Written By Delilah
Sept. 11, 2018, 5:06 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Calista
Written By Victus
Sept. 11, 2018, 4:18 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Niklas
Written By Niklas
Sept. 11, 2018, 4:03 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
Written By Perronne
Sept. 11, 2018, 3:58 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
I think we'll never know most of the real heroes in the world. Not the ones with titles, who have noble families willing to spend enough silver to save a hundred towns from starving for the next decade so that they can have a statue built in the Hall. Those people may be perfectly nice, and brave, and kind, and all of that. But there are thousands of people like that in the Compact, and some just have...more resources to devote to being better known than others.
But I think most heroes don't have that. Because I think that one of the things that defines a hero, for me, is the person who realizes that they are all alone, in the dark, where there is no one to see what they do, and no one to remember their name. And while in that long dark, they realize that if they do the right thing, they will die alone, and no one will ever know. Or people WILL know, but they will disapprove because sometimes the popular thing, the thing that makes people cheer your name and build monuments to you, isn't actually all that right. Or they could walk away, and live a long and happy life. And maybe get called a hero for other things.
And they do the right thing anyway. And they die, without fanfare or reward or the expectation of either. They die so that others might live and never know their name - or need to know it.
We'll never see statues or memorials to most of the heroes of the Compact, I think. Sometimes, I stand in ruins, though, and I find something that tells a story that lets me see them, just for a moment. Standing and holding the line so that others might thrive, with no expectation of survival. I don't know that I could ever do something like that. It terrifies me. I'm not cut out for it. But I say a prayer for them, the forgotten defenders, whenever I visit the Shrines.
Written By Gerard
Sept. 11, 2018, 3:49 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Ida
Written By Ida
Sept. 11, 2018, 3:03 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Edain
Really, I'm reminded that it's maybe been too long since Sir Daemon and I had occasion to ride into danger on the back of a war elk. Maybe.
Written By Niklas
Sept. 11, 2018, 1:19 p.m.(7/28/1009 AR)
I have three more things to have made, and then I'm done.
I am not good at patience.
Written By Thena
Sept. 11, 2018, 12:23 p.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Aleksei
Written By Aleksei
Sept. 11, 2018, 12:16 p.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Thena
Written By Cristoph
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:54 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
She fished Eadric out of a laundry shoot yesterday.
Sure, there's that lingering question of how he was able to get down there to begin with.
You'd have to know Eadric to understand. The child needs to be on a leash. This woman deserves every bit of her salary.
Written By Thena
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:52 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Aleksei
Written By Aleksei
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:46 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Thena
Written By Jasher
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:42 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Lisebet
You can take the sword out and use it as a sword should be used, but doing so causes it to acquire the nicks and scratches a blade suffers under regular use. If you desire, you can spend time and manpower to whet back its edge, clean the tarnish, and make the sword look presentable again, but it will never be the same sword that it would be had it remained in its case, untouched except to be cleaned.
However, in order to be so valued that it was put on display, a sword would have already seen some use beforehand. It was already flawed before being placed upon its case of honour.
Written By Alis
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:38 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Lisebet
Everyone has a different standard, and different criteria for who they personally consider a hero. But usually? A capital H Hero seems to be someone who people from every fealty and every walk of life revere because of their actions. And that only becomes commonly known when they die. I like what Dame Thena has said as well. We'll never know most everyday heroes, because their work goes unnoticed and unrecognized. But without them, life would most assuredly be less.
Written By Thena
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:14 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Written By Harlex
Sept. 11, 2018, 11:07 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Lisebet
You see, I have just found in my time, that when you set someone up like that, you mark them. You make it so that when they come to the gates and find they cannot trespass, when they see their luck won't hold and it is wiser to retreat, that they will not. As though the hands of multitudes push at their backs. Push them into those black flames. Chanting their name.
That is a hard thing to do to a good soul. You lay that guilt on them and it's a kind of corruption in itself. But people are just like that; tradition-lovers, storytellers, singers and scribes. They want to honor sacrifice and noble deeds.
I don't know.
I only know the way I've seen it. But that is how I've seen it time and time again. That when I have seen stone statues lying in their coffins, they have all had feet of clay.
Written By Edain
Sept. 11, 2018, 10:50 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Lisebet
This is a list of some living heroes. This is not all inclusive, some on this list are heroes for reasons that are stories that are no one's to share yet, and sometimes they just resonate more strongly with me:
Duke Gabriel Bisland
Princess Marian Redrain
Lady Aislin Ashford
Princess Alis Valardin
Duchess Margot Tyde
Sir Daemon and Dame Ida
This list is not complete as I don't have enough paper to list everyone I believe to have earned the title of hero in thier life time. I would wager most have thier own lists.
Written By Bliss
Sept. 11, 2018, 10:26 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Relationship Note on Lisebet
The sad truth of the matter, though, is that many of the people we consider heroes and honor as such had sickening truths to them - truths that are easier to ignore once they are dead, truths that are easier to fathom in the contexts of their whole lives. They did not always do the right thing, by any means, yet some of the things they did are such shining examples that we choose to follow them. There is also the issue that what one people finds heroic, others might find monstrous. There are a number of statues in the Hall of Heroes you would never see outside of their own halls for this reason.
Heroism is embodying the ideals of your people. And if you are led to believe you are a hero while alive, well, then you are going to find it really easy to justify doing anything you want - after all, you're doing it, so it must be heroic. There are a few prominent, dangerous examples of this, so it's probably best to just wait until people die.
Or I suppose you say 'fuck it', recognize that your life will be a legendary thing, and work as hard as you can to make sure that when it's looked at, people will be inspired.
Written By Lisebet
Sept. 11, 2018, 10:02 a.m.(7/27/1009 AR)
Obviously, in order to be buried and honored in the Hall of Heroes, one must be dead.
I think it might just be that in general, heroes do the right thing, even when it is dangerous, putting themselves in the way of harm and/or overwhelming odds.
And that perhaps leads to death more often than not.
Written By Calista
Sept. 10, 2018, 11:47 p.m.(7/26/1009 AR)
When I asked for tales of good deeds, it was Marquis Hadrian who wrote of his lady wife's unflappable dedication to their people. Thank you, House Mazetti for being a prime example of how success is achieved through hard work and persistence.
Please note that the scholars may take some time preparing your journal for others to read.