Active Users:173 Time:17/05/2024 05:34:12 AM
Right, then; here we go.... Joel Send a noteboard - 03/06/2012 08:45:20 AM
Has it actually been confirmed that Ishy corrupted the Seanchan prophecies, or is that simply the conclusion most people have drawn?

It is not confirmed that Ishamael did it, but yes it's confirmed by Sanderson that the Seanchan KC prophecies have been to an extent corrupted, and also that some of the Foretelling from the damane which are also part of the Essanik Cycle like the KC aren't genuine (in part because the Seanchan don't understand what a foretelling really is , and also because it's what happens with captives... they often tell you what you want to hear... remember how Tuon lost control and had a damane beaten for a foretelling she didn't like. Brandon said some of that happened, so any prophecy sounding too triumphant for the Empire is kind of suspicious).

Ishamael couldn't easily corrupt the Westlands's prophecies. The prophecies in the Westlands exist in way too many copies. The White Tower arose right after the Breaking and was always too powerful, and too rich in scholars, to allow for corruptions. Corruptions can only be found in biased translations and interpretations, but that can't fool scholars of the prophecies, who compare several translations and the Old Tongue original. At best, it's not impossible Ishamael during the early breaking managed to leak false foretelling, but at the time he didn't exactly have much information to do this.... There may be a few distortions.. a few words here and there that were taking down wrong, or which got altered in copies (though considering the nature of the prophecies... Foretellers would have been very cautious). Mostly, there must be many foretelling that got lost and never made it into the KC.

In Seanchan, the full Westlands KC prophecies were introduced a thousand years ago only, by Luthair's expedition (it's very likely some of the KC prophecies, especially those from the WOS, also survived in Seanchan). Ishamael is highly suspected (BWB) of having been Hawkwing's main advisor Moerad. That advisor is behind the oversea expeditions in the first place. He knew what they'd find on the other side, so it was easy enough for him to craft meaningful corruptions. It was fairly easy for Ishamael to corrupt the copy of the KC Luthair brought along, and introduce new verses. He just had to offer him an amazing copy as a departure gift... Changed, removed, altered verses here and there wouldn't be noticed until it was way too late, with too few versions of the Westlands' version to even know which one was right.

In Seanchan, we know the Empire once it rose "uniformized" the Prophecies, ie: eliminated versions that didn't conform to the Imperial one. The Imperial version of the KC is integrated in a larger set of prophecies (many of which were made by damane, thus after Luthair) known as the Essanik Cycle.

Depending on how long Ishamael was free before first falling dormant behind the Seals (long enough to ensure LTTs suicide, perhaps his one great service to the world,) I think he could have corrupted Randland and Seanchan versions with equal ease, for the same reason: He could do it at the source. He could plausibly have acted later though, since deep knowledge of the Prophecies is uncommon. Professional scholars could surely notice, but change and discovery would have to occur within a single life time, else original quotes would be attributed to mistranslation, misinterpretation, transcription error or (wait for it...) sabotage. :P Obviously Ishamael would not create, well, obvious corruptions, knowing they would need to pass long term scrutiny from scholars familiar with the originals. Given the history and skepticism regarding similarly ancient real texts, and their interpretation, it is plausible to imagine someone with Ishamaels knowledge, powers and longevity doing something similar with Randland prophecies. If people today can credibly claim Nicaeas NT standardization everything from suppressing Gnosticism to power crazed wholesale revision of BOTH Testaments (despite leaving the Tanakh untouched,) Ishamael attempting something similar is at least as plausible.

It just feels self-serving to dismiss every inconvenient Seanchan prophecy as "Ishy corruption," then treat all those in the Westlands (thrice as old, correspondingly more vulnerable to written/oral preservation errors we know common to ancient records) as Randland Gospel.

Why is that one "more reliable"? Where is it written that Ishy badly corrupted the Seanchan prophecies but left those in the Westlands untouched? Bearing in mind that it was at Hawkwings court WEST of the Aryth where he is generally understood to have been chief counselor.

That just doesn't make sense. You forget the WT.

The place the BA tried (often successfully) to run clandestinely almost from its inception? Remember the Tower learning of the Dragons Rebirth via Foretelling only witnessed by the Amyrlin and three others (one of whom died instantly)? Remember the BA nonetheless and almost immediately assassinating said Amyrlin, then hunting down all boys born at the time and thwarting Moiraine and Siuans attempts to find them? No, I did not forget the WT; I just recalled its limitations, and that it has always been more gray than purely white. On one occasion (probably more) Ishy practically ran the place.

Ishamaels position is interesting because it forced him to play the long game. With the BA at his disposal he could have leveled the Tower just as he did the Ten Nations, or found and purged every copy of the Prophecies of the Dragon, but his situation required sparing institutions that might later be vital assets. Come to that, the Prophecies' continued existence is strong, though inconclusive, evidence he had a hand in them as well. Too, there is a real possibility the BA and other Darkfriends slipped in some Shadow prophecies undetected. It is certainly odd to think Ishy remade the Westlands, not once, but twice, yet left both Tower and Prophecies unmolested.

In any event, kneeling to the Crystal Throne and binding the Nine Moons to him are not mutually exclusive; if anything, quite the opposite, as an allegiance to the Empress would unquestionably be a bond. The prophecy we have is not clear whom, if anyone, will be on the controlling end of that bond, but does explicitly state it will exist.

The Nine Moons aren't the Empress but the whole Court, or they refer to Tuon.

Those are two of many possible interpretations. If "the Crystal Throne" can plausibly be metonymy (which I concede,) the same is at least as true of "the Nine Moons." Tuons pre-coronation title was "Daughter of the Nine Moons," implying the Empress herself (may she live forever,) not the court little more than her extension.

Either way, it seems like the binding already occured when Mat married Tuon. He joined the Nine Moons as Prince of Ravens is one interpretation, his bond to the DotNM is the other interpretation. We just haven't seen how Mat's wedding will impact on bringing the Seanchan back to the rest of the Light.

Possible, but, strictly speaking, marriage bound Mat, not Rand, fulfilling no prophecy "he [the Dragon]
will bind the Nine Moons to him." That suggests a direct link between Rand and the Empress; that, plus adam and Tuons sul'dam status, is why many long thought she would be one of two women using the Domination Band on Rand at TG.

Rand knows all too well people can be involuntarily Bonded; what if the prophecy means THAT?

Not a chance.

I would say "possible but not plausible," but meant it as a reminder not to assume too much of any prophecy; remember what happened to Croesus. ;)

Seanchan prophecies of Rand himself are frequently cited, yet never directly, which can only be deliberate.

Exactly.

Fair enough, but that only tells us RJ/Sanderson are not putting all cards on the table; it still does not tell us what cards they hold.

If it even contains that verse; correct me if I am wrong, but I do not believe we know if it was recorded before or after Luthair departed the Westlands.

The first prophecies that were colliged as what would become the KC surfaced during the War of Shadow itself, many others surfaced during the Breaking. Jordan did not give us a very precise timeline, but he said the full KC existed by shortly after the Breaking. What had been preserved (many prophecies must have been lost) must have been colliged when the scattered groups of Aes Sedai came together at the founding of the WT.

It's not been added to since, we know that. So yes, the verse should be in Luthair's copy, unless Moerad removed or altered it. It's possible the Seanchan have not made the "unstained tower"/white tower connection.

I would not presume to question the WoG, but that means either 1) no Westlands prophecies of the Dragon have been made since the Breaking (except Gitara sending Tigraine to the Waste to conceive him, and Foretelling his birth as it happened :P) or 2) many such prophecies in the succeeding 3000 years are accepted, but not part of the KC as such. Common sense and Gitara suggest the latter, making the point semantic: Even if Ishy never corrupted the KC proper, he had many other equally valid and appealing targets. Any from periods he was free would be automatic immediate choices. It is ridiculous to think Luthair carried ONLY the Breaking-era KC to Seanchan, leaving behind any and all related prophecies from the 2000 years since. Any such Ishy already corrupted would have been Seanchan canon before the empires inception.

But anyway... as I said I'm pretty sure unstained tower didn't mean the White Tower but the Tower as it stands now, without the stain of the Shadow in it. Thus its final breaking so they can all bend knee to the old AS symbol, in the sense of creating a new reunified organization for male and female AS, in which the Guardians will join and thus the Servants will be balanced again (the Guardians will bring balance to the Servants, not the Guardians and Servants will balance one another... the Asha'man will bring balance to the Aes Sedai, by becoming the male Aes Sedai the Servants currently miss to be balanced), has not yet happened.

I agree with that general view, but none of it is certain; "the unstained tower"s meaning is VERY debatable. It does not even necessarily mean TV, but even if it does it could mean anything from purging the BA and Mesaana to ending the civil war to Dumai's Wells. Again, I hold with your general view, largely supported by Mins inevitable viewings, both those of Logain and the recent one of the Dragons Fang as an inspirational rather than terrifying symbol. However, I am leery of taking anything not explicit for granted in a series predicated on scrambling expectations and archetypes. If Jordan played it straight Moiraine would have imprisoned Thom in the ToG before going off to conceive Moridin with Rand, instead of those things being alluded to but in/averted.

That is one reason I do not expect Egwene to survive TG, or at least not lead the WT: I do not believe her suited to lead a "co-ed" WT (or perhaps "Gray Tower.") All the Bonded Aes Sedai in his wake, and in particular the two he personally Bonded, make Logain a far better choice, IMHO.

I don't agree the men/Logain are a better choice, and I think co-leadership is a counterproductive idea, furthering the gender divisions. The men will be invited back into the organization, but it will take a generation or two before the old prejudices start to wane. How the new Aes Sedai guild will be organized (we won't see much of that beside the "second founding";) depends on too many factors (will it be more federative - as it is now, or will it work to dissolve the current bonds? The time of the Ajah as political factions is over, I believe), but it can't be lead by a man, and not for a good while. There's just too much for Logain and co. to learn about organizations like the WT. He's no manager or administrator, merely a charismatic field commander. The male leaders' priorities will be to develop an internal organization suited for men, devoid of a military aspect, and how to anchor the men into the existing WT's training system (with help from the sisters, they'll need to develop saidin training - it's not the "as fast as possible, no matter if students die, and priority on blowing things up" methods of the BT that will help them, it's the established methods of the women groups) , and with the sisters, WO, WF develop a whole new program of mixed gender training. It's also the sisters who have all the scholars able to teach non-OP disciplines which the men will also have to learn. The Seafolk have the traditions of channellers in service to their people, and experience at making it work. The WO will kind of obviously be the main contributors to reforming Tower laws and develop the ethical code for channelers that will replace the Three Oaths down the line.

Developing a male internal organization would further a deep division whose repair is critical to any future unified channeling organization. Some techniques and training will always be exlusive to each gender due to saidin and saidars different and diametrically opposed natures, but the biggest challenge for any true channeler leaders is overcoming that to replicate the constructive give and take between them that drives the Wheel of Time itself. Fact is, all current Aes Sedai are horribly suited to that; 3000 years of cultural and institutional conditioning tell them one of the TVs chief duties is eliminating the mortal global threat of male channelers.

Part of why I expect Logain to become Amyrlin is it would go far toward breaking down female resistance to male channelers in one fell swoop, especially when he showed sound leadership. I still do not understand why people dismiss Logain as a leader despite the fact he was a minor noble before learning to channel and leading an army that conquered a sizable chunk of the Westlands. Why is the worldly experience of a backwoods village mayors 20 year old daughter so much greater? Logain may not be the best qualified, but is eminently more so than Egwene, and would consequently be a significant political improvement.

He has another critical experience she lacks: Channeling in and even leading co-ed links. Cohesively leading an integrated group of male AND female channelers will be the most vital role for any future Amyrlin. Logain is already doing it while Egwene has only begun considering OTHERS doing it. Far worse, her view of it is very maternalistic; despite knowing saidin is cleansed, she envisions Reds Bonding male channelers to maintain control, not be equal partners. She considers Reds Bonding Asha'man for control natural and necessary, but Asha'man Bonding AES SEDAI remains a personal and professional affront.

Such a double standard would be fatal to any future unity, but Egwene shows no sign of even recognizing, let alone trying to overcome, her prejudice. Logains group, on the other hand, treats it as a circumstantial necessary evil: SOMEONE must lead, and they cannot let it be those sent to gentle/kill them. If/when Aes Sedai attitudes change (as those in Rands vicinity largely have,) that necessity will, but they will not cede control until those receiving it demonstrate trustworthiness. Their mistrust is well founded on the Aes Sedais completely unfounded one. Thus a capable male Amyrlin experienced with and able to reassure both sides is highly desirable. Logain can bridge the gap as no woman except perhaps Nynaeve could.

And there's no good reason for dual-leadership, Lews Therin was a man and he lead all Aes Sedai. The big problem, when the Guild stopped functioning, surfaced when a woman decided to turn the female Aes Sedai into a faction...

That is the flip side of developing a distinct male internal organization: It deepens rather than bridges the vast existing divide. A single leader is vital to overcoming that, but a wise and experienced male one a far better means than a young strong willed village girl. That would be true even if virtually all Asha'man did not expect domination from a female Amyrlin (again, a well founded fear,) but is doubly so since they do. The best way to convince Asha'man they are not second class citizens is to have one lead; the best way to convince Aes Sedai they SHOULD not be is for one to lead well.

Under the unique leader there's forcibly need for men on whatever type of council/assembly they come up with to replace the current Hall - and the most prominent of these men could be Logain (if he lives and doesn't go out as a TG hero in a blaze of glory... many think he will) - but for now only a female Aes Sedai can lead that organization. The Seafolk, WO and former Asha'man will forcibly have a lot of influence on massive changes to the Aes Sedai's role and how they're run - to begin with they'll spark a return of the Aes Sedai to their nations of birth/choice. But it's clear the WT has the core of the future organization, and are the only ones who have the knowledge and experience to run it.

Of course, that the new unified organization won't emerge during TG. For TG, Egwene's makeshift alliance of all groups, to which the Asha'man are still missing but not for long, will have to make do. So yes, in that sense Logain will no doubt lead the Asha'man, for the duration of TG. The war, however, will be the crucible from which a unified organization will emerge.

In a way, that is the crux of it: There is no way in Shayol Ghul any but a few Asha'man will follow Egwene or any Aes Sedai at TG or anywhere else. They would follow WOs or WFs before taking any Aes Sedais orders. Tarmon Gaidon just raises the ante, because they came to follow the Dragon Reborn prophecied for 3000 years, who offered them power and glory, then Cleansed the Taint, saving them from madness and death. They will not simply shrug their shoulders and instead obey the girl-queen who brought the world to tell him HOW to fight TG instead of following him to it.

You're views of Egwene, I think, are fairly off. She has just the right mix of respect/understanding for the 3000 years of WT traditions and the youthful drive and determination to change things, without the inhibitions and taboos of older Aes Sedai. She also has the novices behind her now, the next generation, that will be trained very differently. Egwene would already have thrown a lot overboard, but Siuan made her understand the need and purpose of what has made the Tower, but she went too far in conservatism. Siuan held her back a lot, but her role near Egwene has now diminished, and now Egwene will have to absorb other influences and ideas. No way the WF and WO will follow a man for now.

Why not? The WFs and Sea Folk captains defer to male swordmasters in all combat; even the Mistress of Ships defers to hers in war. Likewise, WOs defer to chiefs on areas within their authority, even if the question of what falls within whose bailiwick can be hotly debated. Far from a barrier to male integration and authority, the Sea Folk and Aiel offer TV invaluable models.

Mens status in SF and Aiel society is in stark contrast to that in TV, where, because channelers lead and all channelers are women, every man is subordinate to even weak Aes Sedai. Gareth Bryne had to practically beg Egwene for even minimal authority over the army she asked him to lead, and was shocked she allowed the little he got. Understandably, since, with the slight exception of a few Greens, all other Aes Sedai treat each Tower Guard as a mere tool to be used until irreparably broken, then cast aside. Look how everyone, even the woman who wants to marry him, has treated Gawyn since the series began: The Usurper Towers repeated attempts to kill him, with the connivance of the Amyrlin who helped raise him, finally broke his steadfast loyalty, and his treatment from the Restored/Tower in Exile has been better only by comparison.

Maybe Moiraines return will help; her relationship with Lan is the single case in FOURTEEN BOOKS of ANY Aes Sedai treating ANY man as partner and equal. Moiraine takes the lead because of the nature of the Bond and Aes Sedai society, but rarely DEMANDS obedience, and never from entitlement or through the Bond, only on the strength of Lans willing oath. In fact, on several occasions she offers to release that oath, and the Bond, if he feels them too onerous.

Nynaeve, and, thanks to Rand and her noble rearing, maybe Elayne are the only other Aes Sedai capable of even conceiving such a relationship, let alone maintaining it. That definitely includes Egwene, so gratified Gawyn is finally a "partner" who mindlessly accedes to her every command. No, a thousand times no; even if her behavior with women and non-channelers were above reproach (which it hardly is,) she would remain completely unsuitable to lead a unified post-TG Tower, and if "her character development is complete" that will simply never change. That quote is ominous enough in light of her Dream of a mountain whose summit she can only reach by cooperating with a Seanchan woman. If her character development is complete by age twenty she was probably never suitable to lead anything larger than Emonds Field in the first place.

Be honest: If YOU were a male channeler, would you entrust your life and sanity to women who all saw you as a rabid dog, except a few who considered you a useful but very expendable tool? Most Greens have enough martial (and other... :winky:) passion to at least have some respect and compassion for men, but even most of them treat even their Warders more as beloved pets or steeds than as partners. You think I give Egwene too little credit, but I think you give her, and the organization so badly influencing her, too much.

You put on rosy glasses or something.

To say I find this comment ironic would be massive understatement. :P

There's no way in hell Rand can make the Seanchan Empress the top political leader. Even bending knee to her would amount to legitimizing her claim to hegemony. Right then and there Rand would lose the WT, the Asha'man, and most of the Westlands rulers. The only political leader the Westlands rulers may accept is the Amyrlin Seat, and the only leader the Seanchan will accept is their Empress. Fortuona and Egwene may have no choice to work together, but really... it's probably best the two groups stay apart yet agree to collaborate against the Shadow. And which leader can serve as liaison between Amyrlin and Empress? Perrin, of course. Perrin is the ta'veren political glue. Mat is the military ta'veren, Rand's job is Shai'tan/Moridin and co.

Oh, yes, Perrins weeks of discovering some Seanchan are not Darkfriends make him a much more qualified liason than the Empress' husband. :sarcasm: Do not distract me from listing Egwenes flaws by forcing me to list Perrins. :P

Elayne is the logical choice to lead the "free Westlands" politically, and to join Tuon as dual political leader. The Ever Victorious Army, and the Seanchans enlightened despotism, made Tuon political leader of the lands where they were victorious. Egwenes Dream does strongly suggest cooperation with her (in which case the veracity of "Egwenes character development is complete" goes out the window, because her primal fear and hatred of the Seanchan has been one of her strongest attributes for a dozen volumes.) It is just that Westlands leaders consider the Amyrlins counsel from necessity, not respect, while constantly wary of many hidden hooks. Egwene said it herself: Aes Sedai will plot and scheme until TG itself; the Westlands' other rulers know that as well as any twenty year old does.

The Seanchan/Westlands merger won't happen. We know five-to-ten years after the Last Battle, Fortuona and Mat will cross the Aryth to reconquer Seanchan.

This is news to me, but I do not keep up with the Q&As and such; I would not mind a cite though. ;) Still, I never suggested a merger.

And of course, that invalidates Aviendha's "future", where the Seanchan rather stay and finish the Return (they've already lost too much to be able to do both). A temporary alliance/truce of the Light for the duration of TG will happen, but that will be it.

Obviously Mat and Tuon must return to Seanchan to put down multiple rebellions in an empire believing the imperial line extinct. However, I do not see Tuon casually surrendering the Oathbreaker nations retaken at no small loss to the Ever Victorious Army, any more than I expect Mat to shake hands with Rand and Perrin after TG and say, "have a nice life." Traveling and Skimmings rediscovery changed logistics dramatically. So did the fact at least one Westlands royal house WAS extinguished, by the Seanchan (and the king of Tarabons status is unknown.)

I do not expect a Seanchan-Westlands merger, because I do not expect them to advance further, but neither do I expect much, if any, withdrawal. The Borderlands, Tear and Illian have unclear futures, but Saldaea and Illian could easily join Ghaeldan as Andoran provinces, in which case it is hard to imagine Tear independent long surrounded by a much larger and more powerful neighbor containing BOTH its historical foes. The most logical post-TG balance of power would be between Elaynes realm and Tuons, with however much of the Borderlands not a ruin (possibly excepting Saldaea) remaining under its current rulers. If the DOs release Broke the world, his defeat could reunify much of it.

Tarmon Gaidon began no later than the Battle of Maradon,

You can pick whatever random event you like as the beginning of the LB, some look as far back as Rand's birth.

Fair enough; there are neither beginnings nor ends, and if Tigraine had not fled Andor at Gitaras urging Rand would never have been conceived.

Before TGS came out, Brandon however said toward the 2/3 mark the main characters would come together during an event that marked the start of the LB. That's clearly Merrilor/the Battle of Caemlyn, not the invasion from the Blight.

My bet is Caemlyn, but it is far from "clear" he did not mean a Blight invasion. For that matter, the Trollocs in Caemlyn did not come from Disneyland. ;)

Mat, of course, simply will not stand for women collared for life all around him; FAR too much of his plotline has been devoted to rescuing channelers from adam for that to be remotely plausible.

I do expect with the Seanchan it will come to the a'dam being used for criminal channelers only, but unless it's soon found out the sul'dam can learn enough to be brought into circles very fast, it's already too late for the a'dam to be abandonned during the LB. As you must remember from previous attempts, most damane freak out without their sul'dam, and aren't used to think for themselves in battle. So the only realistic option may be to give enough training to sul'dam so they can link without the a'dam, but remain at the damane's side in battle - they will lead verbally, but they won't lead in the circle. That, the damane will have to do. That would greatly increase the power of each damane, all the more since there are far more sul'dam than damane. We don't have the exact ratio, but it looks like each damane could have a circle of 3 or 4 sul'dam to lead, if not more. Either Mat will convince his wife to agree to that at least for the Seanchan-born damane (most of the new ones Fortuona can't really trust), or the a'dam will remain through TG.

I think the other thing Mat will manage to convince Tuon of eventually will be to agree to is to release the Westlanders held as damane.

But the matters have not evolved enough yet for this to be even remotely plausible. The Seanchan will have to suffer a huge setback or see very clearly their own impending doom, before Fortuona even lets Mat finish the sentence by which he would suggest anything like this...

Which is why I think Mat will begin TG by leading the Seanchan armies and it's only later what's left of the forces of the Light are forced to unite or be crushed separately.

I was not thinking of Mat freeing the damane before TG, no, but subsequently. The Last Battle will surely be pivotal, and encounters with both Mat and prominent female channelers, but I do not expect a complete status quo reversal before TG. It will probably be one of RJs deliberate loose ends; we will be able to anticipate its general development without ever seeing its actual conclusion. Honestly, it could be argued the Seanchan are right for the wrong reasons; Aes Sedai are dangerous and untrustworthy, Three Oaths or no (e.g. Manetheren and the Consolidation.) Just not because of the One Power. Convincing Tuon the One Power is not dangerous may prove easier than convincing her Aes Sedai are not treacherous snakes (it would with me.)

Well, what is the alternative? That the Seanchan, along with the half of the Westlands they conquered, sit out TG?

Of course not. Mat will make them fight the LB, just not for now at the other's half side. Mat is the one who will make sure to divert the Seanchan from the WT.

It is not a given they will be diverted. Among the biggest WoT themes is that what we want/expect often has little bearing on what will be.

I think he will see the peril and make his biggest prank ever. He will convince Fortuona her next move is not to attack the White Tower a second time, as currently planned, but the BT/Caemlyn, and will make a demonstration of his military genius by coming up with a brilliant plan for that.

This is just my personal belief but, strategically unsound as fighting on two fronts is, I think the Seanchan, with typical megalomania, will strike the WT AND BT simultaneously. That is where I think Mat will turn the Ever Victorious Army to Caemlyns liberation, after the BT is rent in fire and ruin. Obviously Caemlyn will be quickly lost unless Taim and his new crop of Dreadlords are neutralized early.

Mat will know the Shadow already holds Caemlyn and the BT, the Seanchan won't.

Possibly; he is scheduled to Travel back to Caemlyn from the ToG, right?

The dreamspike will prevent the Seanchan from standing even a chance of success against the BT, and trying to will show them how devastingly superior Demandred's channelers are, not to mention a sea of Shadowspawn as far as the eye can see. They will be forced to retreat.

Again I must ask: Why? It is not like the Seanchan will Travel their entire army right into the center of the BT. That would not be tactically sound in the first place ("hey, let's blindly deploy our entire army into the heart of the enemys fortress: LEEEROY JEEENKINS! (8") They will probably want raken to scout, though that could prove disastrous: Taim will deny any intel by the simple expedient of blasting them from the sky, and their failure to return will signal loss of surprise, transforming the Seanchans slow, careful mass assault into a desperate (and correspondingly less coordinated) blind charge. It could end right there, with a head long sprint into a Dumai's Wells redux.

However, partly because of limited intel and partly because of common sense, they will most likely try to approach within staging distance rather than close enough to meet the Dreamspikes barrier. Something akin to the US Navys island hopping in the Pacific War; Travelings mechanics tend to dictate that, as we have often seen. They also impose a logistical limit on how great a force may be transported at once; for a large scale assault like that intended, Fists of Heaven remain superior in deployment size and speed. The intelligent course is again to repeatedly Travel large but manageable groups to within marching distance of the BT, until the entire army is present at a secure staging ground, then reassemble the whole for a conventional attack supported by damane. It may be tempting to launch a lightning strike like Rand did against Rahvin, but he leapts heedlessly into an ambush that slaughtered huge swathes of his force, including Mat and Avi. Unless the Seanchan commander can access balefire (and a sa'angreal to match the Dragon Reborn channeling through an angreal,) that outcome is unpromosing.

It may come down to channeling numbers, but the difference at the BT itself will probably be Logain and/or Rands timely arrival. On the other hand, if they arrive to find the Seanchan assaulting Taim, they could at least initially aid the wrong side. That may be Mats pivotal role: If he returns to Caemlyn to find it under attack with aid from the BT, a Seanchan strike on the latter would be heaven sent. Then he need only convince the Low Blood leading the assault he is Prince of Ravens rather than (or at least, in addition to) some insubordinate Oathbreaker peasant. ;)

Then Mat, and behind him the Seanchan generals, will have the aces he needs to convince Fortuona the only option left is to join the other half of the Light, to teach the sul'dam how to link to have circles etc.

The Seanchan know how to link to have circles; Step 1: Find a channeler, Step 2: Collar her. They just do not know (or will not admit) sul'dam can channel right along with damane. In fact, they likely do; just unwittingly, because damane wield the Power flowing from BOTH through the link. That actually raises a good point: Unless Taim has more than the two Reds he manifestly turned, he is limited to a single circle of five channelers.

does require some kind of arrangement between Rand and Tuon.

Not yet. Rand has already given up on the Seanchan, and it's not news of their attack of Tar Valon that will convince him to make another attempt. At this point, even suggesting it has to be done would kill in the bud any attempt to get the WT on his side.

Dreams and such strongly suggests Egwene and the Seanchan will meet Rand together.

But... her character development is complete! If she will not accept negotiations/alliance with the Seanchan now, she never will. :sarcasm:

No, Rand is not yet ready for kneeling to the Crystal Throne; to my knowledge, no one ever said HIS character development was complete (though he is far more mature and wise than Egwene, hence he can and does still manipulate her at need, but only then, and not without the grace to feel guilty.) There is a reason we have an entire final volume to read instead of a ToM Epilogue containing TG. Rand is no more ready to deal with Tuon than she with him (their last meeting confirmed for her all the most dire legends and fears from male channelers, particularly the Dragon.) Yet it must happen before the end, and both make concessions for the greater good.

Both pride and political realism demand Tuon get significant concessions from Rand before joining him; we saw that at their last meeting, too; it fell apart because the Empress (may she live forever) cannot FOLLOW anyone. Even were she psychologically able, letting any of the Blood see that would invite dangerous threats to her iron grip on power. Think about it: Assassinating superiors, even imperial heirs, is routine, expected, in Seanchan. But even the most treacherous and ambitious Darkfriends consider a REIGNING Empress (may she live forever) literally untouchable. The simple fact someone, even a Forsaken, managed to kill one is already threat enough to Tuon; she cannot afford to further humanize her station before senior nobles. Her security and very safety depend on being seen as superhuman.

Foreshadowing also suggests Perrin has a role to play in convincing Egwene it's possible to work with the Seanchan, even for channellers, that there are Seanchan who are willing to make truces and hold to their word, to fight a common enemy too big for either side.

I will not throw the quote out again. ;) Suffice it to say I am reminded of what I said on reading it: Sanderson is not RJ.

It sounds quite possible this ends up negotiated between Mat and Perrin down the line, as the Light sends Perrin to meet Tylee.

Plausible, except I am not sure why Perrin would seek out Tylee except as character witness, since he knows Mat married Tuon. Enough Westlands main characters have Seanchan experience to sell those without it; the tricky part will be selling the proud suspicious Seanchan, particularly since it requires extensive dealings with marath'damane. Getting the snake to talk to the rabbit is easy; geting the rabbit to talk to the snake is the hard part.

It's only afterward Fortuona will be brought to Rand, with Egwene present apparently.

Um, I do not know that any such thing is apparent. Did RJ, or at least Sanderson, endorse this "Egwene is co-protagonist" idea or something? Just because she thinks the Wheel revolves around her does not mean it actually does; her role may be no more than leading Lightside female channelers, which, while significant, is far from supreme. Foreshadowing suggests she and Tuon must deal as well (though the Dream allows her no way to know WHICH Seanchan woman she must cooperate with,) but nothing requires she do so in conjunction with an agreement directly involving Rand. At this point, I think Tuon dealing with Egwene before dealing with Rand at least as likely as the reverse.

I don't think Mat will go to Merrilor. I think he will decide he must go to Ebou Dar when he sees Caemlyn conquered, and calculates the Light is doomed if the Seanchan don't join the other half of the Light. But he will find an Empress more convinced then ever to put an end to the WT and capture Rand. He won't convince her with words.

I think Moiraine will tell Rand and co. Mat has gone to bring the Seanchan Empress to her senses, while Thom reveals to everyone Mat is married to the Empress. But Mat won't return. In TGH, in the Portal Stones trip, he saw himself betraying his friends.

That's the "betrayal" in question, Mat will switch to the Seanchan's side, in all appearances.

Rand will make his peace with it, perhaps fairly fast (telling himself as long as the Seanchan fight the Shadow... and Moiraine reminding him about The Will of the Wheel and all that.). But I'm convinced with the channellers, several rulers including Elayne, Mat going to the Seanchan, being married to their Empress, won't sit well at all. Until they realize Mat is there precisely to keep the Seanchan away from them and focussed on the Shadow. Once they realize just how strong the Shadow is, how fast it makes gains against the Light and that they absolutely need the Seanchan, then Egwene and co. will send Perrin to Tylee/Mat.

Mats marriage is an open secret already. Mat was present when Thom told Perrin outright. They certainly mentioned his marriage to Elayne enough, and Birgitte later heard one of her guardsmen call him "the Raven Prince;" one of the two of them will put that together soon. If Rand has not long expected it is only because he has had too much on his mind to consider what being fated to marry the Daughter of the Nine Moons means; Mat complained of it frequently after their trip to Rhuidean, and Rand has since learned whom bears the title. It is not that no one knows; it simply does not worry anyone.

Again, the trick is convincing the Seanchan the Westlands has anything in it but traitors and/or rabid animals. Mat will prove critical there both on his own merit and their travels gave Tuon first hand understanding she would otherwise lack of Westland natives. Bringing Moiraine along to visit would likely help, if only because, once again, Mat did not revisit the Finns, leaving behind an eye and Jain Farstrider, just to see her immediately enslaved. Perhaps knowing Mat, and that he thought one of the Aes Sedai he distrusts worth such sacrifices, will soften Tuon toward them. Perhaps learning Moiraines history will; she has spent enough time around Aes Sedai now to know the Three Oaths are binding.

Really, though, all the Seanchan need do to placate the remaining Westlands is stop conquering new territory and collaring channelers. IF they do that, I doubt anyone who matters will care who rules Altara, Amadicia and Tarabon (the Altarans clearly do not; Beslan could play a key role as Seanchan ambassador, too,) particularly given the cynical nature of politics and TGs imminence. Galad will probably end up ruling Amadicia in any event; the biggest question there is how he will manage it with a wife on the opposite side of an ocean, but he could conceivably bring it into Andor with Ghaeldan (which, with Mayene, would mean Tear might as well accept reality and ask for terms.)

Sheer numbers, brute force and outright brutality will do that. Even without the hordes of Trollocs and Myrddraal, a significant portion of surviving Aes Sedai are BA, and Rands plan to recruit and field an army of male channelers loyal to the Light is backfiring spectacularly thanks to Taim.

Oh, I don't expect the Shadow's channelers to be nearly so small as Taim's faction... This was merely an advanced group, placed there to be able to eliminate Rand's forces when TG begins. Much of that has been avoided, because Logain has brought the vast majority of the Asha'man not tied to Taim out of the BT in KOD. The direst thing now is that Taim is holding the families of many of Logain's Asha'man - and that won't be pretty at all. It won't be easy to convince the Asha'man to focus on anything but rescuing these people (if Taim decides to make them hostages) or to finish off the BT for revenge (if Taim opts for slaughtering the families.. which could turn into a very dangerous trap for the Light because of their bonds)

The BA is no longer so significant. They lost massively, and for now a lot of the remaining BA are scattered anyway. Regrouped, there remains Alviarin's forces, the ones who managed to flee before the purge and haven't later died in Mesaana's attempt to kill Egwene. That's still many more AS to each BA, before adding the Windfinders, WO, Accepted and even novices, who can be used in circles.

But Demandred has recruited other female as well as male channelers, I'm pretty sure.

The question is how many of those channelers remain outside the various channeler groups in which they, and they alone, would be ideal infiltrators. Not that I dispute your view, I am just quibbling over the number of non-affiliated Dreadlords. The WFs and WOs are not necessarily a net benefit in that respect, because they surely have Darkfriends, too, who were not decimated at front line positions in TGs first skirmishes, fomenting fratricidal conflicts and staging repeated, costly and failed attempts to kill various major figures.

Taim and his BT forces must be eliminated in any event; the Light cannot march to TG with such a grave threat at its back even if Taim did not meet them there. That could result in a pyrrhic victory reminiscent of the Trolloc Wars. It is like Gandalf eliminating Smaug and decimating the Misty Mountains goblins: Middle-earth could not march to a last stand at Minas Tirith at the cost of abandoning Eriador to a marauding horde (which would have happened anyway without a strong human bastion at Esgaroth and a re-established Dwarven Erebor.) Using the Dreamspike and attacking Caemlyn might prove a grave strategic error, because Taim and his cohorts could do far more damage as sleeper agents at TG itself (imagine a quarter of the large new intersex circles attacking the Lights forces from their midst.... (8) Continuing the previous parallel, a role like the Easterlings in the Nirnaeth Arnoediad would be devastating; instead, exposing themselves now lets Rand purge them in time for a largely united reliable front at TG.

According to that blueprint, the Seanchan remained at odds with Rand and the Westlands nations not under their heel well over half-way into the last book; how much longer can that reasonably continue?

At least a third into the last act I would say, maybe halfway. It's hard to tell in terms of length, but I would place my bet on "when the Light has suffered enough and it's time to begin to turn the tide". So I would say perhaps for the last major battle of Tarmon Gai'don, before the SG endgame, is when the Seanchan and the other half will finally join their forces.

A third maybe, but half is pushing it. That risks a deus ex machina finale, where insurmountable differences between West and Further West magically evaporate just in time to face the common foe. That is especially so in light of RJs intending AMoL as the last third of a single book. That would mean the Seanchan and Westlands remained enemies for 90% of the final volume, then hastily arranged a truce and fought TG in the scant few pages before Rands personal showdown with the DO, being (most likely) carried to TV mortally wounded, and whatever epilogue RJ intends. It would be the equivalent of putting the Pellenor Fields just before the Tale of Years. :P

It is very possible that the speculated Seanchan attack on the BT will divert to a liberation of Caemlyn

Liberation? Well... as to that...

IMO, the Band of the Red Hand will focuss on holding the Inner City (it's far from the Waygate, but close to the Band's camp) where they will try to evacuate as many people as possible from the New City, turning the cannons against the Shadowspawn (and forcibly wrecking much havoc on Caemlyn itself). I believe Elayne and Kinswomen will return from Merrilor unaware of this battle, Travelling back in the palace and finding mayhem everywhere, the city virtually fallen. As the Band desperately holds the gates of the Inner City, Elayne will focus on evacuating the rescued population (to Cairhien?). Then the gates will fall, the channelers will link to try to kill as many Shadowspawn as possible.

Further efforts will have to focus on evacuating the population for leagues around Caemlyn (it's the most populated area of Andor) and regrouping the armies of Andor, a good part of which Elayne has sent to the Andoran borders before leaving for Merrilor (as she expected another kind of invasion altogether...).

So I don't think the matter of "liberating Caemlyn" will be much of an issue....

Cities can be rebuilt, it's their population the rulers will have to care about, and before long I highly suspect the Light will have to begin sending its weak, old and youth to the Stedding the Shadowspawn won't enter, and in which the Shadow's channellers can't channel.

I suspect several cities to fall to the Shadow, then once these armies are in place they will focus of the Light's real weakness: the scattered population. I also suspect the attack on Caemlyn is only one of several attacks. I wouldn't put it past Demandred to seize or destroy Illian, Tear, Rhuidean, Cairhien and Caemlyn with Shadowspawn armies simultaneously, as it would be a strong symbol (all the cities conquered by Rand), and one Demandred might calculate is bound to infuriate Rand. That would place the Light on the defensive immediately, force them to focus on saving the population around these new Shadowspawn-bases before they end in the Trollocs' pots, which means scattering their forces. That would in turn let Demandred launch targeted attacks with the channellers on these armies coming to gather and evacuate the people.

Stones are just stones. People can't be "rebuilt". The Shadow's only real goal is to free Shai'tan.

Rand's answer to the series of attacks may well be the breaking of the seals. That's about the only thing that could make the Shadow halt and slow down the multiple attacks, as the breaking of the last seals can only mean Rand is very close to the strike at SG.

//pause, it's time to join the neighbourhood's daily effort to piss off the 1% and their minions.//

Okay, I'm back. Let's see...

Ultimately, I think it will come to most of the Light's forces being based in Tar Valon, the last great city they will still hold. I think it's there the "Great Battle" will take place, on both sides of the river, followed by the final strike at SG. It's at that battle I think the Seanchan will join with the others. By then, most of the "non-combattants" will have been sent in stedding, IMO.

It's at that battle Mat will finally lead everyone and defeat Demandred.

The key is that the Shadows only goal is freeing the DO, and how aware of that everyone but Ishy is (Ishy knows the score: The temporal battles mean nothing: If the DO is released reality, eternal recurrence and all the rest ceases; otherwise, an extinct humanity "wins," because no one can release the DO after the Bore is repaired.) However, I would not expect Demandred to pursue the populace, as such, either way. If, like Ishy, he knows the Shadows real objective, he knows the populace is irrelevant; if not, he will want slaves to rule.

Going after Great Cities makes sense, but to destroy the Lights strengths, not exploit its weaknesses. If the Shadow sought the latter, it could roll over the Borderlands first; Borderlanders are individually tough, but collectively few, and even their stout fortresses would not last long against another Trolloc Wars. It is no coincidence the Shadow is striking the most populous and prosperous area of the strongest Westlands nation. If the Lights forces can be overwhelmed separately in succession, no united stand at TG will be possible. While I do not rule out the possibility of myriad simultaneous attacks, the inability to Travel, and the resulting losses from using the Ways, would make that a logistical nightmare for even a general of Demandreds stature. No one wants to stage a battle against strong defences with no idea what strength they can bring to bear, but using the Ways means exactly that, and every additional such battle makes the odds much less certain.

Merrilor is almost incidental to what is converging on Caemlyn.

Except I think the invasion of Caemlyn takes place during Merrilor, and the Light won't hear of that before Elayne returns to Caemlyn. The Light will hear about the final word about the BT and the impossibility to open gateways there after Merrilor or at the end of Merrilor as well.

Possibly, though I think you may be overestimating the Dreamspikes range. It might blockade Caemlyn if moved from the BT, but I doubt it could interdict Traveling to both. That does not make Caemlyn any less significant by comparison to Merrilor though; it adds to Merrilors OVERALL importance, as a diversionary extension of Caemlyn. Note also another argument Caemlyn is a singular attack is that the Shadow only has a single Dreamspike remaining (so far as I know.)

They won't mount a gigantic concerted attack on the Shadow at Caemlyn immediately, because Caemlyn isn't the only place the Shadow will have striked at.

That remains to be seen. I do not see how the Shadow could do that with Machin Shin consuming an unpredictable portion of every force sent through the Ways (arriving at speeds proportional to the forces size.) Again, the only thing dicier than one attack with 250,000-x soldiers is a dozen. In a single attack, one can simply send enough soldiers to negate the attrition rate; with many, one must ask where and in what proportion to commit the excess, knowing attrition will not be uniform. The Shadow has a finite Trollocs, and lost substantial numbers in Murandy and Saldaea. Maybe it can shrug off a quarter million troops, but it cannot do so and then immediately attack a dozen or two major cities via the Ways when at least 10-20% of the troops deployed will be lost before reaching battle. Not unless the Shadow has hundreds of millions of soldiers to hand, in which case the Light is outnumbered 50:1, maybe more, and already lost.

Sidebar: What kind of fighting soldier wears LACQUERED armor? With all Jordans sneers at parade ground swords, he has an elite military in gear fabricated by armorers who double as cosmetologists?! :rolleyes: Sure, samurai had some rather ornate armor, as did Medieval knights—for CEREMONIAL use; in combat, I believe they typically wore plain unadorned leather.

Lower samurai yes. Not the officers and lords. Those fought or rather directed battles wearing those lacquered armors and lacquered masks/helmets. The lacquered armors weren't just for show, though the lacquer itself was of course decorative.

Yeah, but ALL the Seanchan armor is lacquered, which is both extravagant (which I think part of the point: Empire=wealth) and impractical.

I don't think the Seanchan armors are purely Japanese. They're lacquered, but not made of wood. They're not so different than Westlands painted or gilded armor, just decorated with lacquer instead.

I agree, my point was lacquered armor is as functional as gilded. Both are fine for parade grounds and high ranking non-combat officers, but wasteful at best and ineffective at worst for grunts.
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aMoL UK cover and Blurb (SPOILERS!!!!!!!!!) - 21/05/2012 06:44:26 PM 2625 Views
Thoughts... - 21/05/2012 06:46:41 PM 1128 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 21/05/2012 08:04:29 PM 1083 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 21/05/2012 08:45:41 PM 986 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 21/05/2012 09:04:09 PM 1187 Views
*nods in agreement* *NM* - 21/05/2012 10:46:48 PM 379 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 21/05/2012 11:08:50 PM 1015 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 22/05/2012 01:02:16 AM 1000 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 21/05/2012 09:35:29 PM 1087 Views
Mat and the madness... - 21/05/2012 10:30:09 PM 993 Views
Nynaeve's revelation may make the AS even more worried of Rand being mad - 21/05/2012 10:58:37 PM 1044 Views
Not Egwene though... - 21/05/2012 11:02:41 PM 857 Views
Maybe, maybe not ... Nynaeve just gave everyone proof of the extent of his possible madness - 21/05/2012 11:26:41 PM 853 Views
Fair enough. - 21/05/2012 11:31:10 PM 870 Views
Agreed that it's an odd blurb - 21/05/2012 11:45:03 PM 904 Views
Re: Maybe, maybe not ... Nynaeve just gave everyone proof of the extent of his possible madness - 22/05/2012 01:14:05 AM 928 Views
I was thinking about that... - 22/05/2012 02:35:25 AM 825 Views
Re: I was thinking about that... - 22/05/2012 03:41:48 AM 905 Views
Re: Mat and the madness... - 22/05/2012 02:29:31 AM 979 Views
Rand's dreams... - 22/05/2012 02:42:36 AM 886 Views
She assumes he's mad just like most people assume a 19 year old boy is horney - 22/05/2012 03:47:49 AM 1035 Views
I'd like some evidence for this. - 22/05/2012 04:14:27 AM 850 Views
It's still ingrained in the society - 22/05/2012 01:28:05 PM 957 Views
Moridin and the link - 28/05/2012 01:45:43 AM 792 Views
Re: Thoughts... - 23/05/2012 01:06:10 PM 814 Views
What caught my eye there was "Trollocs seize Caemlyn." - 22/05/2012 02:12:25 PM 925 Views
As much as I would love Moiraine to go with him to Ebou Dar - 22/05/2012 07:20:40 PM 989 Views
At this stage, all roads lead to Rand. - 22/05/2012 09:08:42 PM 838 Views
Re: At this stage, all roads lead to Rand. - 23/05/2012 08:07:56 PM 870 Views
Well, like I say, there is no reason they could not ALL meet up with Tuon. - 23/05/2012 08:53:53 PM 847 Views
Re: Well, like I say, there is no reason they could not ALL meet up with Tuon. - 24/05/2012 02:41:55 PM 978 Views
Aviendha's visions from Rhuidean indicate he will kneel... - 24/05/2012 07:04:02 PM 1259 Views
Re: Aviendha's visions from Rhuidean indicate he will kneel... - 26/05/2012 09:42:20 PM 1344 Views
Agreed... - 26/05/2012 09:57:06 PM 958 Views
I think you are extrapolating some of his actions into more than he intends - 26/05/2012 10:37:44 PM 828 Views
Re: Agreed... - 27/05/2012 04:26:15 AM 902 Views
I think you're both wrong... - 27/05/2012 08:41:50 AM 889 Views
Re: I think you're both wrong... - 27/05/2012 07:10:08 PM 904 Views
I can't believe Galad will be accepted as a ruler since he is the Lord Captain Commander - 28/05/2012 02:48:26 AM 886 Views
Re: I can't believe Galad will be accepted as a ruler since he is the Lord Captain Commander - 28/05/2012 04:54:46 PM 831 Views
That makes no sense - 28/05/2012 05:50:16 PM 863 Views
Taringail was Laman's heir... - 28/05/2012 07:20:07 PM 796 Views
You are answering the wrong question - 29/05/2012 02:19:48 PM 799 Views
No. I've answered the exact question. You seem to have missed it. - 29/05/2012 04:40:17 PM 843 Views
Yet not one of these things actually happened - 29/05/2012 10:13:35 PM 833 Views
You're being absurd... - 30/05/2012 01:04:36 AM 798 Views
Explain why Taringail didn't become King after Laman's death then - 30/05/2012 05:48:48 AM 771 Views
- 30/05/2012 06:11:02 AM 770 Views
Why then would Taringail, an ambitious man, renounce a Throne? - 30/05/2012 06:22:08 AM 919 Views
We don't fully know... - 30/05/2012 06:43:30 AM 688 Views
You just flipped your last statement - 30/05/2012 06:55:36 AM 928 Views
You seem extremely confused... - 30/05/2012 09:56:30 AM 847 Views
Not confused, simply not satisfied with the information we have - 30/05/2012 12:15:59 PM 807 Views
Re: Not confused, simply not satisfied with the information we have - 30/05/2012 03:34:06 PM 966 Views
I am not contesting the information we have - 30/05/2012 04:48:08 PM 919 Views
You're impossible... - 30/05/2012 10:02:59 PM 849 Views
Wow ... Not sure what is bringing out the aggression - 30/05/2012 10:19:18 PM 755 Views
*sigh* - 30/05/2012 11:45:28 PM 817 Views
DomA swore *NM* - 31/05/2012 03:39:24 PM 917 Views
Re: That makes no sense - 29/05/2012 04:39:45 PM 984 Views
Only one other thing... - 29/05/2012 04:53:29 PM 711 Views
Re: Only one other thing... - 30/05/2012 12:32:58 PM 776 Views
Bryne was Captain General not First Prince and Taringail was Prince Consort not FP - 30/05/2012 06:07:48 AM 826 Views
Bryne was First Prince Regent. - 30/05/2012 06:19:33 AM 801 Views
Fair enough ... Thanks for providing a quote - 30/05/2012 06:22:52 AM 976 Views
Re: Fair enough ... Thanks for providing a quote - 30/05/2012 04:38:29 PM 855 Views
No he wasn't - 30/05/2012 04:16:02 PM 780 Views
No Forsaken will go near that Ter'angreal - 26/05/2012 10:33:20 PM 749 Views
Re: No Forsaken will go near that Ter'angreal - 27/05/2012 03:23:12 AM 823 Views
Aviendha reprogrammed the ter'angreal - 27/05/2012 01:50:19 PM 787 Views
Re: Aviendha reprogrammed the ter'angreal - 27/05/2012 06:44:41 PM 908 Views
I'd have to re-read to be 100% certain, but the way I read the passage - 28/05/2012 02:10:14 AM 889 Views
He might not literally kneel before the ter'angreal, but almost certainly must meet with Tuon soon. - 25/05/2012 03:40:54 AM 1131 Views
Soon might be relative... - 27/05/2012 02:08:53 AM 1308 Views
Sul'dam - 27/05/2012 09:03:57 AM 1165 Views
Re: Sul'dam - 27/05/2012 05:54:57 PM 898 Views
Right, then; here we go.... - 03/06/2012 08:45:20 AM 774 Views
Re: As much as I would love Moiraine to go with him to Ebou Dar - 23/05/2012 05:28:17 PM 848 Views
I think I read a fan fiction like that once *NM* - 23/05/2012 08:04:42 PM 445 Views

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