extramural: (008.)
тнє outsider ([personal profile] extramural) wrote in [community profile] therookery2016-06-20 05:44 pm

rest, my brother, and tell me all about the ocean

FORM: Sending crystal.
SENDER: The Outsider
RECIPIENT: everyone
WHAT: Poking the hornets nest.
WHEN: Nowish?
WHERE: Skyhold
NOTES: He creepy.


What a tumultuous time it is in this world. An empire at war, ancient protectors showing what many feel to be their true colors, strangers falling from the sky -- the more things change, the more they stay the same.

I am not of this world, though it bares similarities to my own -- namely a prominent disdain for the other and ridiculous class differences -- as much it it shows its differences. Empires rise and fall; I admittedly have little interest in wars that have played out hundreds of times in similar ways across hundreds of worlds.

However, I do want to know what you find interesting about this world, if you will share.
bookish_lioness: (Bookish)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-07-13 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, well, Nicolas Flamel was an alchemist, who developed what's known as the Philosopher's Stone. It enabled him to enjoy eternal life, but when he discovered that it was in danger of being used for evil, he allowed it to be destroyed; he was well over 650 years old by then, though, so he'd lived a long life. And Christopher Marlowe was a playwright and poet; his most famous work was probably Doctor Faustus, which was about a man agreeing to sell his soul to the Devil in exchange for worldly pleasures.
bookish_lioness: (Listening intently)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-07-15 11:39 am (UTC)(link)
He did, yes. For him and his wife. But given the danger it posed to the world at large if it fell into the wrong hands, he bought them both enough time to get their affairs in order before allowing it to be destroyed.

[She hadn't really had any reason for spouting off those two names first, other than Flamel being a noted scholar in her world and Marlowe being a celebrated contemporary of Shakespeare's, but she can at least see the connection between him and Flamel's extended life, even if she'd still insist that the mention of Faust had been coincidental.]

Ah, I never did offer it, did I? Sorry; my name is Hermione. Hermione Granger.
bookish_lioness: (Golden background)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-07-19 11:42 am (UTC)(link)
Same. Even if we're still trying to puzzle out your name.

It's... sort of a long, complicated story. Essentially, a very bad person who'd sort of been killed but whose essence still lingered was going to use it to become more than just an essence. He ended up managing to emerge at full power a few years later through Dark magic, but destroying the Philosopher's Stone at least prolonged his return until we were better able to fight him.
bookish_lioness: (Looking down contemplatively)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-07-21 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I suppose it would make for a better story if I hadn't been living it.

We did. It took a few years, but in the end, he was little different from this world's Corypheus, looking for ways to prolong his life so he could destroy the world in his efforts to rule it.
bookish_lioness: (Profile)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-07-22 11:37 am (UTC)(link)
He was. I know too many people who started out all too similarly to him. It was just a matter of ambition that separated the thing he became from the man my best friend grew up to be. It's not an easy thing to think about, when you realize how easily the average person can be corrupted.
bookish_lioness: (Swan-like neck)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-07-27 02:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Dark magic took its toll on him, yes. But he had plenty of followers who bore no physical mark of the acts they've committed, aside from the tattoo they all had. After all, some of the most monstrous scars are more psychological or emotional than they are physical.