
Why doesn't anyone care about Pietten?
Moderators: Orlion, kevinswatch
So true. What does that say about all of us who are his fans?DukkhaWaynhim wrote:To me, that twisting of intent / purpose is one of the central themes of TCTC. It also extends to what I believe is a huge recurring theme in *all* of Donaldson's works, the theme of flawed people and their struggle with/against redemption.

And remember that the twisting of intent goes both ways - for example, TC is told "of your own volition you will deliver the white gold into my hand." He can't find a way to avoid it, so he finds a way to turn it to his advantage.
"History is a myth men have agreed upon." - Napoleon


- CovenantJr
- Lord
- Posts: 12608
- Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2002 9:10 pm
- Location: North Wales
I think two things prevented me feeling any compassion for Pietten:
1) He was, as others have said, quite inhuman - almost monstrous.
2) He didn't really appear to be suffering. He was gleeful about the wrongs he performed. Yes, that's a result of Foul's 'damage' to him, but it still makes him difficult to feel for.
1) He was, as others have said, quite inhuman - almost monstrous.
2) He didn't really appear to be suffering. He was gleeful about the wrongs he performed. Yes, that's a result of Foul's 'damage' to him, but it still makes him difficult to feel for.
- The Leper Messiah
- Servant of the Land
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Fri Dec 31, 2004 2:45 am
- DukkhaWaynhim
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 9195
- Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2003 8:35 pm
- Location: Deep in thought
That is way too funny, Romeo!
And if people are going to say, well, we can't blame him because Foul/the ur-viles messed with his mind...then fine, I would advise those people to get off Elena's case, too, because she gets such a bad rap. (Yes, I know she did a bad thing with the Earthblood.) She wasn't exactly right in the head either, but we hold her responsible for her actions.
Regarding the Ramen, maybe I was too harsh in saying they were dense about Pietten. It's been a long time since my last read of TPTP (as I find it a very bleak book to get through), so maybe I've given myself a distorted impression of the Ramen. Others have pointed out that the Ramen were, after all, bound by a promise to the Ringthane himself take care of Pietten. So even if they had been suspicious of Pietten, what could the Ramen have done about it?
The cruel irony about the Ramen's promise to Pietten is that it should be Covenant who bound them (and the Ranyhyn) to it. It is exactly the kind of absolute, all-or-nothing dedication shown by the Ramen and all the people of the Land that frightens Covenant, yet he's the one who binds them, and in such a deadly way that would have made Foul proud.

Exactly. Hard to feel for him when he's obviously taking delight in the misery he's causing to others.CovenantJr wrote:I think two things prevented me feeling any compassion for Pietten:
1) He was, as others have said, quite inhuman - almost monstrous.
2) He didn't really appear to be suffering. He was gleeful about the wrongs he performed. Yes, that's a result of Foul's 'damage' to him, but it still makes him difficult to feel for.
And if people are going to say, well, we can't blame him because Foul/the ur-viles messed with his mind...then fine, I would advise those people to get off Elena's case, too, because she gets such a bad rap. (Yes, I know she did a bad thing with the Earthblood.) She wasn't exactly right in the head either, but we hold her responsible for her actions.
Regarding the Ramen, maybe I was too harsh in saying they were dense about Pietten. It's been a long time since my last read of TPTP (as I find it a very bleak book to get through), so maybe I've given myself a distorted impression of the Ramen. Others have pointed out that the Ramen were, after all, bound by a promise to the Ringthane himself take care of Pietten. So even if they had been suspicious of Pietten, what could the Ramen have done about it?
The cruel irony about the Ramen's promise to Pietten is that it should be Covenant who bound them (and the Ranyhyn) to it. It is exactly the kind of absolute, all-or-nothing dedication shown by the Ramen and all the people of the Land that frightens Covenant, yet he's the one who binds them, and in such a deadly way that would have made Foul proud.
- Worm of Despite
- Lord
- Posts: 9546
- Joined: Sat Oct 26, 2002 7:46 pm
- Location: Rome, GA
- Contact:
- DukkhaWaynhim
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 9195
- Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2003 8:35 pm
- Location: Deep in thought
I could be misremembering, but didn't the Ramen know (or at least suspect) that Pietten was exposing their coverts?
The Ramen knew it was Covenant's bargain with the Ranyhyn that kept the horses in danger - even if they knew Pietten was behind the Ramen betrayal, they had to stay their hands out of deference to the Ringthane and their promise. Absolute pledges.
DW
The Ramen knew it was Covenant's bargain with the Ranyhyn that kept the horses in danger - even if they knew Pietten was behind the Ramen betrayal, they had to stay their hands out of deference to the Ringthane and their promise. Absolute pledges.
DW
"God is real, unless declared integer." - Unknown


Yea, I kept hoping for more Mhoram chapters to give a break from the bleakness... those chapters may be my favorites in the entire SRD canon.danlo wrote:Yes very gritty and cold...but in many ways it's the most haunting and gripping book in the series.MM wrote:TPTP (as I find it a very bleak book to get through)
On the other hand, when I just reread the whole series this summer, I didn't find TPTP hard to read. I guess after WGW (which was also really hard to read the first time) and the Gap I've gotten acclimated to SRD's style

"History is a myth men have agreed upon." - Napoleon


- drew
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 7877
- Joined: Sun Sep 12, 2004 4:20 pm
- Location: Canada
- Been thanked: 1 time
- Contact:
So what did the Urviles do to Pietton?
Am I forgeting, or did it ever say?
I know he enjoyed the taste of Blood (a foreshadowing of things to come in the years of the Clave?)
Or was it that they planted the notion in his head to Serve Foul?
IIRC, Pietton never answered TC when he asked him how many times he had been to Fouls Cheche...perhaps he never was...perhaps he served his own despite, from the pain of watching his enitre village burn to death, and being denied treatment for the ease of a cavewight.
Am I forgeting, or did it ever say?
I know he enjoyed the taste of Blood (a foreshadowing of things to come in the years of the Clave?)
Or was it that they planted the notion in his head to Serve Foul?
IIRC, Pietton never answered TC when he asked him how many times he had been to Fouls Cheche...perhaps he never was...perhaps he served his own despite, from the pain of watching his enitre village burn to death, and being denied treatment for the ease of a cavewight.
I thought you were a ripe grape
a cabernet sauvignon
a bottle in the cellar
the kind you keep for a really long time
a cabernet sauvignon
a bottle in the cellar
the kind you keep for a really long time
- Dirty Whirl
- Woodhelvennin
- Posts: 58
- Joined: Fri Nov 10, 2006 7:47 am
Do you guys think that Pietton would have been healed and normal had foamfollower given him the hurtloam that he instead gave to the dying cavewright?
She looked like a crowned vestal, somehow both powerful and fragile, as if she could shatter his bones with a glance and yet would fall from her seat at the touch of a single hurled handful of mud. She daunted him.
- TIW
- TIW
- CovenantJr
- Lord
- Posts: 12608
- Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2002 9:10 pm
- Location: North Wales
"It's not that easy."Dirty Whirl wrote:Do you guys think that Pietton would have been healed and normal had foamfollower given him the hurtloam that he instead gave to the dying cavewright?

Covenant fears the absolute dedication or failure of the Ramen and Haruchai, yet he too is a man of absolutes. Hmmm.Matrixman wrote:It is exactly the kind of absolute, all-or-nothing dedication shown by the Ramen and all the people of the Land that frightens Covenant, yet he's the one who binds them, and in such a deadly way that would have made Foul proud.
- iQuestor
- The Gap Into Spam
- Posts: 2520
- Joined: Thu May 11, 2006 12:20 am
- Location: South of Disorder
I do not. Remember Dukka Waynhim (I am sure that is spelled wrong) -- the being who was found and brought to Revelstone in TIW, that eventually led the Lords to know of the illearth stone? Hurtloam caused agonizing pain to it, so I think Pietten might have suffered some similar fate because he was warped by Foul in some way, probably with the stone as well.Do you guys think that Pietton would have been healed and normal had foamfollower given him the hurtloam that he instead gave to the dying cavewright?
This is the way Lord Foul works. There is no good decision, and he wants to muddle the lines of right and wrong by making any choice you have serve him in some way.
Becoming Elijah has been released from Calderwood Books!
Korik's Fate
It cannot now be set aside, nor passed on...

Korik's Fate
It cannot now be set aside, nor passed on...

- CovenantJr
- Lord
- Posts: 12608
- Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2002 9:10 pm
- Location: North Wales
- CovenantJr
- Lord
- Posts: 12608
- Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2002 9:10 pm
- Location: North Wales
Nerdanel wrote:But hurtloam worked for what the ur-viles did to Llaura. I think the Lords were simply unaware that the Waynhim's alien nature made them incompatible with hurtloamSpoiler
just like the presence of the Staff of Law.


As an aside...how do other Watchers pronounce 'Llaura'? Since I spend quite a lot of time in Wales and the double L is a feature of their language, I habitually pronounce it Welshly: "chlhtlhthaura"...
