian. I never gave much credence to
the let the children decide approach.
Without teaching religion at a formative age, the child would not have
the capacity for faith later in life.
Second, if a parent truly believed, then choice is not an option. If you believe a stove is hot, then you will
teach your child to avoid hot stoves. If a parent believes in eternal hellfire,
then they would raise their children to avoid it. Giovanni Auditore and Edward Kenway chose to
teach around the Assassin training without directly training their
children. This approach left both
children vulnerable. It worked for Ezio,
but Haytham was much younger and fell into Templar hands to be raised. In the end. Ethan raised his children to be
Assassins, and this worked best for them because they were part of a community.
THE DIVISION OF LABOUR
Assassin’s Creed Syndicate is
touted as the first game set in the Modern Era.
For the majority of human existence not much had changed. The big shift happened with the Industrial
Revolution and the subsequent birth of the Modern. The world changed dramatically. One of the principle features of the Modern
is the division of labour and this is a key theme in Assassin’s Creed
Syndicate. Remember, a syndicate is a
joint collaboration. This is many parts
working together, like cogs in a machine, to accomplish a shared goal.
Underworld gives important backstory to the events of the
game. Henry Green, the leader of the
London Assassins, was born Jayadeep Mir, the son of Arbaaz Mir, the protagonist
in the Indian chapter of the Assassin's Creed Chronicles game and originally
featured in the comic book Assassin’s
Creed Brahman.
Needless to say, Arbaaz was proud
of his son who proved to be a natural Assassin in terms of skill and technique,
however Ethan Frye, Jayadeep’s teacher, saw something dangerous in the
boy. He lacked the killer instinct. Unfortunately, his warnings went unheeded and
Jayadeep went on his inaugural mission only to fail to make the kill. To the Assassins, an Assassin who could not
kill was of no use. Worse than that, it
meant death for poor Jayadeep. Fortunately,
Ethan intervened.
Ethan had a unique perspective. He stood at the crossroads of the Pre-modern
and the Modern. The Assassins could be
described as philosopher-warriors, but first
and foremost, they killed Templars. For
the Indian Brotherhood, you could not be an Assassin and not be a killer. However, the modern world would be
characterised by the division of labour.
People of different skills working where their skills were of the most
use for the benefit of the whole organisation.
Ethan saw that one need not be a killer to be an Assassin and recognised
that Jayadeep’s skills lie in networking.
He may not be a killer, but he would be an excellent spy.
We see this division of labour in
Ethan’s children. Evie is the scholar and
Jacob is the warrior. Technically, Evie
is the better fighter, but since this was a natural gift she never regarded it
much. She preferred learning. Her fighting style is direct, calculated, and
technical. Jacob is less technical and
more brute force. His concern is getting
the job done.
Evie represents the past. She knows the history and folklore of the
Assassins and can be both a philosopher and a warrior. Jacob is the future. His concern is with the now and accomplishing
the mission at hand regardless of consequences. Evie is too enamoured with the
past and Jacob is too concerned with the moment regardless of past examples or
future consequences. It is interesting
to note that Evie believes in ghosts, remnants of the past, while Jacob does
not.
Here is where the division of
labour falls apart. It is important for
each part to value the other parts. The
spy, the philosopher, and the warrior all have value to the whole and none is
more important than the others. This
mutual respect for the talents of others on your team is necessary for the
division of labour to work. Eventually,
the twins learn to work together through mutual respect for each other’s unique
perspectives and talents.
Another division in the twins is
the Creed itself. Evie has set herself
on a critical pursuit of the Truth, as dictated by the first part of the Creed,
“Nothing is True”. Jacob is a man of
action representing “Everything is Permitted”.
During the course of the story both characters conflict with their evil
counterparts who represent these areas of focus taken to extremes. Evie has Lucy Thorne and for Jacob its
Maxwell Roth.
For Evie, the purpose of
knowledge is enlightenment, but for Lucy knowledge is power to be utilised for
her ends. Instead of being a light to
share, it is a light to be kept and exploited.
In Aristotelian ethics, vices are the extremes of virtues. Courage is a virtue but in its two extremes
we find the vices of cowardice and rashness.
The pursuit of wisdom could be called a virtue. Evie often mocks Jacob, first in jest and
then seriously, for what she perceives as foolishness. That is one of the extremes and the one most
are familiar with daily, but what would the other extreme look like? Is it possible to be too wise?
Wisdom is not possible without
the capacity for abstract thought.
People who use too little abstract thought only see the concrete in
front of them at the moment. They do not
consider things like underlying principles, potential consequences, or
implications. These people are commonly
deemed fools. Those at the opposite end
are the “intellectual morons”. The have
too much abstract thought. These are the
people with all brains and no sense.
They only see the concepts in their minds and miss the concrete right in
front of them. We also see this with
people with book knowledge but no experiential knowledge. Unfortunately, there does not seem to be a
handy word for this vice. There is
foolishness at one end of the spectrum, but nothing for the opposite end. I have chosen to call this fancifulness.
Granted, the word fanciful has a
light air about it and hardly seems appropriate to describe a villain like Lucy
Thorne. She is cold, arrogant, and
cruel. These attitudes are symptomatic
of a defensive posture. It is not
difficult for people with a large capacity for abstract thought to view others
as stupid and to feel outnumbered by them.
There is a tendency to become impatient with fools and to develop an
arrogant stance towards them. For those
who take abstract thinking to the extreme, people, things, and events are all
secondary to the person’s idea of them which can lead to the objectification
and exploitation of others. An example
that comes to mind is the way wealthy politicians, who have no direct
experience of poverty or the poor, will exploit the idea of the poor to justify
policies that will ultimately benefit themselves.
Lucy is quick to tell a henchman that a chest
containing research documents is of more value than his life and the life of
his family. Once Evie obtains the chest,
she is forced to abandon it to save herself and Jacob from their pursuers. Jacob sees the adventure as a bit of fun, but
for Evie this is the beginning of the wedge that will separate them because she
blames Jacob for the loss. So were the
contents of the chest more valuable to Evie than her relationship with her
brother, or did it simply confirm her perception of him as a meddling
idiot? Later, Evie bemoans the loss of
artifacts in Edward Kenway’s mansion.
Here, Henry Green provides balance by reminding her that they could come
back for it or perhaps find something better.
Several times Evie repeats the
mantra, “Do not allow personal feelings to compromise the mission”. She learned this from her father. It is only later that she discovers that
Ethan adopted this stance as a response to grief following the death of his
wife Cecile in child birth.
I love the character of Evie
Frye. She is filled with delight at
learning something new possessed of a childlike enthusiasm. Yet, as the game proceeds we see her become
colder and colder as if she is on the path to becoming her shadow, Lucy
Thorn. Fortunately, Evie learns that her
brother is not a fool. He just has a
different perspective and sometimes he is right. Sometimes you have to act on the fly and there
is no time to plan.
“Nothing is True” should serve as
a warning to Evie against fancifulness and intellectual arrogance. No matter how knowledgeable or enlightened we
think we are, there is always the possibility that we will be proven
wrong. Also, no matter how much we know,
someone with less knowledge may know things that we do not. Ignoring the Creed in this instance would
lead Evie to disaster, but in the end it saved her.
Critics have described AC
Syndicate as Victorian Arkham City. I
don’t see that as a negative. If this is
true, then Maxwell Roth is the Joker. He
takes the literal interpretation of “Everything is Permitted” to its extreme
and forces Jacob to face it.
At first, there was a certain
comradery between Jacob and Roth. Jacob
had not long been in London before he began recounting his dream of becoming a
“firm but fair” gang leader, and now he was in the presence of the actual
leader of the London gangs. Roth was
equally impressed with Jacob’s accomplishments, despite these being at the
expense of his own self-interests. This
mutual respect came to a sudden end when Jacob realised that for Roth
everything being permitted included killing children as collateral damage. Soon after, Roth set a trap for Jacob where
he happily set fire to his own theatre.
In the wake of the chaos, as Roth lay dying from Jacob’s blade, the
Assassin asks him, “Why did you do it?
All of it?” Roth answers with a
crazed smile, “For the same reason I do anything. Why not?”
For those encountering the Creed
for the first time, their immediate fear is that “Everything is Permitted” is a
licence to anarchy and hedonism.
Throughout the game series, we see that this is not the meaning. However, only now do we have a character who
lives by the literal interpretation.
Roth is a monster. The word
monster is from the Latin meaning, “a warning” and serves as a moral example in
narrative fiction. Frankenstein’s
Monster is a warning against meddling with powers beyond your control. Maxwell Roth is a warning about literally
interpreting the Creed.
As with Evie’s encounter with her
shadow, Jacob’s youthful devil-may-care attitude could easily have evolved into
Roth’s dark take on the Creed. Jacob had
the potential to become Roth.
Fortunately, Jacob recognised the warning. He learned that everything is not permitted
and came to realise what he already knew and what Evie tried to remind
him. That actions have consequences and to
deny this will lead to madness.
FORMING A SYNDICATE
How does it feel to be wrong? It feels exactly like being right. People do not go through life thinking that
they are wrong. They may well be wrong,
but they don’t know that. So how do we
get better at being right?
One of the problems faced today
is what can best be called a lack of diversity.
True diversity is a variety of points of view, not a variety of
skin-colours and gender representations.
Through the internet we are able to surround ourselves with people and
information confirming what we already believe to be true and protecting our sensibilities
against disagreement. As a result, we
are never challenged with new and different ways of seeing the world. We are never placed into a position where we
realise that we are wrong.
It is said that friends are God’s
apology for family. The difference is
that we can chose our friends as people that we perceive to be like us. They confirm our biases whereas family is
more inclined to call us out. They have
nothing to lose because they are family and will always be family. It is this familial bond that forces Evie and
Jacob together even when they want to go their separate ways. They are united as the children of Ethan
Frye.
Diversity is not as advertised
with people of all races, genders, social classes, and creeds sitting around in
a grand love fest. True diversity is
about conflict and power. Prior to the Eighteenth Century, the word
diversity meant to be contrary to what is agreeable or right, often interpreted
as wickedness. A society had to work
together to survive and diversity was contrary to that necessary unity. With the advent of Classical Liberalism, the
word took a positive turn. Concentrated
power was seen as a negative and the will of the social whole as expressed
through democracy as being mob rule, therefore a danger to individual
liberty. Diversity became a sort of
balance of power within society itself.
If no one group held absolute power, then liberty could be protected. Diversity was seen as a safeguard against
group-think and the herd mentality.
Ideally, it is through the conflict born of diversity that the stronger
ideas rose to the top.
Imagine if the friendship between
Jacob and Maxwell Roth had blossomed.
After all, they had much in common.
Evie and Lucy Thorne got off on the wrong foot, but they also had
similar interests. Relationships with
these people would have been terrible for the twins. Instead, they had each other to force
themselves through conflict into the realisation that they were wrong. Well, not wrong per se, rather to see the
value of another person’s mode of action.
Just as diversity was seen originally
a balance of power, so too are our beneficial relationships those that balance
us out to make us better people. Jacob
helps Evie to let go and live a little, while Evie teaches Jacob the importance
of taking responsibility for the consequences one’s action. Through their syndicate, they let go of their
pride and their prejudices to become more complete people.
In this sense, the idea of Ethan
Frye becomes a goal symbolising balance and completion. The last mention of Ethan Frye is in the very
last scene where Evie turns to Jacob to say, “Father would be proud of you.” In the context of the story, this is the
highest compliment she could pay her brother.
He responds by saying, “Race you to the train” and she answers, “You’re
on.” They dash off leaving a bewildered Henry
Green. In the face of their great
achievement, the twins are still challenging each other through competition to
achieve more together despite their differences.
If we see the twins as an example to follow, then we should not be afraid to have diversity in our lives and to form syndicates with those people. There may not be agreement, but that is okay. Nor do we have to compromise ourselves. What we do need to do is to have mutual respect for each other despite our differences and hopefully learn to become better people through the experience.
If we see the twins as an example to follow, then we should not be afraid to have diversity in our lives and to form syndicates with those people. There may not be agreement, but that is okay. Nor do we have to compromise ourselves. What we do need to do is to have mutual respect for each other despite our differences and hopefully learn to become better people through the experience.