Seafoam Understone wrote:I can imagine the inner thoughts of the giants that were listening in on the description Brinn was explaining to Covenant. It would make them admire the little fellas all the more.
The crew of
Starfare's Gem had a number of married Giant couples. I imagine the First and Pitchwife, and Seasauce and Hearthcoal, looked at each other and winced inside as they heard Brinn's words.
Iryssa wrote:From the sounds of Korik's thoughts in "Korik's Mission" the Haruchai were men who loved as fiercely as they fought...it is pretty amazing to think of such a stoic people that way (it's one of the things I love about Donaldson's work...it's so unexpected like that). I can't even imagine what a sacrifice that would have been for them...and for their wives, strong though I'm sure they were too.
Men who not only lusted, but
loved as fiercely as they fought--Korik's memories make that obvious. His Mrs. had been one heck of a lucky lady, though the day she learned of the Vow must have been a dark one indeed.
Though the results of the Vow included such loss and sterility, I have a theory about why.
Korik's memories of the first arrival of the
Haruchai at Revelstone describe the city in terms that almost personify it. Personify it
female.
SRD wrote:Revelstone itself met the eyes of the invaders with a wonder such as they had never known. They understood mountains, cliffs, indomitable stone, and never in their warmest dreams had they conceived that gutrock could be made so welcoming, habitable, and extravagant. The great Giant-wrought Keep astonished them, inspired them with a fierce joy unmatched by anything except the sight of austere peaks majestically facing heavenward and the enfolding love of wives....Here, amid warmth and lushness, fertility and food and sunlight, was a single rock home capacious enough to enclose the entire Haruchai people and hold them free of want forever.
Perhaps the "ascetic and womanless" character of the Bloodguard under the Vow was not due to renunciation
per se. Revelstone itself received them as a woman, and they gave themselves completely to her. Maybe the act of Vowing was (ontologically and magically, not physically) a
consummation so vast that no shred of their being, not even a single haploid cell, remained outside it.