Yeah, I concur with Cüréthañ and call bullshit on lack of selflessness too. But, I think you were kind of misinterpreting what I was saying locke. Fanayal ceding authority to Skaurus for the campaign in Gedea and Shigek is less about selflessness, but much more about "following the shortest past." Doing what is pragmatic to preserve the nation of Kian, sovereignty of the Solitary God, such and such, etc. etc.
And because I'm an asshole
" Men, Kellhus had once told her, were like coins: they had two sides. Where one side of them saw, the other side of them was seen" So I ask you locke, who do you think was manipulating Fanayal? And why do you think he gave command of the Shigek campaign to Skaurus?
I think Madness has articulated this somewhere, that the difficult task of getting a solid read on a set perspective of this series is the Curse of Knowledge that the reader is afflicted with. How can we empathize or understand what motivates these characters when we ourselves have a such a profoundly totality of understanding that belies compassion? We are like the Hundred Gods in that sense. We apprehend the whole, but we are blind in so many other ways. Anyway, I thought it was funny that Cüréthañ brought up AE as being the bleaker series that lacks selflessness, when for 99.9% of The Great Ordeal it is probably the most self-sacrificing thing they have ever done. One of the most iconic images of the series, for me, is when Kellhus gives his speech to the Ordeal right before they leave Sakarpus and cross the threshold into the Ancient North. I'm paraphrasing, but he says something like "There will be blood, there will be sacrifice for you the chosen. You who have taken up the yoke up the apocalypse. Verily, you may lose your very lives. But knows this, though you may die, you will save the world." Spoken without any irony. Now, since we know Kellhus is
Kellhus we suspect everything he says. But for The Great Ordeal, this is Aragorn marching on the Gates of the Morannon, this is the final battle against the Legions of Mordor and such. In their minds, there is nothing more selfless, this is the most important thing they've ever done in their lives. But we as the readers are cursed with knowing the truth! *shakes fists at the heavens*