Thesholds
Posted: Sun Mar 20, 2011 5:27 pm
Anele is the last hope of the Land. His birth was made possible by the death of the last forestall breaking the Law of Life. Somehow through the process of Holian being brought back to life, and Anele with her, he was infused with a massive amount of earthpower. He expended all that earthpower to enable Jeremiah’s freedom from the croyel, and ultimately from his self-imposed exile within his mind. Anele’s life was enabled because a threshold or boundary between life and death was further damaged because of the law breaker, Caer Caveral. Jeremiah’s seemingly innate ability plus the gift of earthpower from Anele enabled him to resurrect himself through the bone structure; he broke through a threshold or boundary within himself, his Law of Death if you will.
So Anele is supposed to be the last hope of the Land. The forestals were in their way supposed to be the last hope of the One Forest. They were placed there as defenders, as forbiddings in a way. Their power allowed them to encase an elohim into the Colossus as an interdict or forbidding, to create a boundary or threshold that a certain evil—ravers in the case of the Colossus—could not cross. Anele said in AATE that without forbidding, there is too little time. The Magister of Andelain said in TC’s trip down memory lane as Timewarden that wood cannot remember the lore of the Colossus, the necessary forbidding of evils. It is clear that Anele was either channeling this knowledge through the forestals, maybe because of some innate connection he has to them because of Caer Caveral’s sacrifice for him. Or maybe he has this knolwedge without directly knowing it because of this gift of earthpower, not unlike Wildwood carving the runes on Linden's staff, having the knowledge that they needed to be there but not directly knowing the specifics of why. Did Caer Caveral know that this knowledge would be needed in the future, and so gave it Anele through his gift of sacrifice, or was it written into the exchange when Caer Caveral enabled his life through earthpower?
The thought of sacrifice makes me return to the issue of boundaries and thresholds. When TC gave his life in WGW, and then allowed Foul to burn the venom from his soul with wild magic thus enabling his spirit to become pure and remain as a defender of the Arch—essentially enabling him to become Timewarden—did he do so knowingly? Or was it just that his particular sacrifice in that particular way at that particular time made his becoming Timewarden possible? Either way, his apparently innate relationship with time—the fact that he himself is the white gold—plays a part. He crossed the threshold of life to remain as a spiritual defender; he crossed the boundary of limitation and mortality to participate in the infinite. He crossed back when Linden resurrected him with Law, wild magic and the krill (could the stone be a part of this?), but was not whole(ly present). He fully returned when he used the krill’s magic in the caesure to seal off the cracks in his mind from the slippage back into the infinite.
Anele crossed a threshold of death when his birth was enabled by Caer Caveral; he crossed the same boundary the other way when he poured his earthpower essence into Jeremiah. He is the last hope of the Land; it is just possible that his spirit remains as a defender of the boundary between life and death—Lifewarden? Even if not in this specific way, I don’t think we’ve seen the last of Anele. His palendromic counterpart of Elena returned to sacrifice herself for the company; Anele’s final sacrifice may not have been what he did for Jeremiah.
So Anele is supposed to be the last hope of the Land. The forestals were in their way supposed to be the last hope of the One Forest. They were placed there as defenders, as forbiddings in a way. Their power allowed them to encase an elohim into the Colossus as an interdict or forbidding, to create a boundary or threshold that a certain evil—ravers in the case of the Colossus—could not cross. Anele said in AATE that without forbidding, there is too little time. The Magister of Andelain said in TC’s trip down memory lane as Timewarden that wood cannot remember the lore of the Colossus, the necessary forbidding of evils. It is clear that Anele was either channeling this knowledge through the forestals, maybe because of some innate connection he has to them because of Caer Caveral’s sacrifice for him. Or maybe he has this knolwedge without directly knowing it because of this gift of earthpower, not unlike Wildwood carving the runes on Linden's staff, having the knowledge that they needed to be there but not directly knowing the specifics of why. Did Caer Caveral know that this knowledge would be needed in the future, and so gave it Anele through his gift of sacrifice, or was it written into the exchange when Caer Caveral enabled his life through earthpower?
The thought of sacrifice makes me return to the issue of boundaries and thresholds. When TC gave his life in WGW, and then allowed Foul to burn the venom from his soul with wild magic thus enabling his spirit to become pure and remain as a defender of the Arch—essentially enabling him to become Timewarden—did he do so knowingly? Or was it just that his particular sacrifice in that particular way at that particular time made his becoming Timewarden possible? Either way, his apparently innate relationship with time—the fact that he himself is the white gold—plays a part. He crossed the threshold of life to remain as a spiritual defender; he crossed the boundary of limitation and mortality to participate in the infinite. He crossed back when Linden resurrected him with Law, wild magic and the krill (could the stone be a part of this?), but was not whole(ly present). He fully returned when he used the krill’s magic in the caesure to seal off the cracks in his mind from the slippage back into the infinite.
Anele crossed a threshold of death when his birth was enabled by Caer Caveral; he crossed the same boundary the other way when he poured his earthpower essence into Jeremiah. He is the last hope of the Land; it is just possible that his spirit remains as a defender of the boundary between life and death—Lifewarden? Even if not in this specific way, I don’t think we’ve seen the last of Anele. His palendromic counterpart of Elena returned to sacrifice herself for the company; Anele’s final sacrifice may not have been what he did for Jeremiah.