Item:Bronze-edged parchment song scroll
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bronze-edged parchment song scroll | |
---|---|
Look: | This is a Bardic scroll, enscribed with the non-magical Bard song "Sand Singer". It must be studied to be used. If it is being read by another, no one but that person can study it. |
Weight: | 5 stones |
Metal: | Unknown |
Appraised Cost: | 375 Kronars300 Lirums <br />270.6 Dokoras <br />0.375 LTBpoints <br />0.375 Tickets <br />0.375 Scrips <br /> |
Properties: |
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Dimensions: | ? length x ? width x ? height |
Sources: | Source is Songs of the Sands |
Song
'The Sand Singer', a song of the desert by Serienna Alypsen
- "She sat by the wayside, on the edge
- of the city, where the hard packed ground
- was just beginning to turn to sand.
- Fingers in the soil, she sat, and she sang,
- hot words melting in the day's sun,
- grains dripping through her fingers like rain."
- "As she sang, from beneath her, the very ground
- began to tremble. Her hands lifted more than sand,
- an old stone, a worn doll some child once sang
- her heart to, a faded coin colored like the sun.
- Objects startling in the desert monotony as rain;
- She began uncovering the treasure's first edge."
- "She left behind her piles and piles of sand,
- grains whispering in falling their soft song,
- glittering like gems in a swaying sun.
- Then, the plop of the first drop of rain
- came in tune to the slim finding, an edge
- of glass sticking diamond hard from the ground."
- "Moving swiftly, her deft fingers sang
- the rock from its hiding place, like the sun
- rising by her hand, effortless as rain
- falling. More would follow, edge by edge
- emerging, bubbling up now from the ground,
- small hill forming on the new-damp sand."
- "Clouds moved protectively over a struggling sun,
- ever determined to bring their hard rain
- -- that sun fought to his great strength's edge,
- but sure as stones poured up from ground,
- fat drops were lured to new homes in sand,
- and the woman still dug and sang, dug and sang."
- "Gushing up now were shining gems in geyser's rain,
- rolling over one another they ran to the edge
- of the city, to the city itself, covering the ground
- with slicing new grains of dirt and sand,
- wet and rumbling along with storm's song;
- no mourning call for the defeated sun."
- "Sand-people rejoiced in rain -- and later sun --, and condemned,
- their song ground in praise of one act, curse of the other,
- not able to find that precious between-edge."
The rhythmic notes of the song fall into silence.
Whistling
You whistle a few dry, rhythmic notes from "The Sand Singer" to yourself.
Others see: Jane whistles a few dry, rhythmic notes.