Can anyone here imagine a Lord getting tricky with a Sword? They don't strike me as having been all that brawny!
Which Lord do you reckon would've come out best in a swordfighting tournament?

Moderators: Orlion, kevinswatch
Well said.Wayfriend wrote:Also, before you consider swordplay "a step backwards", consider: how might learning The Sword in the Land, under the Oath of Peace, differ from the combat arts we have today? I am sure that there is more to the art than killing.
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Sometimes what you learn, you learn because it is a stepping stone. The Sword is a stepping stone on the path to Lordship. Perhaps small powers must be mastered, and lessons of power learned, before you can trust to weild the bigger powers rightly.
I didn't see anyone in the Warward breaking up an ur-Vile wedge with his or her sword like Mhoram did.Wayfriend wrote:
Also, before you consider swordplay "a step backwards", consider: how might learning The Sword in the Land, under the Oath of Peace, differ from the combat arts we have today? I am sure that there is more to the art than killing.
Huh?ur-monkey wrote:
(there's probably no need to speculate about such a minor matter, but I've always loved the whole idea of Revelwood & the Loresraat)
High Lord Tolkien wrote:ur-monkey wrote: Huh?
No need to speculate?
Do you rave man?
Why else are we all here?
Maybe I do my friend
I think that is exactly why the sword must be mastered before the staff.Wayfriend wrote:Sometimes what you learn, you learn because it is a stepping stone. The Sword is a stepping stone on the path to Lordship. Perhaps small powers must be mastered, and lessons of power learned, before you can trust to weild the bigger powers rightly.
Avatar wrote:But then, the answers provided by your imagination are not only sometimes best, but have the added advantage of being unable to be wrong.
By the way, welcome to the Watch, tyciol!I never gave a second's thought to studying the martial arts until about the time I began working on the GAP books. And when I did consider the idea, my reasons were entirely personal: they had nothing to do with anything I had written, or anything I intended to write. (Some day, long after I appear to have died--because we all know I'm not *actually* going to die--I'll write an essay about "The Writer as Warrior." But don't wait up. <grin>)
If you want to get a feel for the depth of SRD's enthusiasm for martial arts, you should read The Man Who Fought Alone. About a third of the book is given over as a critique of different martial arts and I think it's probably the best of that series (even though SRD drops a rather clumsy hint about a third of the way through).tyciol wrote:I had NO IDEA that Stephen Donaldson is a martial artist... that is so COOL! I guess I should have guessed from the Haruchai.