Difference between revisions of "TITANS OF THE AESIR"
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+ | Reviled and rejected, the Titans of the Æsir created the | ||
+ | land, the sea, the sky which the Æsir later stole from | ||
+ | them. Oftentimes, the boundary between Titan and God rests | ||
+ | on a question of favor, intermarriage, or which version of an | ||
+ | Edda someone consults; the ties between Titan and God are | ||
+ | old, convoluted, and sometimes look an awful lot more like a | ||
+ | network of scars. Some take their drive from a desire to once | ||
+ | more ascend to prominence, some simply attempt to move | ||
+ | on, and some live only to destroy what was stolen from them; | ||
+ | they’d rather burn themselves to ash than leave the Æsir one | ||
+ | plank of wood on which to stand. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ---- | ||
+ | <BR> | ||
+ | <BR> | ||
+ | ---- |
Latest revision as of 16:30, 15 March 2021
Reviled and rejected, the Titans of the Æsir created the land, the sea, the sky which the Æsir later stole from them. Oftentimes, the boundary between Titan and God rests on a question of favor, intermarriage, or which version of an Edda someone consults; the ties between Titan and God are old, convoluted, and sometimes look an awful lot more like a network of scars. Some take their drive from a desire to once more ascend to prominence, some simply attempt to move on, and some live only to destroy what was stolen from them; they’d rather burn themselves to ash than leave the Æsir one plank of wood on which to stand.