S. Borne
Acolyte
I'd like some advise. I have gods in my published books, and the same gods with different names in my "how it all began" manuscript. This is intentional. But I didn't address this change. I do have a codex where I note it however. The plan is to create a vibrant world where I can now play between the genesis and Spirals in Ash. My question is, should I address it in the manuscript, perhaps in the Epilogue, or keep it in the codex, which I can publish with the manuscript?
Codex excerpt: The divergence of names between the codices of Spiralkeep and the chronicles of Greymoor is not mere erosion of memory. In the centuries after the god‑wars, scattered sects unearthed fragments of the old scrolls. These sects, desperate to anchor their rituals, misread the glyphs and spirals, mistaking dominion for identity.
Thus Pyreth was re‑spoken as Ilyrion, his fire remembered only through visions of burning cities. Thalos became Maroth, his tide misinterpreted as inevitability rather than covenant. Graven was renamed Serathis, stone twisted from foundation into suffocating imprisonment. Sylith was recalled as Kaelith, her prophecy mistaken for inevitability, stripping mortals of choice.
Only Vorath and Aelthar endured unchanged. Hunger and balance were too central to be misread, too deeply carved into mortal survival to be forgotten.
The sects’ misinterpretations spread through Greymoor’s rituals, until the distorted names became the only ones spoken. What began as error hardened into tradition, and tradition became truth. In this way, the kin’s names fractured as surely as their dominions, leaving mortals to worship echoes rather than origins.
Codex excerpt: The divergence of names between the codices of Spiralkeep and the chronicles of Greymoor is not mere erosion of memory. In the centuries after the god‑wars, scattered sects unearthed fragments of the old scrolls. These sects, desperate to anchor their rituals, misread the glyphs and spirals, mistaking dominion for identity.
Thus Pyreth was re‑spoken as Ilyrion, his fire remembered only through visions of burning cities. Thalos became Maroth, his tide misinterpreted as inevitability rather than covenant. Graven was renamed Serathis, stone twisted from foundation into suffocating imprisonment. Sylith was recalled as Kaelith, her prophecy mistaken for inevitability, stripping mortals of choice.
Only Vorath and Aelthar endured unchanged. Hunger and balance were too central to be misread, too deeply carved into mortal survival to be forgotten.
The sects’ misinterpretations spread through Greymoor’s rituals, until the distorted names became the only ones spoken. What began as error hardened into tradition, and tradition became truth. In this way, the kin’s names fractured as surely as their dominions, leaving mortals to worship echoes rather than origins.
Myth Weaver
Istar
Maester