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Author Topic: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)  (Read 7415 times)

mcclay

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #60 on: September 20, 2013, 12:41:18 pm »

And the Shadowfrom did fester and the land above it was twisted and strange. No bamboo grew above it and the earth pushed away from it. Great mountains arose and twisted animals haunted their passes.
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IamanElfCollaborator

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #61 on: September 20, 2013, 12:43:19 pm »

Eventually, the first Merfolk envoys approached the shores of the World Basket. They were able to live upon the land, for they were made in the image of the fluffy ones, yet unlike the fluffy ones. They did not live on it for long, for the Ocean called them back before the night came, and they came only to trade the goods of the sea with the humans and rodents.

Harbingerjm

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #62 on: September 20, 2013, 12:51:45 pm »

EDIT: Oh, and thinking about it, and then looking it up, rodents actually lack canines, so Xarokan couldn't have made the Great Fluffy One's canine into a spear unless he had taken all of them and all rodents, in reflection of the perfect rodent, then lost their canines from then on. So I think maybe it would be a better idea if it had been an incisor instead.
Frankly, I'd be more confused over the "humungous spear" bit, given the Most Fluffy One is a fair bit smaller than a human head, and most of that is fur.
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Kadzar

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #63 on: September 20, 2013, 02:00:26 pm »

EDIT: Oh, and thinking about it, and then looking it up, rodents actually lack canines, so Xarokan couldn't have made the Great Fluffy One's canine into a spear unless he had taken all of them and all rodents, in reflection of the perfect rodent, then lost their canines from then on. So I think maybe it would be a better idea if it had been an incisor instead.
Frankly, I'd be more confused over the "humungous spear" bit, given the Most Fluffy One is a fair bit smaller than a human head, and most of that is fur.
Ah, see, I had imagined he was immense, given that giant fleas roamed along his back and he had planets in or inside his ear. I also personally believed that the World Basket sat perched upon his belly, because that seemed rather cute.
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kaian-a-coel

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #64 on: September 20, 2013, 02:20:59 pm »

EDIT: Oh, and thinking about it, and then looking it up, rodents actually lack canines, so Xarokan couldn't have made the Great Fluffy One's canine into a spear unless he had taken all of them and all rodents, in reflection of the perfect rodent, then lost their canines from then on. So I think maybe it would be a better idea if it had been an incisor instead.
Frankly, I'd be more confused over the "humungous spear" bit, given the Most Fluffy One is a fair bit smaller than a human head, and most of that is fur.
Ah, see, I had imagined he was immense, given that giant fleas roamed along his back and he had planets in or inside his ear. I also personally believed that the World Basket sat perched upon his belly, because that seemed rather cute.
Let's retroactively do that (the basket on belly I mean) :P.
Honestly the size of the Great Fluffy One doesn't really matter. As with all myths, inconsistencies exists and that's part of the fun!
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micelus

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #65 on: September 20, 2013, 05:28:20 pm »

You seemed to have skipped the Third.


Twas on purpose.
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Harbingerjm

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #66 on: September 20, 2013, 08:46:22 pm »

EDIT: Oh, and thinking about it, and then looking it up, rodents actually lack canines, so Xarokan couldn't have made the Great Fluffy One's canine into a spear unless he had taken all of them and all rodents, in reflection of the perfect rodent, then lost their canines from then on. So I think maybe it would be a better idea if it had been an incisor instead.
Frankly, I'd be more confused over the "humungous spear" bit, given the Most Fluffy One is a fair bit smaller than a human head, and most of that is fur.
Ah, see, I had imagined he was immense, given that giant fleas roamed along his back and he had planets in or inside his ear. I also personally believed that the World Basket sat perched upon his belly, because that seemed rather cute.

See:
In the beginning, there was a rodent, and it was small, and very, very fluffy. From it came the land, the sea and the stars, from one bodily function or another. Best not to ask too many questions there.

Also, I don't know where you're getting planets being inside its ear from, it leaves them lying around the universe. Sometimes it gives them a sea, sometimes it doesn't. It depends on bladder control.
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Kadzar

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #67 on: September 21, 2013, 12:16:07 am »

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micelus

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #68 on: September 21, 2013, 06:52:57 am »

The third child, as in age-wise, did not receive knowledge; his/her younger sibling did instead.
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Kadzar

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #69 on: September 22, 2013, 01:07:54 pm »

And so the children of Xarokan brought their gifts to civilization. Iskus's clothes weren't very popular with the rodents, as they made them feel too hot and a bit itchy, but the humans appreciated them as a means to keep warm and cover up their dangly and jiggly parts.

Avide's crops were appreciated by all, but there was sometimes a problem of the rodents being too enthusiastic and eating at the crop plants before they were ready.

The humans found Fierte's writing useful for recording thoughts and memories, but the rodents were reluctant to adopt it, instead favoring their own scent-based "writing" system.
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IamanElfCollaborator

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #70 on: September 22, 2013, 01:11:44 pm »

Iskus's clothes were not popular with the Merfolk, for they were sea-dwellers, and the clothes would be dampened and rendered useless.

Avide's crops were, predictably, not very much appreciated by the Merfolk.

However, they did adopt Fierte's writing, merely adapting it into their own form of writing.

And thus were the first languages eventually developed. Rodent, human, and merfolk.

Kadzar

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Re: Cosmogeny (World-Building in the Style of Ancient Myths)
« Reply #71 on: September 30, 2013, 10:19:56 pm »

And so the Furies saw their sibling grow prosperous from their gifts, and their envy grew. They contemplated stealing the products of their gifted siblings, but realized that, because of the knowledge they had, it wouldn't do much, since they could always make more.

But there was one thing their siblings couldn't make more of, and which was desired by many and they could easily steal: their father's pearl.

So, in the dark of night, the Furies snuck into their father's bedroom and stole his great pearl, which took all five of them to lift, and ran off with it to the mountains.
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What if the earth is just a knick in one of the infinite swords of the mighty fractal bear?
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