Abrir menu principal

UESPWiki β

Alterações

Lore:Crônicas dos Cinco Companheiros 6

3 241 bytes adicionados, 15h12min de 1 de maio de 2014
m
dab
<noinclude>{{Book Summary
|ON=yes
|title={{Lore Link|Chronicles of the Five Companions}} 6
|author=Sai Sahan
|description=The personal recollections of the {{Lore Link|Five Companions}}
|prev={{Lore Link|Chronicles of the Five Companions 5|Part 5}}
|next={{Lore Link|Chronicles of the Five Companions 7|Part 7}}
}}</noinclude>

I am called {{Lore Link|Sai Sahan}}, son of {{Lore Link|Nazir Itaf Sahan}} of {{Lore Link|Bangkorai}}. I have been asked to add my words to these chronicles, and though I am no scribe, I will do my best.

The teachings of {{Lore Link|Divad}}, of {{Lore Link|Abah}}, of {{Lore Link|Kalam}}, and of {{Lore Link|Satameh}} tell us that while a warrior may hone his craft to perfection, or sharpen his sword to where it may cleave stone and steel as though it were air, the true worth of a swordsman is denoted by the quality of the enemies he draws to him. I find myself idly wondering if the great {{Lore Link|Forebears}} would reconsider this philosophy if they could see us now, and witness our enemy, the {{Lore Link|Daedric Princes|Prince}} of {{Lore Link|Daedra}} known as {{Lore Link|Molag Bal}}.

At first, I thought to write that my training did not prepare me for this, but after hours of meditation and the counsel of my once-emperor, I have come to realize that this is exactly why {{Lore Link|Kasura}} and I trained and studied for so many years. The {{Lore Link|sword-singers}} of old {{Lore Link|Yokuda}} were said to be more than mortal, possessed of focus and skill far beyond what other men might achieve in a dozen lifetimes. While I cannot claim to have reached such greatness, perhaps my final test was not to wage wars alongside emperors, but to bring righteous steel to bear against the foes of all life.

I harbor some doubts about whether I am ready for the coming struggle. I did not break under the tortures of the betrayer, but I did not emerge from the {{Lore Link|Halls of Torment (place)|Halls of Torment}} unscathed. Torn flesh knits under the ministrations of my lord's healing magic, and my savage dreams are soothed by {{Lore Link|Snow Lily}}'s warm voice in my ear as I startle awake in the dead of night, but still I am not whole.

Tharn and I speak at length over games of skill and strategy while I recover, and I have spoken plainly about my worries. His contempt at my perceived weaknesses serves as a much-needed counterpoint to Snow Lily's tender words. I endure and accept it, for a warrior without humility is as flawed as a sword blade forged too rigidly. His words harden my resolve and keep my wit sharp.

It is difficult to set aside the many deaths at the Abbey of Blades, and though we did what we could in the wake of the attack, it will be many years before {{Lore Link|Kasura}} is ready to train more students in the way of the blade and the mind. When all of this is ended—should we survive, of course—I would very much like to return there and help rebuild.

Perhaps I will ask Snow Lily to come with me.

{{Book Footer
|Skippage=Chronicles of the Five Companions
|Prev=''{{Lore Link|Chronicles of the Five Companions 5|Part 5}}''
|Up=''{{Lore Link|Chronicles of the Five Companions}}''
|Next=''{{Lore Link|Chronicles of the Five Companions 7|Part 7}}''
}}