THE ELVEN FOLK
- Matron Selidhn
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
Introduction Page 1
BEGINNINGS AND MYTHS Page 4
THE TIME OF SORROWS Page 8
THE TIME OF THE CLANS Page 9
Forest Elves Page 9
River Elves Page 10
Wind Elves Page 11
Mountain Elves Page 13
Snow/Sand Elves Page 17
City (Celestial) Elves Page 18
Bone Elves Page 19
(PAGE 1)
[Most of the research for the following text was taken from the Elven
oral history, which is inevitably performed in songs, chants, dances,
plays, or a combination of all four. It is rare to hear an Elven sage
speak of their history at any length in anything less than a well-
organized recitation. Perhaps this can be credited to the incredibly
liquid and musical language of the Elven people, or perhaps this oral
tradition is what has caused their language to be, essentially, spoken
lyrics.]
I shall begin as all Elven kind begin. I am Matron Selidhn, daughter of
Matron Ivydh, who is the daughter of Matron Eivyshay, who was the
daughter of Matron Kalish, who was the daughter of the Two known as
Mother Celestidhl and Father Keloryon, who all Elven kin are children
of. I have written many times of the Elven history, and chanted with
some of the First. I have drunk from the dream smoke that the World
Dragon exudes through Its celestial maw, and tasted the sweet berries
that hang from the jewel trees. I have listened to the lilting song of
the Phoenix, touched the silver mane of the Unicorn in my youth, and
seen the place where the shells of the Fourth Moon fell when it hatched
in the Eastern Sky. My Tapestry is well-woven and rich, but not nearly
done.
(PAGE 2)
+--------------------------------------------------------------+
[*] Matron does not denote social status, but rather that the
person in question has had children or has been a foster
parent. Since Elves cannot have children until they are
at least forty, and since many do not have any until they
are one hundred and fifty -- and any birthing amongst Elven
people, or the caretaking of any child for that matter, is
a great honor -- this is a distinguishing title.
Since Elven children usually stay with their mother -- and
since "the one who carries" is often thought of as the one
whom the child "belongs" to -- most family lines are traced
through the mother's lineage rather than the father's.
+--------------------------------------------------------------+
I have seen Sorril Fade.
I have heard Kanton's death cry.
(PAGE 3)
I have lived through the Elven-Human wars and cried as I heard the tale
of the Mountain Elves and their betrayal. I am a daughter of the ones
who are known as the Celestial Clan -- we who watch the stars from high
towers in great cities. I am rich in knowledge. In the years of my
living I have seen many who have not understood my people, or myself.
They find my tongue hard to master, and will not sit through our songs,
which even the briefest ones they call lengthy. So it is with great
difficulty that I lay down much of what I have learned as a sage in this
format that is most appealing to those who are not of Elven kin. I
entrust much of what I write to my good friend Chante, who, though
mortal, has an eye for the way I will want my tale told, and may well
write said tale in the format I desire. His comments are within the odd
markings I believe he calls "brackets" [yes, that's what they're
called].
I shall Begin with the Beginning, for that is where all Elven children
learn first.
(PAGE 4)
BEGINNINGS AND MYTHS (approx. 3000 years)
The Gods were most careful with us when we were first created. We were
not created in large quantities, but rather two were crafted -- the ones
known as Mother Celestidhl and Father Keloryon [hereafter Mother and
Father] -- to start our species. Within the green of the forests the
Mother and Father spent much of their time, laughing and singing to one
another, content in their joy and happiness. It is because there were
initially only Two that we Elves number so few; that, and our often
infertile bodies do not produce children quite as adequately as the
Humans or Gor'Tog. The War of Tears [or the Elven-Human War] also
greatly crippled us, but never fear. We prevail doubtless.
The Mother and Father were the longest lived of us all, and the Mother
was nearly a thousand when she had her first child. This child's name
was Avaric, and he was perhaps the bravest of all the Mother and
Father's children. After that came some twenty others, each gloriously
beautiful in the eyes of their great parents, each raised with the
lavish love and care of the Two. Time, however, is a steady mistress,
and the children soon grew and spread out into the world. Many of them
married humans, and hereforth something odd happened when these couples
(PAGE 5)
had children. Rather than coming out as a hybrid of their parents, the
resulting children were invariably always EXACTLY like their Elven
parent, or EXACTLY like their Human parent. This truth is one of the
reasons Elves often disliked the Dragon Priests. That they would even
SUGGEST that Elotheans were really half-Human, half-Elven children is
ridiculous.
Now, by exactly I do not mean completely similar in likeness, but rather
in species; a child who looked like his or her Human parent never had
pointed ears and slanted eyes, nor did his or her children, nor did they
live long lives. They were as their mortal parent; brief.
This began the beginning of the Time of Sorrows, which I will speak of,
but first I must tell of the Fading.
The Mother and Father watched their many, many children prosper and
breed, spreading more and more of the Elven kind across the lands. They
smiled at their grandchildren and rejoiced at the formation of the many
Clans. But as they watched their children leave them, they felt a great
sorrow, a weariness of the heart. Their lives had been long, and slowly
(PAGE 6)
now they were beginning to feel they were no longer needed here, and
that it was time to...move on.
The Father was hunting one day when he happened upon a tribe of Dwarves.
Cruel creatures that they were, they accused him of killing one of their
"prey" (a deer they could never have possibly brought down) and when the
Father showed his pride and pronounced them liars, they fell upon him
and killed him, rending his body into many pieces and setting those
pieces to the winds.
The Mother Felt her beloved's death, and in anguish found the remains of
his body. Fierce was the vengeance of her children, who hunted down the
wicked tribe of Dwarves and killed them. The Dwarves, when they saw
their cousins killed and witnessed the terrible anger of the Elves, fled
into the mountains and buried themselves inside prisons of stone, living
in eternal fear of the Elves. And this is why Elves do not like
Dwarves.
[I must note here that the Dwarven version of this story is
significantly different, but since this is not my place to tell it, I
will leave it to you, dear reader, to learn the truth yourself.]
(PAGE 7)
The Mother saw her beloved buried, and then turned from her children,
who wept bitterly for the loss of their Father. Silently she passed
into the woods, and there it is said -- as her silver tears passed down
her cheeks -- she Faded into the stillness of the forest, vanishing
before her children's very eyes. No longer possessed of the will to
live, she passed forever from the denizens of Elanthia.
The time soon after the death of the Two became known as the Time of
Sorrows.
(PAGE 8)
THE TIME OF SORROWS (approx. 1000 years)
Many of the Two's children learned the pain of living at this time when
the ones they had called beloved -- mostly Humans -- flickered out off
living. It was a painful reality that shocked and hurt them when they
saw their own children or grandchildren die of old age. For this
reason, Elves began to move away from the Humans, the Elotheans, the
Halflings, the S'kra, and the Gor'Tog. They could not bear to watch as
those they cared for died, and the only other species that lived as long
as they were the Dwarves, who they could care less if they lived or
died.
Even isolated, the children of the Mother and the Father continued
prospering, and began to organize their own clans. Because we do not
like to dwell on the Time of Sorrows, I shall endeavor to move on to the
clans.
(PAGE 9)
THE TIME OF THE CLANS (current)
I shall tell now of each clan: their past, and some of their present.
† Forest Elves - Sometimes known as the "Silent", the Forest Elves are
perhaps some of the most numerous and least industrious of the Folk. It
is hard to tell the true number of all the Forest Elves, but it is
figured that they number well into the thousands of thousands. Since
they fade so easily into the backdrop of the sylvan they live in,
keeping a head count is obviously difficult.
Sturdy and tall, Forest Elves invariably dress in browns and greens and
tans, and are rarely seen outside a forest. Ancient Leth Deriel was
partially created by them that they might have a home during peacetimes
and a fortress during wartime.
The Forest Elves are the natural "offshoot" of the Two, since those
founding parents greatly preferred the woods to the city. Their
leaders have varied over the years due to their involvements with
various skirmishes and wars, and they were heavily involved with the
War of Tears.
(PAGE 10)
Their leader is currently an Elder Elf named Fiandehn, who is the great-
grandson of the Two's first son.
† River Elves - Perhaps the most curious of the Elven people, the River
Elves roam over the waters of Elanthia on the backs of great boats and
skiffs. Sometimes called the "Floaters", their Elven name means
"Wayward Flowers on the Cool Currents". River Elves are great traders,
but are often mercurial and not fond of worldly things such as war and
politics. Their allies are, oddly enough, the Halflings, who share
their free-spirited heart.
Wiry and thin, River Elves have darkened skin and sandy blonde hair.
Often seen wearing the takbahn (a type of straw hat designed so the wind
will not sweep it from their brow), the Floaters do not wear shoes
often, and a River Elf is lucky to touch down on land for more than an
hour in his or her long life. They tend to be shorter than other Elves,
which has been speculated to be the cause of too much fish in their
diet. Untrue to popular belief, River Elves do not have gills or fins.
(PAGE 11)
River Elves are good friends with the merfolk. A ship crafted by a
River Elf is a masterpiece of Elven workmanship; to be given one as a
gift is as great an honor as a suit of armor from the Mountain King.
River Elves are the only species on Elanthia who know what lies on the
other side of the great white and blue waves.
Their current leader is an Elven woman named Truly T'neir, granddaughter
of the Two's fourth child, Rili'ki.
† Wind Elves - So called for the windy plains they reside in, the Wind
Elves can fade into invisibility amongst the grasses. Fierce in battle
with a paired spear and handaxe, the Wind Elves are often quiet people
who do not speak unless they feel they have something to say. They are
sometimes called Catwalkers for their silent strides.
Wind Elves are hearty folk with tanned skin. Tall and slender, they
frequently dress in soft and pliable deerskin garments. With feathers
and beads braided into their hair, and their faces painted in wild
(PAGE 12)
colors, they can present a formidable scene to the naive. In truth,
their softspokenness belies a gentle spirit and a strong grounding in
common sense. A clan of Catwalkers have been known to follow a caravan
of traders within their territory for a hundred miles without once being
noticed. Wind Elves are master horse breeders; Horse Clan is an
offshoot of this clan.
Wind Elves were top scouts and hunters during the turbulent years before
the Seven Star Empire, and several of the
Catwalkers weakened the Dragon
Priest lines during Dzree's War. Unlike other Elven clans, Wind Elves
choose their names to emulate a mental image, and many of them will have
sometimes up to five names in their lifetime, depending on how many
changes their life goes through. They typically keep one name as
their "heart name"; the name loved ones and close comrades will know
them by. For a Wind Elf to give out his or her "heart name" to another
person who is not of the clan is a rare honor.
Their current leader is actually two -- a husband and wife (who take the
honorary title of Mother and Father to the clan) by the names of Falcon
and Bright. They are both great-grandchildren of the original Mother
and Father.
(PAGE 13)
† Mountain Elves - Perhaps the most political and devious of the Elves,
the tale of the Mountain Elves is the most sorrowful of all the clans.
The Mountain Elves did not always reside in the dark holds of the Spine
Mountains. Originally, they were an offshoot of the Wind Clan, wild and
free on the Plains of Elanthia. Innocent they were, and they flourished
as they fed on the creatures of the grasslands and lived their quiet
lives. But Dwarves, still smarting over the slap on the wrists that the
Father's children had dealt them, sought vengeance, and when they found
the innocuous clan one day, they did the unspeakable.
Luring them into their mountains with promises of a truce, the Mountain
Elves went happily, entranced by the idea of peace at last. But peace
they did not find. As their chieftains went to speak to the Dwarven
Mountain King, the artisans of the Clan were poisoned where they feasted
on breakfast and the warriors slain as they moved through the halls
toward the meeting. Only the children remained, and these the Dwarves
carried off and threw deep into the dark bowels of the Mountains.
(PAGE 14)
The children were raised to accept their lot as servants to the Dwarves.
Greedy creatures that they were, the Dwarves believed they had enslaved
their age-old enemy. But they discounted the memory of the Elven folk,
and especially the memory of a young Elven child by the name of
Morganae.
Silently seething as a mere servant, she bided her time, growing into
beauty and personal power as the Dwarves grew fat and lazy. One day,
one hundred and fifty years after the Outrage (as she came to call it),
she began her own slow poisoning. She told tales of the great tragedies
that had descended on them, and in the eyes of some who could still
remember sparked a fire, bright as the sun they had not seen for nearly
two centuries. Now that they had grown in numbers, the time had come.
At Night's Vigil, she and several others took up their hammers and
chisels, and slew the Dwarves who had been their overseers. Taken off
guard, the once-slaves took up the weapons of their enslavers and
destroyed all within the Mountain -- men, women, and children. The
Mountain King Morganae executed personally -- slowly.
(PAGE 15)
With the Mountain King's crown now beaten into a thin gold circlet, the
self-proclaimed Queen of the Mountain Elves turned her eyes toward the
world she had been forced to forget so many years ago. But time had
changed her, and changed her brethren. Many of the Elves found the
sunlight intolerable, to the point where they simply could not venture
out into the light without crying out in pain. A few of the more sturdy
left, forming the loose collaboration of folk known as the Bone Elves. Realizing she could never return to the days of old, realizing she no
longer even desired to go back to that way of life, Morganae encouraged
her people to learn how to shape the rocks, just as they had once
learned to sculpt trees. From the ore of the rich mountains they mined
metals and gems. The found beauty in the stalactites of the deep,
secretive caves and formed out of quarry and minerals cities and
villages of graceful stone. (PAGE 16) But bitterness at the life they had once led remained embedded in the
Elven hearts, and perhaps this is what gnaws at the Mountain Elves,
twisting them politically and ethically. Morganae has had numerous
assassination attempts on her persons in her life; she has killed two of
her own children who aspired to take her throne before she wished to
relinquish it. Morganae herself is as cold hearted as the cold
mountains she dwells in. She has remained a steady control over the
Mountain Elves over the many years of warfare and upheaval, and it is
whispered that it was she who poisoned the Empire of the Seven-Pointed
Star into chaos. Morganae (and all Mountain Elves, in fact) loves
dabbling in politics, so long as she does not lose. It was Morganae and the Eloth lord Corik who built the city of Shard
many years ago; Morganae's design and materials, Corik's magic and
lands. Morganae and her folk sometimes venture into the city to sell
their wares, though this grows more and more infrequent as the Mountain
Elves recede further away from the world they perceive as being against
them.
(PAGE 17)
Mountain Elves are commonly pale and thin with dark hair and eyes,
although a child of summer season's hair or sky-colored eyes does appear
from time to time. Black-hearted as the night, a Mountain Elf's devious
mind is not to be trifled with.
† Snow/Sand Elves - Fierce and savage, the Snow Elves -- like their
counterparts, the Sand Elves -- are a vicious tribe of barbaric Elven
folk. In the case of the Snow Elves, they live in the cold tundras,
believing that those who resort to cities or warmer climes are
weaklings. Snow Elf life is often short and cruel; dwelling in the
wastes of the wind-torn snowfields, they have little room for art or
love, instead living an existence that is wildly passionate in the
knowledge that each moment could be the last. Snow Elves do not often
speak with foreigners, and disdain most of the other Elves. They are
frequently tall and stocky, with pale blonde hair and chapped skin.
Their leader is the great great great great great grandson of the Mother
and Father, a barbarian chieftain named Trebar.
(PAGE 18)
† Sand Elves are almost exactly like Snow Elves in existence, living life
in the parched and desolate deserts instead. Dealing with the
sandstorms, the constant risk of dehydration, and the savage beasts of
the dunes, the Sand Elves ride over the sands on the backs of giant
packbeasts called the yeehar. Hardy and strong, the Sand Elves are
usually tall and wiry with long black hair, ebon to mahogany skin, and
bright (sometimes even blue) eyes. Their leader is the great great
great granddaughter of the Mother and Father, a fierce warrior named
Zeelah.
† City (or Celestial) Elves - Not so much a clan as a designation, the
City Elves (or Celestial, as they like to be called) is any Elf who no
longer dwells in a clan. Celestial Elves are who helped build Leth
Deriel and who initially ruled Shard. Celestial Elves commanded the
Empire when the Empire still stood. Since they come from many varied
clans, they do not have any particular appearance.
(PAGE 19)
† Celestial Elves are fairly recent, having existed officially since
approximately fifty years before the arrival of the Seven Star Empire, a
blink of an eye to an Elven Lorethew. Their leader is Nelix. o Bone Elves - Mysterious and feared, Bone Elves carry much of the
anguish of the Mountain Elves and have converted it into bitterness and
hate. Bone Elves are necromancers and enchanters, destroying for the
sake of destruction. Bone Elves despise all things pure and are
followers of Huldah and Harawep. Perhaps most frightening is their
ability to melt in amongst other Elves -- their only discerning feature
is that they are very intolerant to alcohol and shun the light.
(PAGE 20)
† Bone Elves consort with the demonic creatures of other planes, and
welcome all and any Elven "undesirables" into their clan, their leader
is the original nemesis of Morganae -- an Elf named Sidhlot. Morganae
despises Sidhlot since he is one of the first to challenge her "right"
to rule the Mountain Elves, and he despises her because she has retained
that right over the years. Sidhlot teaches much of his dark magic to
the clan members, using this as a shield against dissension. Traitors
to the clan are put to a slow, painful death, and their soul passed over
to the demonic forces that Sidhlot has bargained with.
Bone Elves look like any other Elf.
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End of the Account
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HISTORY
CIRCLE REQUIREMENTS
SPELLS
RITUALS
OUTRAGE & STATES OF BEING
TRAINING TIPS