![]() Gadling, like Element Girl, is one of several humans in The Sandman series who do not age.īy 1989, Gadling will come to regret his involvement in the Atlantic slave trade, an occupation Morpheus advised him to forgo centuries before having apologized repeatedly to his 20th century girlfriend in "Sunday Mourning", he is told by Gwen to drop the subject. De Rais' plot is foiled when he is tricked into turning down Hob's particular brand of eternal life in favour of the extended feeling of childhood the Dead Boy Detectives experience.overlooking the fact that they have no life to steal. He also makes an appearance in The Sandman Presents: Dead Boy Detectives spinoff, where Gilles De Rais tricks Charles Rowland and Edwin Paine into tracking Gadling down in an attempt to harvest his immortality. Anyway, Gwen'd kill me." The issue concludes with Hob dreaming of walking on a beach with Dream and Destruction. He thanks Death for the offer but ultimately refuses, saying "I'm not ready to die. While there, he is visited by Death who, reflecting that Hob may have reconsidered his pact for eternal life since Dream’s death, offers him an end. ![]() Disgruntled by the inaccuracy of the event, he spends most of the afternoon drinking in a derelict tavern, somewhat similar to the one in which he first met Dream. ![]() In “Sunday Mourning”, Hob attends a Renaissance festival with his African-American girlfriend Guenevere and reminisces guiltily about the slave trade. Hob’s final three appearances occur in issues #70 ("Chapter One, Which Occurs in the Wake of What Has Gone Before"), #72 ("Chapter Three, In Which We Wake"), and #73 (An Epilogue, Sunday Mourning) of The Wake. As they leave Hob warns Dream that he has the stench of death upon him, which Dream responds with an ambiguous smile and thanks. Having lost his most recent significant other in a car accident, Hob is devastated and asks Dream to resurrect her, remarking that "it never gets easier, people you love not being there any more." Dream states that such an act is impossible, but offers Hob the comfort of making her killer aware, while dreaming, of that which he has destroyed. The narrative later reunites Hob and Dream in issue #59 of The Kindly Ones. In it he shares an adventure with a girl named Peggy Peggy and Hob appear again, albeit briefly, during the Blitz in issue #32 of The Dreaming. He next appears in issue #53, “Hob’s Leviathan” which recounts a portion of Hob’s biography independent of the Dream King the story, which takes place on a ship called the Sea Witch in the first half of the 20th century, forms a section of the frame narrative which comprises Worlds' End. He gives Hob a bottle of Chateau Lafitte 1828 which remains material in the waking world. In issue #22, collected in Season of Mists, Dream visits Hob in his dreams while preparing for a visit to Hell. ![]() In 1989 Dream, freshly escaped after decades of captivity, returns, stating that it is impolite to keep a friend waiting, confirming their friendship. Dream rejects the suggestion angrily and walks out. In the penultimate meeting in 1889, Gadling suggests to Dream that the true purpose for meeting was friendship. In 1789, their meeting is interrupted by the arrival of magician, Lady Johanna Constantine, ancestor of John Constantine, who says she heard it rumoured that once every hundred years, the The Devil and the The Wandering Jew meet there in that very same tavern. Over the course of the next three hundred years, he falls into disgrace following the premature death of his wife and child (1589-1689 AD), enters the slave trade to again become wealthy (1689-1789 AD), and exits it after Dream comments on its immorality (1789-1889 AD). In the next century, he becomes rich, marries and is knighted (1489-1589 AD). In the century following his initial appearance and meeting with Dream, Gadling continues fighting as a soldier and gets into the new field of printing (1389-1489 AD). They do so, and Gadling recounts each century of his life. Dream strikes up a conversation with Gadling who agrees to meet him again in the same inn once every hundred years. Death agrees, at the request of her brother, who says that "it might be amusing" to grant Gadling eternal life. It is, as Gadling puts it, "a mug's game." This catches the attention of Death, who encourages Dream to listen. Dying, he argues, is merely a habit, something that people do simply because everybody does. Gadling is arguing that if he refuses to die, he will have eternal life. 2, The Doll's House issue # 13, “Men of Good Fortune” in 1389, sitting in a smoky tavern, the White Horse, in what will eventually become London's East End.
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