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The Wiseman´s Fear VI (Spoilers and discussion)


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#141 SkynJay

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Posted 01 July 2011 - 03:33 PM

View PostWerthead, on 28 June 2011 - 03:36 PM, said:

I quite enjoyed TWMF, but I found this guy's take on it to be quite amusing.

I do think he might have missed some of the subtler and more subversive elements though.

Too funny.


And after browsing this thread for a bit, I realize I am at least two rereads away from discussing some of this stuff with all of you.  Wow, you dig deep.

#142 two_by_two

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Posted 01 July 2011 - 04:45 PM

View PostSylvester, on 01 July 2011 - 05:55 AM, said:

Another small find that I haven't seen mentioned so far: I rememeber people wondering about the mysterious enemy of the Creation War, for example at the Drossen Tor. Well, I have found in WMF a few names of the enemy's warriors. It is in Ademre, when Kvothe is learning his sword's Atas. (p822, Chapter 125):

So, any etymological findings to make? Maybe gremmen=shamblemen somehow?

So. Gremmen and daruna...

"Daru" is a root for the word "tree" (no pun intended), meaning "wood" or "log" in Sanskrit, which is also related to the word "tar" (here). "Runa" is related to "rune" and means "a secret conversation, whisper" in Old High German (here). "Grem" is linked to "gremlin", which may stem from Old English "gremman", meaning "to anger, vex" (here).

Let's throw in Drossen Tor while we're at it. I think someone somewhere linked this to the Sheer, but I can't for the life of me remember how.

"Dross" means garbage, specifically leftover metal from smelting in Old English (here). "Tor" means "high, rocky hill" (here). Interestingly, in German, "Tür" means "door". That may be important, or it may not be. I'm up for considering all options at this point.

#143 Jodan

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Posted 01 July 2011 - 06:39 PM

Wow, you guys have been busy, it's taken me longer to read all these threads than it did to read WMF! Some fantastic catches and theories on here, though I'm amazed my following theory hasn't really been touched on at all. (Wow, I did not see this post being this long, this is the short version! So apologies)

I believe in certain parts of this theory more than other parts, it really has grown and expanded in speculation since reading these threads, so without further ado...

My theory goes like this, Denna is not a Chandrian, but she will become one, replacing Cinder.

I don’t have the books with me at present but I’ve found some evidence to make it plausible, first off there are rumours/stories of a new Chandrian though they refer to Kvothe. The whole point of stories in the KKC is they contain a vein of truth running through them, so while Kvothe is not the new Chandrian, there is one running about which he may have directly or indirectly been responsible for.

We know the Chandrian are still out there through the framing in WMF, that's not a surprise as it would be pushing Kvothe into god like power to defeat them all in the last book, but I'd be very surprised if Kvothe doesn't defeat/kill Cinder in the DOS, there's a reason he's been picked as the main focus of Kvothe's revenge over the others and I think The Cteath helps hone and crystalise this train of thought. By revealing Cinder raped/tortured his mother it's focusing and centering that hate within Kvothe and sending down that path. The Cteath we are told always picks the most malicious path for the future, so my theory goes likes this:

1. It relys on Master Ash = Cinder, I think the evidence is too strong for this over Bredon which I'll explain later.
2. Cinder will be the one killed in Imre, the fact we only ever hear the person mentioned as 'him' might be an old hangover of never mentioning the names of the Chandrian in public.
3. Killing one Chandrian is going to be an epic task all by itself, so one epic fight which leads to the destruction of the Eolian and moves outside (the Eolian being destroyed is a theory and there's some possible foreshadowing of it), maybe if Denna is performing there Cinder is in and around as patron, Kvothe bumps him to him...
4. Plenty of potential for causalities in the crossfire, Sim?, Wil?
5. I think it has to be more than naming that doesn't allow the cobblestones to be mended, it would take every strain of magic to defeat Cinder, and him being 5000 years old he's going to know a fair bit himself, shaping?
6. Cinder is defeated, Haliax shows up, Kvothe is too weak to beat him.
7. Chandrian seems to means 7, so we can't have 6 can we?, Denna's search for magic and power could mean having her head turned by Haliax to take Cinders place. No more beatings, true magic, a 'proper place in the world', power etc it might be too good an offer to refuse, it would also fit with Kvothe feeling betrayed by Denna.
8. Technically this could be classed as breaking his oath not to go looking for Denna’s patron, all the more reason she is pissed and more susceptible to Haliax.
9. Haliax and Cinder don't get along it seems, so I wouldn't be surprised if Haliax sits the Kvothe fight out and lets Cinder die, maybe to get a better feel of powerful new enemy in Kvothe or because he's tired of Cinder and his possible screw ups (the bandits).

Whether Kvothe injures his left hand or not in this fight could be open also, another random point to finish on is he doesn’t have to kill all the Chandrian to score a major victory against them. One of Kvothe’s most frustrating failures is finding information and getting people to believe him on the Chandrian subject. Not openly fighting, but killing one of the Chandrian would destroy thousands of years of work by them to erase themselves from history, if that partly is their plan.

In the framing in WMF when Kvothe speaks their true names from the Adem story, Bast is horrified, but Kvothe points out it won’t matter one, besides, there’s probably people all over the FC speaking their names in wartime, they wouldn’t know the difference. Why would people be talking about the Chandrian openly all of a sudden? Has Kvothe done something to expose them? That’s where I get the above theory from.

The seed of all this came from my original belief that Denna wasn't trying to learn written magic, she was looking for help to not be controlled by it. I think/thought she was an unwilling agent of the Chandrian, the (paraphrased) 'See a girl pale as snow, easy come easy go' line sounds more like a sign than one of the actual Chandrian. I don't think they have a network of agents themselves, there trying to erase their own existence, having a network of agents constantly saying their name won't help matters, though having one person under constant and complete control could be a help. That's not to say Denna is centuries old/immortal, they might use random girls for a time and then dispose of them. In a city like Tarbean, whos going to notice another dead whore down a back alley?

After reading all these threads this does seem less likely now, but as no one has really mentioned it I thought I would through the whole Denna looking for a counter magic theory on here.

I also thought Denna was either trying to learn Yllish magic to counteract the Chandrians hold over her, or they are spoon feeding her BS to keep her compliant or semi cooperative, the same with Cinder acting as a patron of sorts. That she's had contact with the Chandrian and knows some of their secrets would make her the ideal replacement, while being a good parallel fate of Lanre/Lyra to Denna/Kvothe. They might also like to keep a ‘reserve’ just in case or have a powerful human agent, but I doubt that.

As for Bredon, unless Cinder/Bredon are the same person I can't see it simply because of geography. We know from Kvothe it takes 2-3 weeks to sail from Tarbean to Vint one way, add another 2-3 days to Imre, that's 8-10 weeks travelling alone. Then add on a few weeks spent with Denna, a few trips a year, can Bredon really afford to be away up to half a year from the Maer's court when the Maer himself can’t risk being away? Unless he's using The Fae/Waystones as some sort of shortcut it just doesn't add up for me. On top of that the whole wedding and Master Ash asking for what sounds like a scouting report from Denna about the wedding is too big a hint IMO to be a red herring.

It might be cliché having Cinder/Ash, but having Denna die at the end is much more of a widespread cliché in my eyes, tbh I think it’s impossible to avoid every cliché in a story no matter what medium it’s in, it’s enough of a heartbreaking twist while avoiding the standard happily ever after or dies in his arms which it appears to be.

Edited by Jodan, 01 July 2011 - 06:43 PM.


#144 Merihathor

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Posted 01 July 2011 - 09:19 PM

Interesting ideas, Jordan, but now I'm wondering--wasn't her patron described as older? Perhaps the description wasn't explicit and his age was implied, or perhaps I'm confused about this being ascribed to Master Ash. In any case, I think that's why I wasn't sure about Cinder being Master Ash. I'm sure the other side of the argument might be that given the Chandrian can hide their signs, then perhaps they can shape their appearance as well. Regardless, I'm still unsure about who Master Ash really is.

#145 two_by_two

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Posted 01 July 2011 - 10:41 PM

View PostMerihathor, on 01 July 2011 - 09:19 PM, said:

Interesting ideas, Jordan, but now I'm wondering--wasn't her patron described as older? Perhaps the description wasn't explicit and his age was implied, or perhaps I'm confused about this being ascribed to Master Ash. In any case, I think that's why I wasn't sure about Cinder being Master Ash. I'm sure the other side of the argument might be that given the Chandrian can hide their signs, then perhaps they can shape their appearance as well. Regardless, I'm still unsure about who Master Ash really is.

Quote

Chapter 66: Volatile
"She's not really the sort of girl who spends a lot of time alone...." He gave me a sympathetic look. "She turned a few away, but did eventually leave with a fellow. I don't think she was really with him, if you catch my meaning. She's been looking for a patron, and this fellow had that sort of look about him. White-haired, wealthy, you know the type."



I am pretty sure that is the only description we get of Master Ash, and honestly it may not even be him (though it seems likely). No mention is made of his age, though it is implied he is elderly.

#146 jumbles

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 12:17 AM

@Jodan

Great post! I like the idea!

@two_by_two

Denna refers to her patron as an older gentleman in NotW chapter 72.

#147 two_by_two

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 12:26 AM

View Postjumbles, on 02 July 2011 - 12:17 AM, said:

@Jodan

Great post! I like the idea!

@two_by_two

Denna refers to her patron as an older gentleman in NotW chapter 72.

Oh right. Well. Hmm. Perhaps just older than her??? That's a stretch...

#148 Zizoz

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 04:05 AM

Doesn't Cinder have white hair, at least? And he is, technically, quite old.

Plus, he could disguise himself, as someone said.

#149 thistlepong

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 08:56 AM

Sylvester and faek: thank you.  I'd considered reading through the Spanish translations to look for differences, but I'm out of practice.

View Posttwo_by_two, on 01 July 2011 - 04:45 PM, said:

Let's throw in Drossen Tor while we're at it. I think someone somewhere linked this to the Sheer, but I can't for the life of me remember how.

I did at one point.  At The Blac of Drossen Tor, Lanre and his allies “won the battle and turned the tide of the war.”NotWc26, kl 3667  The words are packed with meaning.  Both blac once meant shining, bright, or pale; drossen is straight Danish; tor itself means door and rocky outcropping.  All this to bring up something that began here.WMF III #247  Sheer means a change of course, rising perpendicularly, shining, bright, and free from adulteration.  Coupled with launceshaubert’s posts from around that time you get a cluster of alchemical symbolism occurring in exactly the same place, made all the more obvious by the scorched area of town at its base.

The Sheer is indeed aptly named.  It's central to Kvothe's narrative.  It’s the only tor we ever see.  It’s dense with symbolic reverberation.  It’s etymologically significant.  It’s implicated in one of the major structural themes.  It’s proximal to the mysterious Lackless Door... So yah, could be.

#150 two_by_two

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 12:31 PM

View Postthistlepong, on 02 July 2011 - 08:56 AM, said:

Sylvester and faek: thank you.  I'd considered reading through the Spanish translations to look for differences, but I'm out of practice.



I did at one point.  At The Blac of Drossen Tor, Lanre and his allies "won the battle and turned the tide of the war."NotWc26, kl 3667  The words are packed with meaning.  Both blac once meant shining, bright, or pale; drossen is straight Danish; tor itself means door and rocky outcropping.  All this to bring up something that began here.WMF III #247  Sheer means a change of course, rising perpendicularly, shining, bright, and free from adulteration.  Coupled with launceshaubert's posts from around that time you get a cluster of alchemical symbolism occurring in exactly the same place, made all the more obvious by the scorched area of town at its base.

The Sheer is indeed aptly named.  It's central to Kvothe's narrative.  It's the only tor we ever see.  It's dense with symbolic reverberation.  It's etymologically significant.  It's implicated in one of the major structural themes.  It's proximal to the mysterious Lackless Door... So yah, could be.

Oh yes. Thank you very much.

#151 two_by_two

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 01:15 PM

I just realized something. The word "aeolian", meaning "characterized by a sighing sound, as if produced by the wind", is remarkably similar to "Eolian". Don't really know what this could mean, but it's interesting.

#152 tze

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 04:00 PM

View Posttwo_by_two, on 01 July 2011 - 10:41 PM, said:

Chapter 66: Volatile
"She's not really the sort of girl who spends a lot of time alone...." He gave me a sympathetic look. "She turned a few away, but did eventually leave with a fellow. I don't think she was really with him, if you catch my meaning. She's been looking for a patron, and this fellow had that sort of look about him. White-haired, wealthy, you know the type.".

This brings up another piece of Master Ash = Cinder evidence that I haven't seen posted yet. According to the above quote, Denna meets her patron at approximately the same time as the fire in the Fishery (Kvothe doesn't meet her because he's lying injured in the Medica). Denna herself reinforces this when she next meets Kvothe:

Quote

She rolled her eyes. "I'm sure you were terribly distraught. You did me a favor in a way. While I was sitting there ... alone ... pining away ... " "I said I was sorry." " ... an older gentleman introduced himself to me. We talked, got to know each other. ... " She shrugged and looked sideways at me, almost bashfully. "I've been meeting with him ever since. If things continue smoothly, I think he'll be my patron before the year is out."

And what else do we know about the day Denna met her patron?

Quote

It was so cold that my breath hung white in the air.

Quote

and guessed that it might have something to do with the workshop being cooler this early in the morning.

And lest we forget what precipitated the fire that day in the first place:

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"Should there be this much frost?" I asked him, pointing out the tar canister. Its edges were covered in fine white tufts of frost, like tiny shrubs. The air around the metal actually shimmered with cold.

Quote

"What went wrong with the canister?" "Too cold," Kilvin said. "The metal was just a shell, protecting a glass container inside and keeping the temperature low. I suspect that the canister's sygaldry was damaged so it grew colder and colder. When the reagent froze ... "

So on the day Denna met Master Ash, it was strangely, noticeably, cold. The bone tar canister mysteriously freezes. People make up somewhat plausible explanations for these things, but given how Cinder brings the cold, I think it's one more piece of evidence that Cinder is Master Ash.

Edited by tze, 02 July 2011 - 04:02 PM.


#153 Angeleyes

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 06:22 PM

View Posttze, on 02 July 2011 - 04:00 PM, said:

So on the day Denna met Master Ash, it was strangely, noticeably, cold. The bone tar canister mysteriously freezes. People make up somewhat plausible explanations for these things, but given how Cinder brings the cold, I think it's one more piece of evidence that Cinder is Master Ash.
Beautiful work.  +1!

#154 Merihathor

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Posted 02 July 2011 - 09:33 PM

View Posttze, on 02 July 2011 - 04:00 PM, said:

So on the day Denna met Master Ash, it was strangely, noticeably, cold. The bone tar canister mysteriously freezes. People make up somewhat plausible explanations for these things, but given how Cinder brings the cold, I think it's one more piece of evidence that Cinder is Master Ash.

Wow...that's really interesting. Nice! Now I'm starting to think her patron is Cinder, as well.

#155 Kmmontandon

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Posted 03 July 2011 - 01:22 PM

Here's a subtle bit of maybe foreshadowing, the Maer telling Kvothe that it's improper to carry a sword at the court:

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"I could not help but notice that you are armed," he remarked, disapproval heavy on his voice.
My hand went unconsciously to Caesura.  It was at my hip now, rather the over my shoulder.  "Is there aught amiss with that, your Grace?  I have understood that all men keep the right to gird themselves in Vintas."
"It is hardly proper," he stressed the word."
"I understand that in the king's court in Renere, there's not a gentleman would dare be seen without a sword."
"Well-spoken as you are, you are no gentleman," Alveron pointed out coolly, "as you would do well to remember."
I said nothing.
"Besides, it is a barbarian custom, and one that will bring the king to grief in time.  No matter what the custom in Renere, in my city, my house, and my garden, you will not come before me armed."


My bolding.

#156 Ser Scot A Ellison

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Posted 03 July 2011 - 03:27 PM

I'm listening to the audiobook of WMF I noticed that the reader when reading Hespa's story he makes Jax sound a lot like Kvothe.  I wonder if that has significance.

#157 two_by_two

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Posted 03 July 2011 - 07:42 PM

View PostSer Scot A Ellison, on 03 July 2011 - 03:27 PM, said:

I'm listening to the audiobook of WMF I noticed that the reader when reading Hespa's story he makes Jax sound a lot like Kvothe.  I wonder if that has significance.

You mean, as far as their voices go, or as in their names (because I can't figure out how that would work)? I probably wouldn't put too much stress on that. My guess is that the voices are the actor's affectation and have little bearing on the story.

#158 thistlepong

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Posted 03 July 2011 - 09:14 PM

View Posttwo_by_two, on 03 July 2011 - 07:42 PM, said:

You mean, as far as their voices go, or as in their names (because I can't figure out how that would work)? I probably wouldn't put too much stress on that. My guess is that the voices are the actor's affectation and have little bearing on the story.

I noticed it too, Ser Scot.  Nick Podehl's a fantastic reader.  Even voices within accent groups are distinct.  Wil, Kilvin, and Roent would be recognizable in conversation with one another or just passing through another scene.  Hespe relating "The Boy Who Loved the Moon" is noticably Hepse doing the voices; which made Jax just being the normal Kvothe voice stand out.  It may be nothing.  It may simply reinforce the Iax/Lanre/Kvothe similarities.

As for it, having bearing on the story, it's much easier to remember that the Adem are lily white blonds when one hears them.

#159 Galactus

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Posted 04 July 2011 - 06:54 AM

View Posttwo_by_two, on 02 July 2011 - 01:15 PM, said:

I just realized something. The word "aeolian", meaning "characterized by a sighing sound, as if produced by the wind", is remarkably similar to "Eolian". Don't really know what this could mean, but it's interesting.

I always associated it with king Eolus from the Odyssey.

#160 jumbles

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Posted 04 July 2011 - 10:36 AM

View Posttze, on 02 July 2011 - 04:00 PM, said:

So on the day Denna met Master Ash, it was strangely, noticeably, cold. The bone tar canister mysteriously freezes. People make up somewhat plausible explanations for these things, but given how Cinder brings the cold, I think it's one more piece of evidence that Cinder is Master Ash.

Very observant! Thanks for pointing this out!