Anyone else think that the blight and the food blight are connected and that both will end when the tinkers/aiel sing the song?
That the spoiling of the food was related to Rand's "connection-to-the-land-symbolism-thingy". I was under the impression that the DO was responsible for the bad weather, and Rand was responsible for the food. To be honest though, I don't really know anything about this subject, so my opinion is effectively void.
I do happen to agree with you about the Tinkers though. I think that the Song will be necessary for the world to survive after Tarmon Gaidon. After all, the ecosystem for the planet is basically shot. And what better way to solve this problem than to take advantage of a plot element introduced in book one, and (uneccesarily) repeated in almost every subsequent book up until now?
"Take the Gleeman!" Rand and Mat cried, throwing Thom to the Myrddraal. Then they ran away as fast as they could, and Thom's screams quickly faded into the distance along with any inconvenient feelings of guilt.
Blight
- 21/04/2010 05:21:41 AM
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I always thought ..
- 21/04/2010 07:47:09 AM
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Seems like it'd be the opposite, wouldn't it? (AND GODDAMMIT THERE IS NO SONG)
- 21/04/2010 05:46:37 PM
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but the food spoiling when dark rand appears def points a finger at rand affecting the food supply
- 21/04/2010 05:49:15 PM
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The song
- 21/04/2010 06:46:21 PM
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No, that wasn't "the song" it was a bystander's persepective of Aiel seedsinging
- 22/04/2010 06:57:48 AM
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Don't make me explain myself!
- 21/04/2010 08:19:27 PM
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- 21/04/2010 08:19:27 PM
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Eh... it's possible. but it doesn't seem like they're Mat-memories
- 22/04/2010 07:00:43 AM
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Re: Seems like it'd be the opposite, wouldn't it? (AND GODDAMMIT THERE IS NO SONG)
- 21/04/2010 10:30:57 PM
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Ahahaha, I read the capitalized DO as Dark One, not the word itself.
- 22/04/2010 05:02:40 AM
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