Enlightenment (comic story)

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Enlightenment was a full-page comic story by Tim Quinn and Dicky Howett included in DWM 105. Unrelated to the TV story of the same name, it instead focused on the inner workings of the Doctor's TARDIS and, in the process, inadvertently foreshadowed a recurring element of the later revived series.

Summary

While the Doctor waits outside, Peri climbs a staircase in the TARDIS lined with portraits of the Doctor's incarnations to change the outer plasmic shell's light bulb, which, it turns out, must actually be done from the inside, through a hatch in the roof.

Characters

References

  • The stairway leading up from the TARDIS control room to the roof of the outer plasmic shell is adorned with a portrait. Two, labelled No. 1 and No. 2, depict the First Doctor and the Second Doctor. Also pictured are "-10" (a bald, round-faced man), -6 (a bearded man dressed like a hippie), "No. 33" (a man with an enlarged forehead emblazoned with a question mark), and No. 13 (a smiling, middle-aged man with dark hair). The exhausted Peri passes by several more portraits.
  • At the end of the actual stairway, a smaller ladder bridges the gap to the hatch in the roof.
  • The Doctor owns an issue of Radio Times. A cup of tea and a discarded book are also visible among the scattered items from the Doctor's picnic basket.

Notes

  • As the portraits of the First Doctor and Second Doctor are labelled "No. 1" and "No. 2", the clear implication is that the other numbered portraits adorning the TARDIS staircases are of other, unknown incarnations of the Doctor; No. 33 and No. 13 would respectively be the Thirty-Third and Thirteenth Doctors, while the "minus"-numbered Doctors would, logically, be incarnations predating the commonly-understood "First Doctor", William Hartnell. However, none of the pictured individuals are explicitly identified as the Doctor, and indeed, even if they are purported, in-universe, to depict the Doctor, there is no certainty that the portraits are accurate; the eventual Thirteenth Doctor introduced on television, of course, bore no resemblance to "No. 13" in Enlightenment.
  • If taken at face value, the TARDIS containing portraits of alleged future incarnations of the Doctor during the Sixth Doctor's era may hint at time within the TARDIS being flexible, an idea later explored at greater length in The Doctor's Wife.

Continuity