Difference between revisions of "Iviad"

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The '''Iviad''' is a literary work or book that [[Jasnah Kholin]] considers so important or famous that it doesn't really need a reference.{{epigraph ref|sa1|50}}
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The '''''Iviad''''' is a literary work on [[Roshar]]. [[Jasnah Kholin]] implies that it is extremely well-known, to the point that most scholars would recognize passages without a specific reference.{{epigraph ref|sa1|50}}
   
== Stories ==
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== Contents ==
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The ''Iviad'''s age, format, author, and language are unknown. It has only been mentioned once, by Jasnah during her research of the [[Voidbringers]].{{epigraph ref|sa1|50}} The lines of the work are numbered for reference and the excerpt is written in sentence fragments, suggesting that the ''Iviad'' is a work of poetry rather than prose.
It is unknown what the Iviad is about specifically, it does however reference the [[Voidbringers]] in some way.{{epigraph ref|sa1|50}}
 
   
 
== Quotes ==
 
== Quotes ==
 
{{quote
 
{{quote
 
| Flame and char. Skin so terrible. Eyes like pits of blackness.
 
| Flame and char. Skin so terrible. Eyes like pits of blackness.
| A quote from the Iviad probably needs no reference notation, but this comes from line 482, should I need to locate it quickly.{{epigraph ref|sa1|50}}
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| A quote from the ''Iviad'' probably needs no reference notation, but this comes from line 482, should I need to locate it quickly.{{epigraph ref|sa1|50}}
 
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Revision as of 18:18, 1 March 2019

Iviad
World of Origin Roshar

The Iviad is a literary work on Roshar. Jasnah Kholin implies that it is extremely well-known, to the point that most scholars would recognize passages without a specific reference.[1]

Contents

The Iviad's age, format, author, and language are unknown. It has only been mentioned once, by Jasnah during her research of the Voidbringers.[1] The lines of the work are numbered for reference and the excerpt is written in sentence fragments, suggesting that the Iviad is a work of poetry rather than prose.

Quotes

Flame and char. Skin so terrible. Eyes like pits of blackness.

— A quote from the Iviad probably needs no reference notation, but this comes from line 482, should I need to locate it quickly.[1]

Notes

This page is complete!
This page contains all the knowledge we have on the subject at this time.
Chaos2651 (talk) 20:04, 25 December 2016 (MST)