


Moderator: Xar
::bowing head:::Simjen wrote: Realizing this, he called forth his youngest son, Simjen. With a heavy heart, he informed his son that it would be his task to clear out the room so that Eiran could live. For this, he was given his birthright - Fire. And his arrival spelled the beginning of what we know as mortality.
It came to Simjen easily, did the wielding of fire. He sent great fingers of it through the dense forests. He pulled flaming gouts from the sky to hammer the plains. And he pushed his fists into the ground, driving up volanoes to spit, smoke, and explode across the sea.
No creature or creation on Eiran was safe. His brothers and sisters came angrily to him, bearing in their arms their dead children. Simjen's precious nieces and nephews. When he tried to tell them he had only done it to save Eiran, they looked at him with pity and disgust.
Only his oldest brother, the one he admired most, came to him. Putting a hand on his shoulder, he said, "Simjen, you could have found a better way. Fire is not your curse. It is a gift, but it does not define you. Surely you can do more with it than destroy."
Simjen bowed his head and thanked his brother.
His other siblings never came again to see him. The pain of their loss and the weight of their years slowly drove them away from Eiran, or perhaps drove them deeper into Eiran, considering he would occasionally see their faces in the new gods that came and went.
But his oldest brother always greeted him as he passed over Simjen, sitting on the highest mountain. It was on this mountain that Simjen vowed to be a creator. Like his father and his father's father. And he would use fire to do it. If he must follow his father's will and burn away that which threatens Eiran's stability, h would make sure something greater came of it.
The contest guidelines are VERY loose: as long as your creation myth explains the origins of the world according to Maeror, it can be as metaphysical and philosophical or down-to-earth as you like, there is no minimum or maximum length, it doesn't necessarily have to involve any other deity (although of course, followers would be interested in knowing where the other gods came from), and it can be written in any way you wish (Simjen wrote it as an extract from his holy book, for example). If you have any doubts, feel free to PM me and askMurrin wrote:I wasn't planning to enter the contest, because I had no good ideas. But something has occured to me. Depends on how loose the contest guidelines are, and if I can summon up the effort (and te creativity) to get something done.
:::assuming you are saying according to whichever deity is being represented:::Xar wrote: The contest guidelines are VERY loose: as long as your creation myth explains the origins of the world according to Maeror, it can be as metaphysical and philosophical or down-to-earth as you like, there is no minimum or maximum length, it doesn't necessarily have to involve any other deity (although of course, followers would be interested in knowing where the other gods came from), and it can be written in any way you wish (Simjen wrote it as an extract from his holy book, for example). If you have any doubts, feel free to PM me and ask
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.
Hmmmm ... seeing that cousin Jove's creative process starts with her CONSUMPTION and then transformation ... does that mean her followers will look for treasures .... to come from her ....Xar wrote:Well, you DID realize that the creation myth is probably going to affect how your god's worshipers look at your god, did you?Balon wrote:Thanks!![]()
Glad someone got a kick out of Allbert.
Astavyastataa Kadna wrote:Hmmmm ... seeing that cousin Jove's creative process starts with her CONSUMPTION and then transformation ... does that mean her followers will look for treasures .... to come from her ....Xar wrote:Well, you DID realize that the creation myth is probably going to affect how your god's worshipers look at your god, did you?Balon wrote:Thanks!![]()
Glad someone got a kick out of Allbert.![]()
![]()
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.