The Celmomian Prophecy [Moved from The Darkness That Comes Before]

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« on: April 19, 2013, 01:59:09 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
Now that the reread project has reached Chapter 15, I feel it's time to take a look at the only onscreen Seswatha Dream in The Darkness That Comes Before.  The Celmomian Prophecy.  This dream occurs in Chapter one--we will call the chapter one iteration SD1.1--and it occurs in Chapter fifteen--we will the chapter 15 iteration SD1.2.  The Warrior Prophet Chapter 1 continuation of this dream (via Nautzera) will be referred to as SD1.3.

As far as I can recall, this is the only Seswatha dream that is repeated on screen, and extremely few Seswatha dreams of this variety are had over the course of the five books--at least from Achamian's perspective.  So its repetition is all the more interesting, so let's go through line by line and look at how they compare and contrast, all Italics are as in the original, and watch carefully because they change from 1.1 to 1.2.

Quote
SD1.1
Achamian watched Anasûrimbor Celmomas, the last High King of Kûniüri, fall beneath the hammer of a baying Sranc chieftain. Even though Achamian cried out, he knew with the curious half-awareness belonging to dreams that the greatest king of the Anasûrimbor Dynasty was already dead—had been dead for more than two thousand years. And he knew, moreover, that it was not he himself who wailed, but a far greater man. Seswatha.

The words boiled to his lips. The Sranc chieftain flailed through blistering fire, collapsed into a bundle of rags and ash. More Sranc swept the summit of the hill and more died, struck down by the unearthly lights summoned by his song. Beyond, he glimpsed a distant dragon, like a figure of bronze in the setting sun, hanging above warring fields of Sranc and Men, and he thought: The last Anasûrimbor King has fallen. Kûniüri is lost.

Crying out the name of their king, the tall knights of Trysë surged about him, sprinting over the Sranc he had burned and falling like madmen upon the masses beyond. With a knight whom he did not know, Achamian dragged Anasûrimbor Celmomas through the frantic cries of his vassals and kinsmen, through the smell of blood, bowel, and charred flesh. In a small clearing, he pulled the King’s broken body across his lap.

SD1.2

And then Achamian found himself on the Fields of Eleneöt, dragging the broken body of a great High King from the clamour of war.

As can be seen here, SD1.1 offers a longer introduction, and SD1.2 picks up only at the ending.  the primary repetition here is of the King's broken body, but in 1.1, a knight helps to drag the body, in 1.2 the implication is that Achamian alone drug the body alone, but this is minor and not conclusive, nor all that important a discrepancy.

Quote
SD1.1
Celmomas’s blue eyes, ordinarily so cold, beseeched him. “Leave me,” the grey-bearded king gasped.

SD1.2
Celmomas’s blue eyes beseeched him. “Leave me,” the grey-bearded king gasped.

Quote
SD1.1
“No,” Achamian replied. “If you die, Celmomas, all is lost.” The High King smiled despite his ruined lips. “Do you see the sun? Do you see it flare, Seswatha?”

SD1.2
“No . . . If you die, Celmomas, all is lost.”

SD1.2
But the High King smiled through ruined lips. “Do you see the sun? Do you see it flare, Seswatha?”

Note that in the kindle edition at least, these are broken into separate paragraphs in SD1.2 but not in SD1.1.

Quote
SD1.1
“The sun sets,” Achamian replied.

SD1.2
“The sun sets,” Achamian replied, tears now spilling across his cheeks.

Quote
SD1.1
“Yes! Yes. The darkness of the No-God is not all-encompassing. The Gods see us yet, dear friend. They are distant, but I can hear them galloping across the skies. I can hear them cry out to me.”

SD1.2
“Yes! Yes . . . The darkness of the No-God is not all-encompassing. The Gods see us yet, dear friend. They are distant, but I can hear them galloping across the skies. I can hear them cry out to me.”

Quote
SD1.1
“You cannot die, Celmomas! You must not die!”

SD1.2
“You cannot die, Celmomas! You must not die!”

Quote
SD1.1
The High King shook his head, stilled him with tender eyes. “They call to me. They say that my end is not the world’s end. That burden, they say, is yours. Yours, Seswatha.”

SD1.2
The High King shook his head, tears streaming from curiously tender eyes. “They call to me. They say my end is not the world’s end. That burden, they say, is yours . . . Yours, Seswatha.”

Significant change in italics here.

Quote
SD1.1
“No,” Achamian whispered.

SD1.2
“No,” Achamian whispered.

Quote
SD1.1
“The sun! Can you see the sun? Feel it upon your cheek? Such revelations are hidden in such simple things. I see! I see so clearly what a bitter, stubborn fool I have been . . . And to you, you most of all, have I been unjust. Can you forgive an old man? Can you forgive a foolish old man?”

SD1.2
“The sun! Can you see the sun? Feel it upon your cheek? Such revelations are hidden in such simple things. I see! I see so clearly what a bitter, stubborn fool I have been . . . And to you, you most of all, have I been unjust. Can you forgive an old man? Can you forgive a foolish old man?”

Quote
SD1.1
“There’s nothing to forgive, Celmomas. You’ve lost much, suffered much.”

SD1.2
“There is nothing to forgive, Celmomas. You’ve lost much, suffered much.”

Quote
SD1.1
“My son . . . Do you think he’ll be there, Seswatha? Do you think he’ll greet me as his father?”

SD1.2
“My son . . . Do you think he’ll be there, Seswatha? Do you think he’ll greet me as his father?”

Quote
SD1.1
“Yes . . . As his father, and as his king.”

SD1.2
“Yes. As his father and as his king.”

Quote
SD1.1
“Did I ever tell you,” Celmomas said, his voice cracking with futile pride, “that my son once stole into the deepest pits of Golgotterath?”

SD1.2
“Did I ever tell you,” Celmomas said, his voice cracking with heartbroken pride, “that my son once stole into the deepest pits of Golgotterath?”

Quote
SD1.1
“Yes.” Achamian smiled through his tears. “Many times, old friend.”

SD1.2
“Yes.” Achamian smiled through his tears. “Many times, old friend.”

Quote
SD1.1
“How I miss him, Seswatha! How I yearn to stand at his side once again.”

SD1.2
“How I miss him, Seswatha! How I yearn to stand at his side once again.”

Quote
SD1.1
The old king wept for a moment. Then his eyes grew wide. “I see him so clearly. He’s taken the sun as his charger, and he rides among us. I see him! Galloping through the hearts of my people, stirring them to wonder and fury!”

SD1.2
The old king wept for a moment. Then his eyes grew wide. “I see him so clearly. He’s taken the sun as his charger, and he rides among us. I see him! Galloping through the hearts of my people, stirring them to wonder and fury!”

Note the italics change here! and there are some other minor discrepencies, but my commentary will have to wait til this is all posted.

Quote
SD1.1
“Shush . . . Conserve your strength, my King. The surgeons are coming.”

SD1.2
“Shush . . . Conserve your strength, my King. The surgeons are coming.”

Quote
SD1.1
“He says . . . says such sweet things to give me comfort. He says that one of my seed will return, Seswatha—an Anasûrimbor will return . . .” A shudder wracked the old man, forcing breath and spittle through his teeth.

SD1.2
“He says . . . says such sweet things to give me comfort . . . He says that one of my seed will return, Seswatha. An Anasûrimbor will return—” The High King winced and shuddered. Spittle hissed through clenched teeth.

Major italics shift here.

Quote
SD1.1
“At the end of the world.”

SD1.2
“—at the end of the world.”

Quote
SD1.1
The bright eyes of Anasûrimbor Celmomas II, White Lord of Trysë, High King of Kûniüri, went blank. And with them, the evening sun faltered, plunging the bronze-armoured glory of the Norsirai into twilight

SD1.2
Then the shining eyes of Anasûrimbor Celmomas II, White Lord of Trysë, High King of Kûniüri, grew slack and dull. The evening sun flashed then flickered out, and the gleaming bronze of the Norsirai host paled in the No-God’s twilight.

Quote
SD1.1
“Our King!” Achamian cried to the stricken men encircling him. “Our King is dead!”

SD1.2
“Our King!” Achamian cried to the grim knights about him. “Our King is dead!”

SD1.3Pitched from nightmare to nightmare, Achamian at last found the sleeping man he sought: Nautzera in his dream, seated on blood-muddied turf, cradling a dead king on his lap. “Our King is dead!” Nautzera cried in Seswatha’s voice. “Anasûrimbor Celmomas is dead!”

Quote
SD1.3
An unearthly roar hammered his ears. Achamian whirled, raising his hands against a titanic shadow.

Wracu … Dragon.

Billowing gusts staggered those standing, waved the arms of those fallen. Cries of dismay and horror rifled the air, then a cataract of boiling gold engulfed Nautzera and the High King’s attendants. There was no time for screams. Teeth cracked. Bodies tumbled like coals from a kicked fire.

Achamian turned and saw Nautzera amid a field of smoking husks. Shielded by his Wards, the sorcerer laid the dead king on the ground, whispering words Achamian could not hear but had dreamed innumerable times: “Turn your soul’s eye from this world, dear friend … Turn so that your heart might be broken no more.”

With the force of a toppled tower, the dragon thundered to earth, his descent yanking smoke and ash into towering veils. Portcullis jaws clacked shut. Wings like war-galley sails stretched out. The light of burning corpses shimmered across iridescent scales of black.

“Our Lord,” the dragon grated, “hath tasted thy King’s passing, and he saith, ‘It is done.’”

Nautzera stood before the golden-horned abomination. “Not while I draw breath, Skafra!” he cried. “Never!”

Laughter, like the wheezing of a thousand consumptive men. The Great Dragon reared his bull-chest above the sorcerer, revealing a necklace of steaming human heads.

“Thou art overthrown, sorcerer. Thy tribe hath perished, dashed like a potter’s vessel by our fury. The earth is sown with thy nation’s blood, and soon thine enemies will compass thee with bent bow and whetted bronze. Wilt thou not repent thy folly? Wilt thou not abase thyself before our Lord?”

“As do you, mighty Skafra? As the exalted Tyrant of Cloud and Mountain abases himself?”

Membranes flickered across the dragon’s quicksilver eyes. A blink. “I am not a God.”

Nautzera smiled grimly. Seswatha said, “Neither is your lord.”

Great stamping limbs and the gnashing of iron teeth. A cry from furnace lungs, as deep as an ocean’s moan and as piercing as an infant’s shriek.

Uncowed by the dragon’s thrashing bulk, Nautzera suddenly turned to Achamian, his face bewildered.

“Who are you?”

“One who shares your dreams …”

For a moment they were like two men drowning, two souls kicking for sharp air … Then darkness. The silent nowhere that housed men’s souls.

Bakker, R. Scott (2008-09-02). The Warrior Prophet: The Prince of Nothing, Book Two (Kindle Locations 328-343). Penguin Group. Kindle Edition.

What Came Before

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« Reply #1 on: April 19, 2013, 01:59:22 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
The text is largely the same, there is some difference in emphasis, as indicated by the italics, but the dialog, so far as I can tell does not change.  What does change is Achamian's perception of that dialog and how he narrates it.  I think putting them side by side you can see that when Achamian is more present there are small differences in style/diction and perhaps in tense.  I think when Seswatha is more present the style shifts to a more archaic feel, akin to the feel found in The False Sun.  it's more rhymthic/verse oriented compared to the Achamian dominant approach which has more of a prose description akin to the rest of the novel.

Also, I had never really noted before how much of this dream circulates on SEEING.  But then also, his eyes are SHINING in one version, and who do we know SHINES in the third SIGHT?  What do you see Celmomas?  And since there are three italics changes and one of them is simply the word "see" I think we're being directed to concentrate on the seeing (or not-seeing) in this dream.  What does it mean to "see" the future anyway?  Does he see as the White Luck Warrior sees?  And note that on his death it is not a 'tunnel of light' that is so popular in western culture currently, but an awareness of "being watched"  what are readers of a novel other than watchers? (but perhaps that's too meta?)
 
Nor had I noted that rather disturbing and intriguing discrepancy in the penultimate lines, perhaps the most noteworthy change from 1.1 to 1.2, regarding the twilight as belonging to the No God. rather than it just being Twilight the first time around.  Also noteworthy are the changes in the final lines, where Achamian was surrounded by stricken men (poetic license could mean either they were all dead or simply shocked at the death of Celmomas) and in the second surrounded by grim men (poetic license could equally mean both here).

But note that because the vast majority of the text is absolutely identical, we can safely assume that each iteration was not separately written.  The versions are too alike to not be purposefully different, and each change signifies that the author is signalling the reader's attention in a different way than he did before.  The perfect repetition highlights each change.  The difference from period to ellipsis, from period to comma suggests there is something going on there, perhaps just mood, perhaps more.

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« Reply #2 on: April 19, 2013, 01:59:33 pm »
Quote from: Wilshire
Wow I'm kind of surprised that no one has done this yet, thanks a lot. Much easier to see.

Something that occurred to me when reading these side by side was Celmomas's son/sun and the no-god. Independent of your comment btw, which is also interesting.

The vision that Celmomas has of the sun, light, twilight, and darkness, is almost like an inversion of reality. The sun is not flaring, the light is fading not rising.

This, combined with how he says 'his son' has seized the sun and is riding through the hearts of all people and his rallying them, fighting for them, this kind of thing. Now, we know that the No-God is felt in the hearts of everyone, but this effect is, again, the opposite.

Perhaps there is some credence to the theory regarding NC = No-God. If you take all Celmomas's discriptions as more or less opposite, then he is basically saying that his son has become the no-sun, is riding against them, and is casing all to feel no-hope.

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« Reply #3 on: April 19, 2013, 01:59:42 pm »
Quote from: Curethan
Quote from: lockesnow
Also, I had never really noted before how much of this dream circulates on SEEING.  But then also, his eyes are SHINING in one version, and who do we know SHINES in the third SIGHT?  What do you see Celmomas?  And since there are three italics changes and one of them is simply the word "see" I think we're being directed to concentrate on the seeing (or not-seeing) in this dream.  What does it mean to "see" the future anyway?  Does he see as the White Luck Warrior sees?  And note that on his death it is not a 'tunnel of light' that is so popular in western culture currently, but an awareness of "being watched"  what are readers of a novel other than watchers? (but perhaps that's too meta?)

This reminds me of Kelmomas in WLW.  When he kills people, he looks into their eyes, and his inner narration talks about some external watcher that comes with death that he sees within.

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« Reply #4 on: April 19, 2013, 01:59:56 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
I updated the first post with SD1.3 which is very nearly an exact continuation of SD1.1 and SD1.2 and thusly they should probably be read together.

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« Reply #5 on: April 19, 2013, 02:00:10 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
Quote from: Curethan
Quote from: lockesnow
Also, I had never really noted before how much of this dream circulates on SEEING.  But then also, his eyes are SHINING in one version, and who do we know SHINES in the third SIGHT?  What do you see Celmomas?  And since there are three italics changes and one of them is simply the word "see" I think we're being directed to concentrate on the seeing (or not-seeing) in this dream.  What does it mean to "see" the future anyway?  Does he see as the White Luck Warrior sees?  And note that on his death it is not a 'tunnel of light' that is so popular in western culture currently, but an awareness of "being watched"  what are readers of a novel other than watchers? (but perhaps that's too meta?)

This reminds me of Kelmomas in WLW.  When he kills people, he looks into their eyes, and his inner narration talks about some external watcher that comes with death that he sees within.
Coming back to both this thought on Kelmomas, but also looking at the prophecy and noting how much it circulates and centralizes on SEEING as a motif (what do you see!) I was struck by this key passage of Kellhus' first onscreen Imprompta in The Warrior Prophet.  Perhaps this sheds some light on Kelmomas, but also points us to the failure of the Mandate since the Consult "disappeared".  That is to say, the Mandate--particularly Achamian--has stopped witnessing the apocalypse and instead only see it.  They no longer testify.  In fact the beginning of this chapter begins with the beguiling thought that Achamian had SEEN too much war, not witnessed, simply SEEN.  And also note that this selection ends with Achamian quoting the Mandate motto, (actually it ends with him mentally deciding Esmenet is equal to Kellhus, or that's the beginning of a similar series of hagiographic thoughts on her).  The fact that this story leads Achamian to thinking about the "gain the whole world but lose your soul" indicates to a degree that Kellhus was conditioning Achamian with this story.  To an extent--this is where Kellhus begins to plan to send Achamian away from him, Compendium of the First Holy War is a testament, a witness, it is a seeing that is meaningful.  And for it to be taken as legitimate, for the seeing to become witness to become testament, Kellhus needed to send Achamian away from him, at this point Kellhus probably plans to use Esmenet for leverage against Achamian to force this issue.  (and note that Achamian's testimony, his book, is crucial in persuading many elite that though Kellhus may be thought of as a god, he is really just a man, not a god, and more importantly, not a demon, the Yatwerians rely on calling Kellhus demon, but this natural progression of refuting his godhood by calling him demon is preemptively castrated by Achamian's hostile testimony, his assertion of Kellhus' humanness is more credible than the cult's assertion that there enemies are demons).  All this and more--jesus fucking christ this passage is incredibly suggestive RE the No God and the demise of the No God--begins here in this passage, which, as I said, I feel is directly connected to the Celmomian prophecy and it's motif of Seeing which connects to the Mandate's imperative to not just see the apocalypse but WITNESS the apocalypse and so Witnessing they are mandated to TESTIFY about the apocalypse.

Quote
“What happened?” Kellhus asked.

The nameless knight smiled, but there was a strange and subtle incongruence in his expression, something like glimpsing the difference between white eyes and yellow teeth.

“Three days ago,” the man said, “our lord heard rumour of a village some miles to the west, so we rode out, hoping for plunder …”

Kellhus nodded. “And what did you find?”

“Nothing … I mean, no village. Our lord was wroth. He claims the others—”

“What did you find?”

The man blinked. Panic flashed from the stoic weariness of his expression. “A child,” he said hoarsely. “A dead child … We were following this trail, something worn by goatherds, I think, cutting across this hillside, and there was just this dead child, a girl, no more than five or six, lying in our path. Her throat had been cut …”

“What happened next?”

“Nothing … I mean, we simply ignored her, continued riding as though she were nothing more than discarded cloth … a-a scrap of leather in the dust,” he added, his voice breaking. He looked down to his callused palms.

“Guilt and shame wrack you by day,” Kellhus said, “the feeling that you’ve committed some mortal crime. Nightmares wrack you by night … She speaks to you.”

The man’s nod was almost comical in its desperation. He hadn’t, Achamian realized, the nerve for war.

“But why?” he cried. “I mean, how many dead have we seen?”

“But not all seeing,” Kellhus replied, “is witness.”

“I don’t understand …”

“Witness is the seeing that testifies, that judges so that it may be judged. You saw, and you judged. A trespass had been committed, an innocent had been murdered. You saw this.”

“Yes!”
the man hissed. “A little girl. A little girl!”

“And now you suffer.”

“But why?” he cried. “Why should I suffer? She’s not mine. She was heathen!”

“Everywhere … Everywhere we’re surrounded by the blessed and the cursed, the sacred and the profane. But our hearts are like hands, they grow callous to the world. And yet, like our hands even the most callous heart will blister if overworked or chafed by something new. For some time we may feel the pinch, but we ignore it because we have so much work to do.” Kellhus had looked down into his right hand. Suddenly he balled it into a fist, raised it high. “And then one strike, with a hammer or a sword, and the blister breaks, our heart is torn. And then we suffer, for we feel the ache for the blessed, the sting of the cursed. We no longer see, we witness …”

His luminous eyes settled upon the nameless knight. Blue and wise.

“This is what has happened to you.”

“Yes … Yes! B-but what should I do?”

“Rejoice.”

“Rejoice? But I suffer!”

“Yes, rejoice! The callused hand cannot feel the lover’s cheek. When we witness, we testify, and when we testify we make ourselves responsible for what we see. And that— that— is what it means to belong.”

Kellhus suddenly stood, leapt from the low platform, took two breathtaking steps into their midst. “Make no mistake,” he continued, and the air thrummed with the resonance of his voice. “This world owns you. You belong, whether you want to or not. Why do we suffer? Why do the wretched take their own lives? Because the world, no matter how cursed, owns us. Because we belong.

“Should we celebrate suffering?” a challenging voice called. From somewhere …

Prince Kellhus smiled, glancing into the darkness. “Then it’s no longer suffering, is it?”

The small congregation laughed.

“No,” Kellhus continued, “that’s not what I mean. Celebrate the meaning of suffering. Rejoice that you belong, not that you suffer. Remember what the Latter Prophet teaches us: glory comes in joy and sorrow. Joy and sorrow …”

“I s-see see the wisdom of you-your words, Prince,” the nameless knight stammered. “I truly see! But …”

And somehow, Achamian could feel his question …

What is there to gain?

“I’m not asking you to see,” Kellhus said. “I’m asking you to witness.”

Blank face. Desolate eyes. The nameless knight blinked, and two tears silvered his cheek. Then he smiled, and nothing, it seemed, could be so glorious.

“To make myself …” His voice quavered, broke. “To m-make …”

“To be one with the world in which you dwell,” Kellhus said. “To make a covenant of your life.”

The world … You will gain the world.

Bakker, R. Scott (2008-09-02). The Warrior Prophet: The Prince of Nothing, Book Two (Kindle Locations 4395-4412). Penguin Group. Kindle Edition.
« Last Edit: April 19, 2013, 02:03:10 pm by Madness »

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« Reply #6 on: April 19, 2013, 02:00:15 pm »
Quote from: Madness
If and when the forum ever gets fixed - War Room to come after exams, if Forumer wizards haven't accomplished anything - you three will be censored ;).

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« Reply #7 on: April 19, 2013, 02:00:25 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
dammit. I was hoping a new post in this thread was going to address what others see in connecting the imprompta to the prophecy

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« Reply #8 on: April 19, 2013, 02:00:33 pm »
Quote from: Madness
Hm... I'm not for contributions to this thread, sorry, lockesnow. All are welcome to continue in your rampant speculation, I simply stopped in to make light of the spoilers, which I will spoiler in the future ;).

Though, I like the analogy you've drawn between Witness & Seeing and the Compendium & the PON as allegory of witness?

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« Reply #9 on: April 19, 2013, 02:01:15 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
ahem, and don't forget the Witness of Fane. 
But yes, I think Kellhus was sowing the seeds of having Akka write the Compendium in this scene, this is the scene where he begins to turn Akka against him because, iirc, this is after his "there was revelation" moment after leaving Mengedda.
« Last Edit: April 19, 2013, 02:03:30 pm by Madness »

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« Reply #10 on: April 19, 2013, 02:01:32 pm »
Quote from: Duskweaver
Quote from: lockesnow
ahem, and don't forget the Witness of Fane.
Or the "cutting eyes" of the Solitary God, depicted as single-edged swords.

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« Reply #11 on: April 19, 2013, 02:01:45 pm »
Quote from: Wilshire
I can believe some kind of setup with the Compendium, but I can't see how this is directly connected to the prophesy. How does witnessing tie into the dreams?

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« Reply #12 on: April 19, 2013, 02:01:55 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
Seswatha intends for the Mandate to Witness the First Apocalypse so they can give Testament that will forestall the Second Apocalypse.  Pretty straight forward.

But the Mandate ran into a snag, people like DA no longer Witness the First Apocalypse, they only See the First Apocalypse.

It's possible that a Mandate to Testament is written into the sorcery that enables the dreams, note that DA is less physically affected by the dreams when he testifies of his dreams to Esmenet or Kellhus.

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« Reply #13 on: April 19, 2013, 02:02:07 pm »
Quote from: Wilshire
Aspect-Emperor Spoilers
Does the pattern continue? Is Akka testifying by meticulously writing the dreams down? I got the impression that he had gotten used to the dream and wasn't so deeply affected by them in the beginning of JE, but that might not be true. Maybe its this Testifying that ends up changing the dreams. The true dreams revealed only to the true witness.
« Last Edit: April 19, 2013, 02:03:42 pm by Madness »

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« Reply #14 on: April 19, 2013, 02:02:16 pm »
Quote from: lockesnow
God that's brilliant.

And would explain just why and how he became a prophet of the past.