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Eilistraee: Lady Silverhair: Difference between revisions

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{{MiscItemPage
{{MiscItemPage
| image = Book Tome M Image.png
| image = Book Tome M Image.png
| controller icon = Book Tome M Unfaded.png
| icon = Book Tome M Item Icon.png
| icon = Book Tome M Item Icon.png
| description = '''Eilistraee: Lady Silverhair''' is a book providing information on the Goddess [[Deities#Eilistraee|Eilistraee]].
| description = '''Eilistraee: Lady Silverhair''' is a book providing information on the Goddess [[Deities#Eilistraee|Eilistraee]].
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| quote = This book is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.
| quote = This book is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.
| book spoiler =
| book spoiler =
| book text = [Sparing no detail, no matter how innocuous, this tale grants the reader comprehensive insight into the life, death, and rebirth of the child of Llolth and Corellon Larethian, the Goddess Eilistraee. One section runs thusly:]
| book text = [Sparing no detail, no matter how innocuous, this tale grants the reader comprehensive insight into the life, death, and rebirth of the child of [[Lolth|Llolth]] and [[Corellon Larethian]], the Goddess Eilistraee. One section runs thusly:]





Latest revision as of 11:11, 22 September 2024

Eilistraee: Lady Silverhair image

Eilistraee: Lady Silverhair is a book providing information on the Goddess Eilistraee.

Description Icon.png

This book is redolent with the enticing smell of paper and ink.

Properties

  • Books
  • Rarity: Common
  •  Weight: 0.5 kg / 1 lb
  • Price: 14 gp
  • UID BOOK_GLO_GeneralLoreBook_EilistraeeLadySilverhair


Where to find

Text

[Sparing no detail, no matter how innocuous, this tale grants the reader comprehensive insight into the life, death, and rebirth of the child of Llolth and Corellon Larethian, the Goddess Eilistraee. One section runs thusly:]


An important note; immortals like Eilistraee view relationships differently than we do. The gaze is cold, abstracted even in the most passionate and vivacious of Gods such as she.


Think of Tellemun's Theatre of Distance. The viewer is somehow allowed space from the action of the play while still being immersed in the experience. That is how deities think. That is how they view everything, in an auditorium of icy-long infinity, in the nosebleed seats.


No wonder Eillistraee smiled and wept with equal fierceness when she defeated her mother.