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Posted: Sun Apr 17, 2005 4:26 pm
by Mack
SRD seems to have answered this one definitively. (Looks like our very own Mack went to the source.)
I guess next time, I'll just listen to Wayfriend! :wink:

I love SRD's answer though.
Sometimes I have that same feeling.
("Oh, fu*k, I'm ruined, and it's all for nothing").
Mack

Posted: Thu Mar 09, 2006 8:00 pm
by High Lord Tolkien
Is Hile Troy, Caer Caveral, *really* dead?

(I don't have the book with me so I don't know if there's a quote that answers this for me.)

He was a man before the Forestal turned him into a tree/proto-Forestal.

The breaking of the Law of Life required a great deal of Earthpower, evidentaly the total sum of the Last Forestal.
But why then wouldn't Caer Caveral have reverted back to human upon his "death"?
Wouldn't that tranformation power have been exhausted as well?
And would the breaking of both the Law of Life and Death actually help to preserve his existance in some way?

Could Troy have "regenerated" over the centuries into something different?
Any thoughts?

Posted: Thu Mar 09, 2006 9:07 pm
by wayfriend
Troy is dead. He might be summoned back as any of the Dead can.

I don't think he can become alive again without a great expenditure of power. But I don't think it's impossible.

Posted: Thu Mar 09, 2006 9:19 pm
by mortem
Again, I love how names mean so much in these books.

Sunder breaks the law of life by striking Caer-Caveral.

Definition of Sunder:

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English gesundrian, syndrian; akin to Old High German suntarOn to sunder, Old English sundor apart, Latin sine without, Sanskrit sanutar away
transitive senses : to break apart or in two : separate by or as if by violence or by intervening time or space

Posted: Tue Mar 14, 2006 3:37 am
by Zarathustra
Again, I love how names mean so much in these books.

Sunder breaks the law of life by striking Caer-Caveral.
Damn, mortem, that's cool. I never thought about that. I always assumed his name referred to the fact that he was "sundered" from his family, his Stonedown, and his previous convictions about the nature of reality.