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| | In the year 160 of the [[Midnight Age]], the Essence of '''Rahn''' was torn from Him |
| | | and His influence on the world collapsed. Like the [[Lanos|Lord of Truth]], His order |
| ==The Rise of Rahn==
| | and shrines were lost to [[Aetolia]]. For posterity, we keep His philosophy below: |
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| In the past, across the Sapphire Sea, a hero arose. By his determination | |
| and spirit, the hero chose to perfect himself in body, mind, and spirit.
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| He strove to cleanse the blemishes of his existence that mortal life
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| forced upon him. Well respected by his peers, the hero extolled his path
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| in life to those around him, beseeching them to forego the banalities of
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| mortality, and seek the path to perfection.
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| His life was well known even to the Gods who saw him as a shining
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| example of the heights a mortal could achieve. One God in particular, a
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| dark God, took great interest in the hero, watching him very closely and
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| studying the effects of his self-purifications on his soul. The
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| machinations that ran through the God's mind are unfathomable to
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| mortals, and ultimately He chose to travel to the hero and test his
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| resolve. Dressed as a simple travelling philosopher and academic, He met
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| the hero on the road between two cities.
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| "I say, good sir, to where do you travel on this humid day?" stammered
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| the academic to the hero.
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| "Rest is for the weak, learned sir, as you must well know. Was it not
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| persistence and will that gave you the insight into the world that you
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| possess today? I travel to ensure my spirit does not grow dull, and that
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| my body does not grow weak."
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| "Ah, I see. You choose to model yourself after that hero, the
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| self-righteous one," spat the academic. "Are you certain you have his
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| will to maintain his stifling philosophy?"
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| "I am quite certain, knowledgable master, as it is I who stand before
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| you!" The voice of the hero was unstrained, neither with pride nor
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| disdain with the line of questioning. In his travels he was quite
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| accustomed to those who did not believe in his ways.
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| "Ah, I had no clue I was in the presence of such greatness. My humble
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| apologies, your excellence. If it does not bother you so, and if you
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| would have the moment of time to spare, would you care to sit beneath
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| this shady tree and speak to me of your travels and tribulations. I know
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| little of what drives you to perfection, and I wish to know more."
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| And so the hero agreed and they sat for a few hours discussing at great
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| length the path to perfection. The academic would attempt to pry a hole
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| into the hero's logic, and the hero would, every time, brilliantly
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| defeat the attack. As the sun drew further down in the sky, the academic
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| posited one final question.
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| "Why do you not seek the path of ascension, to become a truly perfect
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| immortal?" The sweat on the academic's brow dripped onto the ground in
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| the afternoon heat.
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| The hero paused for a moment, unsure of the intent of the question. "It
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| is the path to perfection that is beauty to my eyes, not the state of
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| perfection. To always improve oneself, against constant odds, that is
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| victory and achievement."
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| "It is your mortality that is the blemish on your soul which seperates
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| you from perfection! Do you not see that?" The academic stared deeply
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| into the eyes of the hero, testing his resolve.
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| "I will not be swayed, kind scholar. I do this only for the purification
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| of my own soul, and ask nothing in return. If my path is difficult, I
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| shall walk it proudly. I do not ask the same of any person who does not
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| wish the sacrifice." The hero, his spirit intact, sat firm and his eyes
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| did not budge from the face of the academic.
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| "Then it will be your folly. Your soul will never be pure, and I will
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| show you the corruption in its depths." Revealing His true form to the
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| hero, the dark God towered over the hero. "I will show your pitiful soul
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| the perfection best suited for it." Pulling the mortal hero's frame with
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| Him, the dark God travelled across continents and oceans and once
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| finding the ideal location, cast the hero into the mouth of a steaming
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| volcano.
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| The hero's body weak from the damage caused in the fall, he could only
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| lay there looking back up at the skies above him. During the flight
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| across the oceans, he had seen much he had not imagined about the world.
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| It was much larger and much more rich than he had imagined, and from the
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| heights he soared, he knew he was nowhere near his home.
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| The inside of the volcano was steamy and hot, and he laid on a small
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| slab of rock jutting from a pool of lava. The walls reflected the dull
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| glow of the lava and he could hear in the distant the hiss of water
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| hitting the liquid fire. The heat from the lava below singed his back,
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| and as he struggled to rise, he saw before him the dark frame of this
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| unknown Immortal. "You want your soul perfected so badly? Then I shall
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| hammer the kinks of out of it." Raising a glimmering ethereal hammer,
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| the God struck down on the weakened form the hero, striking not his
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| physical shell, but his very soul and existence with the blow.
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| The blow tore through the hero's stability. He struggled to maintain
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| composure and sanity as his soul was bruised from the strike. Lifting
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| his head from the rock he could see the God standing above him. "Here I
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| shall forge your spirit into My form of perfection!", boomed His voice
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| as He chained the helpless hero onto the rock. Once again, the dark God
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| raised the hammer, and struck down on His prisoner. The anguished scream
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| of the hero rang out amongst the Putoran hills, echoing as far south as
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| the village of Jaru.
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| The pain was horrible, but the hero suffered from then on in near
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| silence. Daily the torment was struck down on him, and nightly the lava
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| pool would rise to heat his stone slab to boiling temperatures. But the
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| hero would not relent his spirit, nor would he perish from the agony and
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| torment.
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| For many years this went on, until one day the punishments ceased and
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| the anonymous Immortal did not reappear. The hero waited, chained to his
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| prison, and as the time passed he began to meditate to perfect his mind
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| and to try to discover the falseness of pain and anguish. During these
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| meditations, he began to hear a faint rhythm in the distant recesses of
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| his mind. Strong and powerful, the rhythm throbbed in his ears and in
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| his head as it invigorated his spirit. As his meditations continued, the
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| rhythm grew louder, and through the strength of his own will and his
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| focus upon the rhythm, he perceived neither the searing heat of the lava
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| nor the pain of his burnt flesh.
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| The beat consumed his soul, and soon it matched the very beat of his
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| heart. Once the hero had made the realization that the two sounds
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| coincided, he looked about himself and noticed his mortal form had
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| expired. He had transcended mortality through determination and the act
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| of purification and he now stood the perfect example of existence, an
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| Immortal.
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| Grabbing the hammer of His torture, the Immortal strode with a fury of
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| fire from his prison, erupting the volcano to seek his torturer and to
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| take his place in the Garden of the Gods as Rahn, God of Fire.
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| ==The Last Testament of Rahn==
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| (from HELP RAHN)
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| In the year 160 of the Midnight Age, the Essence of Rahn was torn from Him
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| and His influence on the world collapsed. Like the Lord of Truth, His order | |
| and shrines were lost to Aetolia. For posterity, we keep His philosophy below: | |
|
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| Into the depths of the fire, to the colorless portion of the flame, must the | | Into the depths of the fire, to the colorless portion of the flame, must the |
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| existence must begin to study the flame and its power. For only through | | existence must begin to study the flame and its power. For only through |
| purification in fire can one shed the chains of mediocrity and imperfection. | | purification in fire can one shed the chains of mediocrity and imperfection. |
| | | [[Category:Mythology]][[Category:Divine Pantheon]] |
| {{GodPage}}
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