Difference between revisions of "Mask of Cronus"
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+ | == '''SATURN''' -- King of the Titans == | ||
+ | '''Aliases:''' Khronos / Saturnus | ||
+ | |||
+ | Sing to me, O Muses, | ||
+ | of the second King of | ||
+ | Heaven, ruler of a | ||
+ | Golden Age, the un- | ||
+ | disputed commander | ||
+ | of Gods and causality. He | ||
+ | plots the ambush of his royal | ||
+ | father, craving butchery. He | ||
+ | awaits the birth of another radi- | ||
+ | ant babe, his stomach howling. | ||
+ | He is the tomb of his own chil- | ||
+ | dren, he is the heat-death of the | ||
+ | cosmos, he is the adversary of | ||
+ | the divine, and he is ''hungry''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | While his four elder brothers seized | ||
+ | their father Uranus and held him fast at the corners of | ||
+ | the earth, Cronus lifted his adamant sickle and hacked | ||
+ | the King of Heaven to pieces. So it was that Cronus the Wily | ||
+ | became the second King, of crooked wit and fearful drive. | ||
+ | Though some claim he ruled over a blissful Golden Age, his | ||
+ | ruthlessness earned the bitter enmity of many — including | ||
+ | his mother Gaea. Upon the unjust imprisonment of his | ||
+ | brothers the Gigantes, Gaea delivered to him that familiar | ||
+ | refrain of Theoi prophecy: However great, the father will be | ||
+ | defeated by an even greater son. | ||
+ | |||
+ | For Cronus, there was a simple solution to this riddle of | ||
+ | Fate: He devoured his children as soon as they were born, | ||
+ | imprisoning them within his empty, frozen body. Confident | ||
+ | in the merits of this plan, he overlooked the unusual | ||
+ | weight of the last child he snatched and swallowed whole. | ||
+ | Unbeknownst to him, his desperate wife Rhea had switched | ||
+ | the newborn with a stone. So it was that Cronus the Cunning | ||
+ | was outmaneuvered by a boulder, the infant Zeus survived in | ||
+ | hiding, and Fate was proved ever ineffable. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Zeus’s quest to release the Gigantes, his war for | ||
+ | Olympus, his wife Metis’s scheme to free the Gods from | ||
+ | Cronus’s gullet — these myths have found their places. | ||
+ | Zeus found his at the head of the Theoi. And Cronus | ||
+ | his, leashed by unbreakable chains beneath | ||
+ | Tartarus. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The King of Titans commands a body enormous beyond | ||
+ | conceiving. Within is concealed | ||
+ | a freezing vacuum and monstrous appetite, particularly for | ||
+ | his kin. While Cronus originally reigned over the concept | ||
+ | of ruler-ship, he now encompasses time as well, especially | ||
+ | entropy, and literal | ||
+ | and figurative reaping. | ||
+ | This and his infamous | ||
+ | sickle syncretized him with | ||
+ | an Italian harvest God, now his | ||
+ | fairer Mantle Saturnus. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Selfish and paranoid, | ||
+ | Cronus is not known to patronize Scions. He does, however, | ||
+ | beget many Titanic omens, even | ||
+ | when the World’s stage is otherwise | ||
+ | q u i e t . His heaving under Tartarus knocks souls | ||
+ | off-course, triggers horrific earthquakes and sparks winter storms. Gates swing open, conveying the expectant and | ||
+ | unwary alike to his cell within Tartarus. To what end these | ||
+ | omens appear, no Olympians are sure, but they do know this: | ||
+ | Even in prison, Cronus has not admitted defeat. He will rule | ||
+ | again whatever the cost — not out of lofty ideals but simply | ||
+ | because he ''must''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == '''Torenus & Cronus''' == | ||
+ | |||
+ | == '''CRONUS' MASK''' == | ||
+ | '''Provinces:''' Adversary, Destroyer, Tyrant | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Dominions:''' [[DEATH]], [[DECEPTION]], [[EARTH]], [[ENDURANCE]], [[FERTILITY]], [[FROST]], [[MIGHT]], [[ORDER]], [[PASSION]] (''Hunger''), [[SKY]], & [[TIME]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 23:37, 5 November 2023
- Masks of the Di Inferi -DEUS- CRONUS
SATURN -- King of the Titans
Aliases: Khronos / Saturnus
Sing to me, O Muses, of the second King of Heaven, ruler of a Golden Age, the un- disputed commander of Gods and causality. He plots the ambush of his royal father, craving butchery. He awaits the birth of another radi- ant babe, his stomach howling. He is the tomb of his own chil- dren, he is the heat-death of the cosmos, he is the adversary of the divine, and he is hungry.
While his four elder brothers seized their father Uranus and held him fast at the corners of the earth, Cronus lifted his adamant sickle and hacked the King of Heaven to pieces. So it was that Cronus the Wily became the second King, of crooked wit and fearful drive. Though some claim he ruled over a blissful Golden Age, his ruthlessness earned the bitter enmity of many — including his mother Gaea. Upon the unjust imprisonment of his brothers the Gigantes, Gaea delivered to him that familiar refrain of Theoi prophecy: However great, the father will be defeated by an even greater son.
For Cronus, there was a simple solution to this riddle of Fate: He devoured his children as soon as they were born, imprisoning them within his empty, frozen body. Confident in the merits of this plan, he overlooked the unusual weight of the last child he snatched and swallowed whole. Unbeknownst to him, his desperate wife Rhea had switched the newborn with a stone. So it was that Cronus the Cunning was outmaneuvered by a boulder, the infant Zeus survived in hiding, and Fate was proved ever ineffable.
Zeus’s quest to release the Gigantes, his war for Olympus, his wife Metis’s scheme to free the Gods from Cronus’s gullet — these myths have found their places. Zeus found his at the head of the Theoi. And Cronus his, leashed by unbreakable chains beneath Tartarus.
The King of Titans commands a body enormous beyond conceiving. Within is concealed a freezing vacuum and monstrous appetite, particularly for his kin. While Cronus originally reigned over the concept of ruler-ship, he now encompasses time as well, especially entropy, and literal and figurative reaping. This and his infamous sickle syncretized him with an Italian harvest God, now his fairer Mantle Saturnus.
Selfish and paranoid, Cronus is not known to patronize Scions. He does, however, beget many Titanic omens, even when the World’s stage is otherwise q u i e t . His heaving under Tartarus knocks souls off-course, triggers horrific earthquakes and sparks winter storms. Gates swing open, conveying the expectant and unwary alike to his cell within Tartarus. To what end these omens appear, no Olympians are sure, but they do know this: Even in prison, Cronus has not admitted defeat. He will rule again whatever the cost — not out of lofty ideals but simply because he must.
Torenus & Cronus
CRONUS' MASK
Provinces: Adversary, Destroyer, Tyrant
Dominions: DEATH, DECEPTION, EARTH, ENDURANCE, FERTILITY, FROST, MIGHT, ORDER, PASSION (Hunger), SKY, & TIME