Mythal'enaste. I see what you mean now. [She'd thought Sera was asking sarcastically before. Something about asking Pel if she'd written insults about city elves into her book. She flips through the book again and reads another passage, one that begins with the same sort of explanation she gave Sera about the duty of the Dalish as keepers of the lost lore, but continues after.]
"We keep the lost lore for the service of those elves who want to become part of the elven nation in exile. It is our most sacred calling. Elves who choose not to be part of the nation in exile fall outside our calling, and as such, have been doubly marginalized--by human society and elven both. The term flat-ear is considered only a mild insult by the Dalish, as if simply having a term for elves who are "not like us" is necessary and this is as good a term as any. Having that term, however, has worsened a grave rift between Dalish and non-Dalish elves. Despite all being equally pureblooded, the prevailing Dalish attitude is that non-Dalish elves are race traitors, having rejected that which is most sacred to the Dalish. They are seen as weak-willed, servile, and ignorant.
My conversations with elves who live in alienages, however, have shown there is little difference in day-to-day life between Dalish and non-Dalish elves. Both groups work hard, sacrifice much, and have little. The major difference, on a day-to-day level, seems to be permanence of residence, and even that can be considered questionable.
There is also the ignorant accusation that the blood of non-Dalish elves is less pure, despite the fact that all crossed-race children of elves are human. In terms of inherited traits, non-Dalish elves have no impurity that the Dalish lack. They are given no disadvantage by blood, only by circumstance."
Sorry for all the edits?
"We keep the lost lore for the service of those elves who want to become part of the elven nation in exile. It is our most sacred calling. Elves who choose not to be part of the nation in exile fall outside our calling, and as such, have been doubly marginalized--by human society and elven both. The term flat-ear is considered only a mild insult by the Dalish, as if simply having a term for elves who are "not like us" is necessary and this is as good a term as any. Having that term, however, has worsened a grave rift between Dalish and non-Dalish elves. Despite all being equally pureblooded, the prevailing Dalish attitude is that non-Dalish elves are race traitors, having rejected that which is most sacred to the Dalish. They are seen as weak-willed, servile, and ignorant.
My conversations with elves who live in alienages, however, have shown there is little difference in day-to-day life between Dalish and non-Dalish elves. Both groups work hard, sacrifice much, and have little. The major difference, on a day-to-day level, seems to be permanence of residence, and even that can be considered questionable.
There is also the ignorant accusation that the blood of non-Dalish elves is less pure, despite the fact that all crossed-race children of elves are human. In terms of inherited traits, non-Dalish elves have no impurity that the Dalish lack. They are given no disadvantage by blood, only by circumstance."
Want me to go on?