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Invocation

Oh, Light of that Divine Source

which does in all things reside and ever moves

them to its ultimate purpose, whose beauty

is blinding, whose radiance is splendor, whose

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power is unmatched, sing now through me the tale

of our ancestors, of those few men of great worth

who became High Teloch of the land and ruled

              with the Signet Ring of the Hart upon their finger,

of battles, of hunts, of wolf-hours

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and blood-days, of trials terrible, and how

in victory they were granted right to rule

the Iolish peoples with wisdom and grace.

Mathred, son of Math,

was strongest of the Iolish, taller than any

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other, powerful as three oxen, gold fell his

locks, keen his sight, for his mother was a Baíth

witch whose blood gave him magic and he faced

beasts of the earth without terror, never fled nor

lost a battle, he flattened the wild mountains

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of Ail Bolam when they would not submit,

he separated the Sun and Moon and gave them each

a time to reign, often that great warrior defeated

the circling Sea before she could swallow Ioland

and the children of Iol, for she had desired Iol,

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giving him many gifts, but he loved her not,

and when she would shake the island Mathred would

place it upon his back, battling the beasts

of the darkest seas though doubled over until

the pillars of the earth ceased shaking and his

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people were once more at peace.

Mathred was advised by his friend,

the young but knowledgeable wise man of Ail Meloch,

              to forge a weapon which would grant him

power over this foe, that the Iolish might never

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again be troubled by her malice; this his final

labor, for with weapon in hand he could defeat

the Sea and bring her to submit or else slay

the demons of dark earth and dragons of wild sky,

forever defending his people.

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With the wise man of Ail Meloch

at his side, he began to search all the Earth for

those boons which might be forged together to make

that mighty weapon, in caves and valleys, through

the windswept realms of the Tella where green

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grass fields and untamed meadows stretch

to the skies, in sweet-water streams and cool

lakes, in the bitter waves of the spiteful Sea,

on the white-caped peaks of the mountains where

eagles make their roost; always they searched for

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those fantastic materials to forge together into

his weapon.

Yet this task was not one of ease,

for though the Earth did love Mathred, his blood

belonging to the Baíth, it would not part easily

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from its wonders and in all hours of the day they

were tested by beasts as Mathred safeguarded

the wise man of Ail Meloch as he by his earned

knowledge sought to discover these materials

by which he would forge his great boon.

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Long was their search

and for five years Mathred slept not but battled

the creatures of the night as the wise man slept,

for many terrible beasts did oppose them and hid

these boons from the waking world: wolves as great

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as bears, maned cats large as horses, whose claws

like knifes hacked and slashed more fiercely than

axes, spiders which devour men as others do flies

and feast on darkness, filth, and decay, demons

and dragons which eat the flesh of man, yet

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faithfully Mathred kept his vigil, slaying each

beast which moved in the night and by his strength

and devotion conquered and delivered these boons.

By guile they stole

the ends of the rainbow from the skies, by skill

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Mathred built a ladder to reach the heavens where

they stole the shadow of the Sun, with honeyed

words they took the wind’s voice that ever after

it could only howl or whisper, by strength

he stole the redness from the waters and left

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it forever blue, with a sack so deep it might hold

ten kingdoms they plucked like apples the stars

which shone in daylight, from cats they stole

the sound of their footfall.

These wonders gathered,

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the wise man of Ail Meloch did declare their

search over and by his skill began to discover

means of joining them in his home beneath those

great Iolish mountains while Mathred returned

to his people, the Ui Lide Aesal, to await the day

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when he might subdue the Sea and secure Ioland

              for all ages.

He wrestled the five wild brothers

of Tach Fel and won their sister as a bride, for

only the woman of Tach Fel could know him and love

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there was between them, creating the boy Malach,

and in joy they lived two years before her death,

for she drowned in the salt waves of the Sea

as she returned from her brothers and for three

months Mathred spoke no word, neither to God

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nor Man and his son Malach knew not his voice,

until breaking his silence he vowed vengeance

and declared war on the Sea, he gave battle though

he was without the great weapon which would secure

his victory.

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The Sea called a gale

as foul demons of the deep rose in the waves

and for three days his ship sailed alone

in the storm, spearing those beasts which hold

no form true, unafraid he was under the wind

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and rain; on the fourth his boat sank, the Sea

held him in her grasp and set all her children

upon him, but they could not subdue him, for

he was the son of Math who had taken a Baíth woman

for a wife, her strong magic ran through him,

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and in his rage he brought the Sea to boil

and the creatures of the salt did die, and,

weeping for her children, she submitted to him,

swearing to never again harm men nor call

the storms while Mathred lived.

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In triumph he returned

to shore, but when he walked among his own people again,

              he fell ill with longing for his wife and died

Such was the life of Mathred,

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and thus Fate had placed her pieces on the board,

and thus the trials of Mathred’s blood began.

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