The following stories will be occasionally told by Melodramatic subjects:
Love PoemEdit
- Here is a love poem from a Markarth bard named Yngvar:
- My lover's heart is numbing stone
That hides in ice beneath our sight.
So some decry, "It is not there,"
While others whisper, "Yet, it might."
- Though stone is born from fevered ash,
Once formed it yields no whiff of heat.
So too, her heart betrays no love,
Nor comforts those embracing it.
- As mountains grow and yearn for sky,
Then climbers, conquering, ascend.
With chisel, rope, with axe and pick,
They force the rock to yield to them.
- A peak stands proud amid the range,
Invincible, and scaled by none.
Those who try wash down her slopes,
Their eye-born streams obliquely run.
- For brash assault could never pierce
Those guarded depths that lay apart.
But patient water gently shapes
A furtive channel to the heart.
- My love is delving water, ice
That cracks with cycles of the sun.
A lapping, yearning, whispered plea
Will mark the time 'til I rush in.
- For I have dwelt among the rocks,
My city carved from rugged stone.
So in that burrow I will creep and
Warm the soul which makes my home.
Mysterious AkavirEdit
- This is an excerpt from the book Mysterious Akavir:
- Akavir is the kingdom of the beasts. No Men or Mer live in Akavir. Men once did, but they were eaten long ago by the vampiric Serpent Folk of Tsaesci.
- Had they not been eaten, they would have eventually come to Tamriel. The Nords left Atmora for Tamriel. Before them, the Elves abandoned Aldmeris for Tamriel.
- The Redguards destroyed Yokuda so they could make their journey to Tamriel. All Men and Mer know Tamriel is the nexus of creation.
- Tamriel is where the Last War will happen, where the Gods unmade Lorkhan and left their Adamantine Tower of secrets.
- Who knows what the four nations of Akavir think of Tamriel, but ask yourself: why have they tried to invade it three times or more?
Tale of Two MoonsEdit
- Here is a classic Khajiit poem entitled Tale of Two Moons.
- As the sky falls white on Elsweyr
When the frost forms on the lake
- When the fires blaze in brightness
When old bones begin to ache
- Then cats cast off their budis
And fur keeps out the cold
- And small moon chases big moon
And tells him secrets old
- But then blue skies o'er Elsweyr
When rivers stream with light
- When fires die in ashes
When youth again takes flight
- Then cats rewrap their budis
And comb out rich, thick manes
- And big moon chases small moon
And frees her from her chains
The Amulet of KingsEdit
- In the First Era, a powerful race of Elves called the Ayleids ruled central Tamriel with an iron hand.
- The haughty Elves relied on their patrons, the dark Daedra Lords, to provide armies of dead spirits.
- With these unholy armies from Oblivion, the Ayleids preyed without mercy upon the young races of men.
- On behalf of them, St. Alessia, first of the Cyrodiils, sought the aid of Akatosh, the Dragon God of Time.
- Feeling pity for humanity, the lord of the Aedra drew blood from his heart and blessed St. Alessia with it.
- As long as her heirs would remain true to the dragon blood, Akatosh would keep the Gates of Oblivion sealed.
- In token of this Covenant, Akatosh gave to Alessia and her descendants the sacred Amulet of Kings.
- Thus does Alessia become the first gem in the Amulet of Kings, the Red Diamond at the center of the Amulet.
- This is the Symbol of the Empire and of the Septim line, surrounded by eight other gems, one for each divine.
- So long as Alessia's heirs bear the Amulet of Kings, mortal man need not fear the hosts of the Daedra Lords.
- But should the Empire slacken in its dedication to the Divines, should the blood of Alessia's heirs fail...
- Then the barriers between Tamriel and Oblivion will fall, and the Daedra will once more trouble this world.
- That was The Amulet of Kings, by Wenengrus Monhona.
The BetrayedEdit
- Here is a poem about the tragic fate of the Snow Elves, titled The Betrayed.
- And when the Snow Prince fell to ground,
The Ice Elves divided above and below.
- Now vanquished and brutally bound,
One moment had shattered all they did know.
- The once cool wind on their skin,
Now replaced with the heat of the flame.
- And a pride once felt deep within,
Forgotten along with their name.
- Torn from their home of ice and frost,
Thrown into the pitch black dread of night.
- Living in fear as their minds become lost,
As their eyes begin dimming the light.
- Chained and enslaved,
What once was light turned to blackness.
- Alone and betrayed,
Sinking deeper into madness.
The Cantatas of VivecEdit
- Here is an excerpt from The Cantatas of Vivec.
- The gaunt ghostfires loom as subtle shrouds,
Smokes and shades on the biers of Red Mountain.
- Arches and spires line the rock halls,
Dimly lit by the spirits of the dead.
- The blood of broken hearths and houses
Runs in red rivers, blossoms in fountains.
- Girdled round within walls of wit's glass
The shattered hosts slumber in cradles of ash.
- But when shall they wake?
What dark crucible may kindle their souls to light?
- How long beneath red-reeking clouds
Must flickering watchfires burn?
- How many lifetimes of labor and lament
Will it take to seal this restless tomb?
The Warriors ChargeEdit
- Here is an old Redguard poem about the constellations, titled The Warrior's Charge.
- The star sung far-flung tales
Wreathed in the silver of Yokuda fair,
Of a hued Warrior who sails
His charges in the serpent's snare
- And the Lord of runes, bored so soon,
Leaves for an evening's dare,
Perchance to wake, the coiled snake,
Take its shirt of scales to wear
- And the Lady East, who e'ery beast,
Asleep or a'prowl can rouse a scare,
Screams, her eye alight in the sky
A worm no goodly sight can bear
- The mailed Steed, ajoins the deed
Not to be undone from his share,
Rides the night, to scale bright,
Leaving the seasoned Warrior's care
- The serpent rose, made stead to close,
The targets laid plain and there,
But Warrior's blade the Snake unmade,
And charges roam no more, they swear