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Man Who Lived by the River

faithful obstinate symbolic passive
An anonymous parable figure invoked by Father Thomas Cavanaugh, the Man Who Lived by the River embodies a believer so certain of divine deliverance that he refuses offered rescue and drowns. He lacks individual history or agency outside of allegory and functions as a moral emblem that converts political and procedural impasses into questions of conscience. The figure exerts pressure on President Bartlet's inner life, reframing ignored counsel as a missed form of practical mercy and prompting spiritual self‑examination rather than legal maneuvering.
1 appearances
Religious moral allegory
Also known as: parable man, drowning man, the man that lived by the river