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===Symbols, Icons and Trappings===
===Symbols, Icons and Trappings===
The Path of Wisdom has many symbols across the Empire. Before the formation of the Synod, animal sigils were popular, in recognition of Sofia’s mastery of animals. However, the Synod has since discouraged this as The Way exalts the human spirit and beasts are lesser. As a consequence, more widely accepted symbols are Scales as used by Kala to weigh and measure the world, and Lantern as used by Yant of Wintermark to illuminate and reveal.
The Path of Wisdom has many symbols across the Empire. Before the formation of the Synod, animal sigils were popular, in recognition of Zoar’s mastery of animals. However, the Synod has since discouraged this as The Way exalts the human spirit and beasts are lesser. As a consequence, more widely accepted symbols are Scales as used by Kala to weigh and measure the world, and Lantern as used by Yant of Wintermark to illuminate and reveal.


Many Priests and Pilgrims of the Path of Wisdom often carry sources of light, or the means to provide such. Many also carry the means to record such knowledge and wisdom that they encounter.
Many Priests and Pilgrims of the Path of Wisdom often carry sources of light, or the means to provide such. Many also carry the means to record such knowledge and wisdom that they encounter.

Revision as of 15:44, 4 July 2012

The Path of Wisdom

There are many Citizens of the Empire who believe themselves, by nature, to be filled with the Virtue and it comes easily to them, yet the truth is – like all the Virtues – Wisdom is a journey and must ever be strived for. Only the fool believes their journey is complete. Wisdom in the Empire takes many forms and what might prosper you in the Wintermark could as easily be your ruin in Navarr. Wisdom’s natural enemy is folly and complacency who steal the wit and desire for understanding and enlightenment. There is also dispute amongst the Wise as to the extent that knowledge should be shared with the unready lest it imperil them.

Teachings of the Paragon

Across their incarnations, the Paragon of Wisdom has provided much wisdom and guidance on how to pursue the Virtue. What follows are a handful of the Paragon’s teachings that are said to go to the very heart of the Virtue:

  • The Virtuous apply what they have learned; wisdom knows all knowledge is incomplete
  • Let every word you speak carry meaning; do not use forty when four will do.
  • Wisdom is not always knowing the answer; wisdom is finding the right question.
  • Test what you learn; only fools accept hearsay as truth
  • Despise folly and chastise the fool that spreads it

The Paragon

The Paragon of Wisdom has had many names and faces over the ages. The earliest recorded incarnation of the Paragon was Zoar who, so legend has it, was a Sorceress possessed of great insight and knowledge. Zoar lived in the depths of the Great Wilds and learned the names of all the creatures of the wild; bird and beast, fish and fowl. Using their names, Zoar could command them and they served her. One day, in return for a kindness done to her by a hunter lost in the Great Wilds, she commanded beasts to serve the hunter by carrying burdens, providing wool, food and companionship. The hunter went on to be the first farmer and his tribe prospered.

Other well-known incarnations of the Paragon include:

  • Kala, the Wise Servant, who was born in Highguard, who devised many ways of weighing and measuring, and – so it was said – used these insights to tear down superstitions and develop new ways to prosper her chapter. The stories of Kala tend to whimsical and comical in nature with her deftly thwarting enemies and averting catastrophe around her largely oblivious Exarch who boasted of his own vigilance.

Symbols, Icons and Trappings

The Path of Wisdom has many symbols across the Empire. Before the formation of the Synod, animal sigils were popular, in recognition of Zoar’s mastery of animals. However, the Synod has since discouraged this as The Way exalts the human spirit and beasts are lesser. As a consequence, more widely accepted symbols are Scales as used by Kala to weigh and measure the world, and Lantern as used by Yant of Wintermark to illuminate and reveal.

Many Priests and Pilgrims of the Path of Wisdom often carry sources of light, or the means to provide such. Many also carry the means to record such knowledge and wisdom that they encounter.