The Oath of Peace

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Post by KaosArcana »

KaosArcana wrote:
The Haruchai already had this ability. Remember when Brinn spoke to Covenant in _The Wounded Land_? Also, the Bloodguard used this form of communication as well, I believe.
Yeah, I remember. I've wondered if that's how the New Lords came up with the idea. Which makes me wonder why Kevin and his Lords didn't.
They didn't need it. Remember the Lords had no means of
communication over long distance until they came up with
something at Hile Troy's insistance? It may be in the later
Wards Kevin's Lore covered something similar to what they
already came up with.

Or they may have just found the practice creepy. I know I'm
a private enough person that I wouldn't want ANYONE peering
into my mind.

KaosArcana wrote:
And to be honest, I don't think it was either useful or innately good. The mindmeld of the Lords chose Elena to be the High Lord, and that ultimately cost them the Staff of Law.
There's no telling what another Lord would have done with the Power of Command. She was unique, with unique strengths. Hey, you win some, you lose some.
But her unique strengths ultimately did diddly squat for the Land.
The ongoing consensus seems to be in the Power of Command
thread that Mhoram would not have used the Power for any
reason because it was a Monkey's Paw kind of power that would
invariably destroy those who wielded it.

To me, what the mindmeld does is perhaps allow the Lords to see
things from each other's viewpoints ... a potentially valuable tool,
but I think that Elena showed that the mindmeld didn't bequeath
any wisdom that wasn't already present among the Lords.
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Post by Fist and Faith »

Ryzel wrote:The way I see it is that the only thing white gold did in TPTP was to destroy the Illearth Stone. It was laughter which defeated Lord Foul. Maybe it was necessary that it was Covenant which did it, but I do not think so.
Perhaps this belongs over in the Foul/Earthpower thread, but it's in response to you here, so... Here's my theory of Foul, and why Covenant was so important.

Foul is an immortal, indestructable being, composed of Despite. This is why he can't be destroyed - If there is a mind in existence, it has some darkness in it. Maybe only a little, buried deep, but it's there. If there is <I>only</I> one mind in existence, he exists. This is why Covenant always told them that they can't get rid of Despite. The higher the level of Despite and Despair in a mind, the greater Foul's essence. The larger the number of minds in pain, the greater his essence. And so he does what he does. He lies, manipulates, antagonizes, etc, to increase the nasty emotions. Since the mind gives him his existence, he can do this from the inside of someone's mind, seeming to be fears, doubts, and all that, and even manifesting as hallucinations.

Since we never saw him possess anyone the way the Ravers do, I don't suppose he can. So I guess he "mastered" the Ravers because they could not feed on him, and he convinced them that he was even better at causing pain in everyone than they were, and so following him would allow them to share in that greater pain. Plus, he gave them the ability to possess others. (Not sure why he wouldn't have that power himself if he could give it to others, or why he <I>didn't</I> use it if he had it.) He was, after all, one of Kevin's Lords, so he must have been able to use Kevin's Lore, as well as the lore of the ur-viles, and probably other lore(s) too.

In the purely mental arena, Foul can be fought by some. The <I>Haruchai</I> and Giants can do this without problem. Unaided, the Ravers can't possess them, and I imagine they can ignore whatever Foul tries to do inside their skulls. Words, of course, would be a laughable weapon against either race. The <I>Haruchai</I> are too disciplined, and the Giants are too happy. :) Covenant was able to fight off Foul's Stone-enhanced mental attacks because, as the Creator told him, "You are a man already acquainted with habit and despair - with the Law which both saves and damns. Your knowledge of your illness made you wise." Some exceptional human inhabitants of the Land might be strong enough. Mhoram comes to mind, or course.

But Foul also does things in the physical realm, using the Ravers, the Illearth Stone, whatever lore he may have used, or anything else. Rather than work <I>in</I> the minds of many people, having to continually expend effort so that their misery doesn't cease, he can expend relatively little effort hurting someone in such a way as to cause anguish to <I>many</I> others for a long time to come. When he damaged Pietten, he knew the emotional toll it would take on everyone else for decades to come. He didn't master Korik, Sill, and Doar (seemed more like Stone-hypnosis, but I suppose it could have been a form of possession) because he thought those three could defeat Revelstone, but because he wanted to cause doubt in all <I>Haruchai</I> forever. He had the Ravers possess the Giant brothers because he knew he would so thoroughly enjoy the level of pain that it would cause the rest of the Giants; so much that they would allow their own deaths. And he knew what it would do to anyone else who ever learned their story!

And I've finally gotten to the heart of my reply to you. :) Covenant took away Foul's ability to do anything in the physical world. Nothing Foul could do, not the Illearth Stone, not his minions, nothing, could overpower white gold. If not for Covenant, he would have gone on and on. Plus, Covenant contained Foul where they were. Stuck where he was with only his mental powers.

And he was facing a Giant.

True, Despite cannot be entirely eradicated. But his strength is only that of the Despite of the mind he has access to. And in the Purified Foamfollower, that was exceedingly small. And Foamfollower taught the spectres how to do it.

*WHEW* Yeah, maybe I've filled in some gaps for SRD. I'm sure he wouldn't mind. :)

Ryzel wrote:I disagree with you here. We have no way of knowing how thoroughly the earthpower was tested in the time of the old lords. I agree that Kevin might be relatively untested but I seem to remember that Berek had a LOT of enemies waiting to kill him when he first got the earthpower.
Well, I did say "probably." :) We just don't know. In Berek's case, we don't know who was left for him to fight after the Fire-Lions. When the Raver King was killed, did the surviving enemies lose their insanity and become good, or at least not evil, again? Or, since it was such a nasty war, were there so few enemies left that they all ran in fear from this guy who just unleashed such power? Berek might never have come close to being pushed to the edge of despair after he gained enough power to Desecrate.

When <I>turiya</I> and <I>moksha</I> corrupted the Demondim, Loric may or may not have ever thought the end was near. It must have been at least a pretty good fight, though, since he felt the need to make the hugely powerful <I>krill</I>.

Ryzel wrote:This is an interesting factor, what did earthpower need the Staff of Law for? It is said that it supported the law, possibly the fact that you had it made the law less mutable than it had previously been. Just like having a written language makes a language less mutable than having just a spoken language.
<I>Unbelievably</I> good analogy!!!
Ryzel wrote:1. Earthpower is not a stable power, it can change to suit different circumstances. The Elohim seems to be the preferred agents of change in most cases, but sometimes the earthpower "itself" seems to take direct action as with Berek.
Yeah. In ways, maybe the Earthpower is in a state of flux. But let me offer these analogies for Earthpower:
1) <I>Brahman</I> is sort of the Hindu equivalent of God. The definitions that I like best, which I've posted at this site before, are "The irreducible ground of existence. The essence of every thing." & "The eternal, imperishable Absolute. The supreme nondual reality of Vedanta." Everything in all Reality is an expression of Brahman. (I like this analogy, because SRD uses other Hindu, and Buddhist, words in TCTC.)
2) "String Theory" is what I think it's called. The idea is that THE fundamental building blocks of EVERYTHING are these sort of vibrating strings of energy. No substance, just vibrating energy. And the different ways these strings can vibrate, and combine with each other, determine the nature of the quarks that make up protons, neutrons, electrons, photons, etc. (Or maybe the strings make the things that make quarks. The theory isn't complete, and I don't know too much about it anyway.)
3) <I>Every single thing</I> that ever happens with any computer program is ultimately reducable to 0's and 1's. It's all binary. Combinations of the two digits make everything possible on computers.

These things all obey certain laws, but allow anything you can think of.
Ryzel wrote:4. Another point to consider is that Lord Foul never used the Staff of Law himself. This suggests that it might have been resistant to him, i.e. impossible for him to use as he was outside the law.
Prothall had considered along these lines, saying, "perhaps he feared to use a tool not made for his hand."
Ryzel wrote:But while it existed it supported the earthpower and made it impossible for Lord Foul to retrieve the Illearth Stone (which I consider the antithesis of earthpower in the Land). Foul had to get Drool to unearth (pun intended) the stone before he could get it and Drool needed the Staff to do this suggesting that it might be impossible without it.
Could be. I'm remembering Drool blasting away the dirt and rocks, digging for the Stone, but I can't find this anywhere. Maybe I made it up. I figured the Staff was the only thing in the Land that had the power to dig as much as was necessary.
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Post by Fist and Faith »

KaosArcana wrote:
Fist and Faith wrote:
KaosArcana wrote:The Haruchai already had this ability. Remember when Brinn spoke to Covenant in _The Wounded Land_? Also, the Bloodguard used this form of communication as well, I believe.
Yeah, I remember. I've wondered if that's how the New Lords came up with the idea. Which makes me wonder why Kevin and his Lords didn't.
They didn't need it. Remember the Lords had no means of communication over long distance until they came up with
something at Hile Troy's insistance? It may be in the later Wards Kevin's Lore covered something similar to what they already came up with.
That's possible. But then, I only suggested the possibility that the New Lords developed their mindmeld while trying to come up with something like the <I>Haruchai</I> mind-speech. It's also possible that they were trying to do exactly what they did - find a way to share health and heart. Too many unknowns here. <B>Hey Stephen! Help us out here!</B>
KaosArcana wrote:Or they may have just found the practice creepy. I know I'm a private enough person that I wouldn't want ANYONE peering into my mind.
Right?!? I'm with you. Maybe the Oath of Peace makes people more trusting and sharing. But sheesh!

KaosArcana wrote:To me, what the mindmeld does is perhaps allow the Lords to see things from each other's viewpoints ... a potentially valuable tool, but I think that Elena showed that the mindmeld didn't bequeath any wisdom that wasn't already present among the Lords.
That's for sure. I can't figure the meld out. If it was only used to help them support each other, and/or share learned information, that'd be great. It clearly gave Elena no wisdom. (Unless she was an idiot beforehand :)) But I have a vague memory of what you said about the Lords using the meld to choose their High Lord. Do you know where that's stated? I really wish it didn't say that! Let me quote again:
And when it was practiced purely, melding brought the health and heart of any Lord to the aid of all the others.
Maybe the part about "practiced purely" means that's its primary use. It certainly does other things, like allowing a sharing of knowledge, and what you said. But those things <I>can</I> be done, if to a lesser degree, verbally. This kind of support, though, - I envision a warm enveloping, almost a physical thing - is unique. Maybe that's why they invented it, or kept it after accidentally stumbling onto it, in the first place. Maybe what's most important to the New Lords is the strength of this specific kind of support/sharing of one's self. If so, ... duh.

Because no, they sure don't use the meld to pick their High Lord based on strength/determination. I can't imagine that Elena was stronger than Mhoram in the way that made <I>samadhi</I> fear him when they touched. Nor do they use the meld to pick the High Lord based on wisdom . I, too, am positive that Mhoram would not have used the <I>Power of Command</I> even if he had had months to ponder it. Yet Elena used it within, what, hours of having first heard of it?! So, Elena:
1) believed those who argued that Kevin did NOT despair are wrong, and
2) had what amounts to an unverifiable fantasy that Kevin had strength that an "unholocausted soul" (good phrase, that) can't imagine, and so,
3) made a HUGE decision without regard for any possible consequences, even though Amok had just warned her of the possibility of unforseen consequences.

My hero!

I know many have already seen all that, but I spelled it all out again so that I could ask this question: Is this truly a flaw of SRD's? He clearly needed someone to make such a rash decision and fulfill Foul's prophecy ("Before the end of those days are numbered, I will have the command of life and death in my hand."), and it wouldn't make sense for anyone other than a High Lord to be in that position. So he needed someone in that position who clearly didn't belong there. Was up wit' dat?
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Post by [Syl] »

I can't really answer that question with anything other than a question.

Why do so many writers of fantasy feel compelled to include a prophecy? Is it because prophecy is a framework for myth-making? It seems to be something of a pitfall, an unavoidable tour de force. Yes, we know that you know how the story ends. Foreshadowing is a much less heavy-handed way of pointing that out.
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Post by KaosArcana »

Fist doth say:
KaosArcana wrote:
To me, what the mindmeld does is perhaps allow the Lords to see things from each other's viewpoints ... a potentially valuable tool, but I think that Elena showed that the mindmeld didn't bequeath any wisdom that wasn't already present among the Lords.
That's for sure. I can't figure the meld out. If it was only used to help them support each other, and/or share learned information, that'd be great. It clearly gave Elena no wisdom. (Unless she was an idiot beforehand ) But I have a vague memory of what you said about the Lords using the meld to choose their High Lord. Do you know where that's stated? I really wish it didn't say that! Let me quote again: Quote:
Yeah. Covenant and Troy are talking:
"No. I mean, why is she High Lord-- instead of Mhoram?"

"What does it matter?" said Troy irritably. "The Council chose her.
A couple of years ago-- when Osondrea, the old High Lord, died.
They put their minds together-- you must have noticed when you
were here before how the Lords can pool their thoughts, think
together-- and she was elected."
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Post by Fist and Faith »

Thanks :) I never would have remembered where that was, or even which book. You'd think I would have remembered that it was Troy, since it always seems so strange to have TC talk with someone using the same dialect and colloquialisms.

Sylvanus,
I never thought of that. Excellent question! It does seem to create problems. In TCTC, it actually serves a purpose, though - annoying Covenant. "I'm not Berek!!" But since so many other things annoyed him anyway, it may not have been necessary.
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Post by Damelon »

The unanswered question in this discussion about mind-melds is how the Lords lost the ability after Mhoram's time. If they had retained that knowledge the Raver would never have been able to master the Council/Clave. They would have known him for what he was. Did the third ward blind them from the ability to mind-meld?
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Post by Damelon »

The unanswered question in this discussion about mind-melds is how the Lords lost the ability after Mhoram's time. If they had retained that knowledge the Raver would never have been able to master the Council/Clave. They would have known him for what he was. Did the third ward blind them from the ability to mind-meld?
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Post by KaosArcana »

Damelon:


The unanswered question in this discussion about mind-melds is how the Lords lost the ability after Mhoram's time. If they had retained that knowledge the Raver would never have been able to master the Council/Clave. They would have known him for what he was. Did the third ward blind them from the ability to mind-meld?

I think the Lords lost the capacity to do the mind-meld probably
around the same time they lost their Earthsight. They wouldn't
have needed the meld to tell them he was a Raver if they had
the Earthsight.

Question is, did they lose the ability through a lack of lore or did
they lose it because of the Earthpower's corruption into the
Sunbane?
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Post by MokshaTuriyaSamadhi Raver »

Wasn't there various quotes about how a meld wouldn't work as a test?

Evil can become so powerful that it can wear the guise of good without fear of discovery.

And if the High Wood test can be mastered then surely the mind meld would pose little resistance to a Sunbane fuelled Raver
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Post by Fist and Faith »

KaosArcana wrote:
Damelon wrote:The unanswered question in this discussion about mind-melds is how the Lords lost the ability after Mhoram's time. If they had retained that knowledge the Raver would never have been able to master the Council/Clave. They would have known him for what he was. Did the third ward blind them from the ability to mind-meld?

I think the Lords lost the capacity to do the mind-meld probably
around the same time they lost their Earthsight. They wouldn't
have needed the meld to tell them he was a Raver if they had
the Earthsight.

Question is, did they lose the ability through a lack of lore or did
they lose it because of the Earthpower's corruption into the
Sunbane?
Excellent questions and comments! And though I don't have any theories for these issues ( 8O I'm as surprised as you!), let me make this observation. The Earthsight required no lore, before <I>or after</I> the Sunbane. The typical inhabitant of the Land in the 1st Chronicles didn't know any lore, and neither did Covenant. They were all just, as Covenant put it, "attuned" to the Land. But, although neither Covenant nor the Land's inhabitants had it in the 2nd Chronicles, Linden did. Fine, Covenant hadn't had any hurtloam. As in TPTP, his leprosy made him as numb to the Earthsight as physical sensation. But what about the people? Why Linden but not them? Were they taught that it was an evil thing, and told from birth to fight against the ability?

About the 3rd Ward... We aren't actually told that anyone ever tried to use it. Certainly not the Clave, since "It is lore for that which no longer exists. It has no value under the Sunbane." And a Rider says, "Little good it did <I>them</I>" (italics mine), not, "Little good it did them. And we couldn't figure it out either." In fact, when Covenant said, "The Third Ward? Did they find the Third Ward?" the reply should have been, "'Ward'? Is that what those are called? What are they? What do they do?" Because this far down the line, I can't imagine they know anything about Kevin's Lore or the Wards. The Lords after Mhoram wouldn't have been practicing it. They must have accidentally stumbled upon it, and then <I>not</I> tried to figure it out. They abandoned Kevin's Lore before figuring out either of the first two. And by the time of the 2nd Chronicles, the legends were so full of lies that I can't imagine how the Riders knew about it.
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Post by amanibhavam »

not necessarily; the 3rd Ward might have been found when still the New Lords were ripe in their power; they just did not try to unlock its mysteries, because they had turned away from Kevin's Lore; but the fact and knowledge might have preserved over the centuries
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Post by Fist and Faith »

It's certainly possible. But I figure that, if everyone has been taught that aliantha is poison, Foul and <I>samadhi</I> probably wouldn't have wanted them to know about this incredible source of power that might do away with the Sunbane, and would have caused it to either fade from the people's knowledge, or told them that it, too, was a poison/evil thing. And yet, that's not what happened. I just wonder how SRD explains it.
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Post by danlo »

I have been asked, by a number of fellow servants, 2 comment on this issue. I don't really think these requests have anything 2 do w/any preceived "xpertise" I may, or may not, possess on the Chronicles, but r more due 2 the fact that my vow of ahimsa bears certain similatities 2 The Oath of Peace. I do strive 2 practice ahimsa in my own affairs as does the character I take my name from in David Zindell's The Broken God. Ahimsa is by no means a new concept, I believe it dates back 2 the beginnings of Hindu/Buddist thought (and is probably in the Upanishads as well, 4 all I know). I'm sure there r some modern-day cults and/or religions that advocate this practice, but according 2 my world-religion researches the Janists (primarily in India--there's that SRD/India connection again...) are the oldest practitioners of Ahimsa: "Never harming or killing another living thing, even in one's thoughts"

Like the white-gold, ahimsa, obviously, is a paradox in and of itself, as is pacifism. "Would u lay down in front of a tank, 4 ur beliefs, knowing u would surely die?" Does absolute faith in ur beliefs make u that much "stronger" given any possible resurrection or reincarnation? Only God (or the Creator) knos...So The Oath of Peace, like ahimsa, boils down 2 a matter of faith and beliefs. Faith is a completely transcendent thing as is God. Despite Earthpower, perhaps the all the New Lords have is this belief system, that, I guess, I'll call faith.
"Remember the Oath of Peace. In the maze where you go, it is your lifeline. It preserves you against Soulcrusher's purposes, hidden and savage. Remember the Oath. It may be that hope misleads. But hate-hate corrupts. I have been too quick to hate. I have become like what I abhor."
A dear old member of the Watch, Juntel, postulated, in the original, archived, "Oath of Peace" thread that in order 2 avoid Kevin's despair and access to dangerous power the New Lords strove 2 create new of rules in this "game" v. Foul. Foul being a different level of being acknowledged no Law and spat upon such a game of "belief". Thus, like others have alluded 2 above, he goes on to say that the New Lords essentially tied @least 1 of their hands behind their back. I personally, think that if Foul was active, @ all, during his "preceived" absence btween the Ritual and the beginnings of the New Lords that he may have secretly fostered such belief. If u r with me, @ all, on this supposition u can c that if it did really happen it bcomes a game w/in a game w/in a game...

Foul tells TC, "You cannot hope." and whether or not the white gold was the true motive in Drool's botched summoning--perhaps the Creator was even smarter than we thought...Because TC is the x-factor: If Foul did have a hand in this game by "boxing in" the New Lords through such a belief system (thus making their belief in their own xistence all the more "real" 2 them) he surely didn't count on someone coming along who didn't nessesarily believe in their xistence or some1 who was outside "the box" and on more of an even playing field w/Foul. Perhaps Foul was inadvertently doing TC a favor by telling him "You cannot hope" when Foamfollower astutely points out that "hope may mislead". Along w/what I have already said re: "the game" the more the New Lord's xistence bcame all the more "real" 2 them: via their life-purpose in upholing the OofP, it is no wonder TC is "closed" 2 them.

Under Juntel's old quote I found this passage I wrote way back when, mayb it will offer more fft...
I can't remember who said it above but I think faith is a key word--Covenant's only real faith--if you want to call it that--was leprosy--and it is a type of faith, or is it really?--but I think the question w/him is-is faith the same as discipline? That's a tough question--the only thing that kept him going was the lepers need to survive @ all costs--to keep moving--that's sorta the same thing for alcoholics: you know you have a disease, it's going to kill you and you must work on it everyday to make sure that doesn't happen--but maybe what Covenant didn't have was faith in a power outside himself, essential to keep alcoholics sober--in other words: a way to get out of his head--to stop all the crazy thinking and get off his pity-pot--perhaps Covenant was being shown faith by the Oath of Peace--he definetly tried, he didn't want to kill again--yet he kept feeling responsiple r all the deaths he left behind--maybe that was the real "stinking thinking" perhaps Foul's real genius was keeping Covenant in his own head--perhaps everytime the title "Unbeliever" was uttered Foul was laughing his ass off-- Foul himself used that title in a very, very condesending way, I feel even more than "groveler".
Looking back at my old quote perhaps Foul said "Unbeliever" in such a way as 2 hide an impending doubt, or fear... :?
Last edited by danlo on Wed Feb 19, 2003 1:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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the 3rd ward

Post by Forestal »

it is said, somewhere, in the 2nd chronicles, that the 3rd ward was found but not researched... therefore, how could the lords know that the lore was bereft and useless?

also:

kevin made the wards in order of the previous ward's understanding, the next ward would be open to them. after they had given up on kevin's lore, they found the 3rd ward; does this not suggest that kevin intended this? and hents, the 3rd ward was discovered just as he had planned?
if this is true, as it was not researched, the lords did not know if it worked or not, they did not realise that kevin possably wanted them to turn away form his lore, if not only to further it, and it could quite possably have stopped the sunbane...

i hate that god damn sunbane :( ah... forests... i mourn...
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Re: the 3rd ward

Post by Fist and Faith »

danlo,
I'm not sure how to read this. Are you suggesting that Foul had a hand in the Oath of Peace? Maybe <I>he</I> knew that such a philosophy would be incompatible with Kevin's Lore, and suggested it as soon as people began returning to the Land?

Forestal wrote:it is said, somewhere, in the 2nd chronicles, that the 3rd ward was found but not researched... therefore, how could the lords know that the lore was bereft and useless?
I don't remember it saying that it wasn't researched, only "For all the good it did them." But I'd assume it wasn't much looked at, since they had not been using Kevin's Lore for some time. (We don't know how long after Mhoram's time the 3rd was found.) They didn't <I>want</I> that lore, and hadn't mastered the first two anyway, so they probably wouldn't have been able to do much with it.
Forestal wrote:also: kevin made the wards in order of the previous ward's understanding, the next ward would be open to them. after they had given up on kevin's lore, they found the 3rd ward; does this not suggest that kevin intended this? and hents, the 3rd ward was discovered just as he had planned?
The 2nd Ward was discovered because of the white gold, which Kevin couldn't have planned for. Since we don't know how the 3rd was found, we don't know that it wasn't because of something else that Kevin didn't plan. He had things set up so that the wards would be discovered in order using <I>his</I> lore. But they were developing <I>new</I> lore. No telling what could have happened.
Forestal wrote:i hate that god damn sunbane :( ah... forests... i mourn...
Amen.
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Post by danlo »

F&F u understood what I said! 8O Praise Jah!
fall far and well Pilots!
Forestal

but...

Post by Forestal »

Forestal wrote:
it is said, somewhere, in the 2nd chronicles, that the 3rd ward was found but not researched... therefore, how could the lords know that the lore was bereft and useless?

I don't remember it saying that it wasn't researched, only "For all the good it did them." But I'd assume it wasn't much looked at, since they had not been using Kevin's Lore for some time. (We don't know how long after Mhoram's time the 3rd was found.) They didn't want that lore, and hadn't mastered the first two anyway, so they probably wouldn't have been able to do much with it.
i think, that the riders lied... personally, i dont think they looked in2 the 3rd ward at all... this would be quite possible if the lords had already be corrupted, so if they were already corrupt, they wouldn't look in2 it and as such would say it was useless when infact it might not ahve been.

Forestal wrote:
also: kevin made the wards in order of the previous ward's understanding, the next ward would be open to them. after they had given up on kevin's lore, they found the 3rd ward; does this not suggest that kevin intended this? and hents, the 3rd ward was discovered just as he had planned?

The 2nd Ward was discovered because of the white gold, which Kevin couldn't have planned for. Since we don't know how the 3rd was found, we don't know that it wasn't because of something else that Kevin didn't plan. He had things set up so that the wards would be discovered in order using his lore. But they were developing new lore. No telling what could have happened.
accourding to his lore... yes... i can see that, but, if the new lore they were developing could unlock the 3rd ward, doesn't that suggest that the new lore they were developing was already a part of kevin's lore that they did not know of yet?

because, if the wards only made themselves available when the last wards had been mastered, whatever caused them to find the 3rd ward must have been as powerful as whatever is in the 1st and 2nd wards, and as such the 3rd ward would be useful?

my 2 cents.
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hmmmm

Post by Forestal »

i was just reading another post about the legends in the 1st ward etc, and i had a minor mind-bullet...
The 2nd Ward was discovered because of the white gold, which Kevin couldn't have planned for. Since we don't know how the 3rd was found, we don't know that it wasn't because of something else that Kevin didn't plan. He had things set up so that the wards would be discovered in order using his lore. But they were developing new lore. No telling what could have happened.
perhaps kevin added the songs about the white gold because he forsaw its coming and saw how much the lord would know. in the same thought, perhaps kevin made the white gold the key to the 2nd ward?

maybe the songs of the white gold were put there so that the lords would summon covenant, bringing the white gold with him and making them able 2 unlock the 2nd ward?

this would also fit in with my ideas on the 3rd ward and the lords turning from kevins lore, only to find more of it and should have turned back.
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Post by [Syl] »

perhaps kevin added the songs about the white gold because he forsaw its coming and saw how much the lord would know. in the same thought, perhaps kevin made the white gold the key to the 2nd ward?

maybe the songs of the white gold were put there so that the lords would summon covenant, bringing the white gold with him and making them able 2 unlock the 2nd ward?
i don't think that's very likely. my reasoning is thus: TC was summoned in a manner of a contest between LF and the Creator for their purposes. Even if Kevin knew Foul would return (a subject of much debate), I doubt he knew Foul's mind well enough to predict he'd summon Covenant, and Kevin was not a prophet (seer, yes, correct?). If he could predict what the Creator would do... well, someone like that could probably tie Foul in a knot and lock him in a closet.
"It is not the literal past that rules us, save, possibly, in a biological sense. It is images of the past. Each new historical era mirrors itself in the picture and active mythology of its past or of a past borrowed from other cultures. It tests its sense of identity, of regress or new achievement against that past.”
-George Steiner
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