[split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - Printable Version +- thePlenty.net Forums (https://theplenty.net/forums) +-- Forum: Robin Hobb and Megan Lindholm (https://theplenty.net/forums/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Realm of the Elderlings (https://theplenty.net/forums/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS (/thread-191.html) |
RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - Valarya - Mar-12-2012 (Mar-10-2012, 10:59 PM (UTC))Farseer Wrote: Just a quick visit here but I so very much want to come back to discuss it all... Oooooh yes!!!! RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - Farseer - Mar-16-2012 (Oct-19-2010, 12:28 AM (UTC))Farseer Wrote: It says in AA, "It requires a Man to sponsor and name the candidate, and he must find a dozen other Men who concede the boy is worthy and ready" so, yes, it does seem that it requires thirteen, including the sponsor.... Only a very fleeting visit as I finally have an opportunity to actually get stuck into City of Dragons tonight but I couldn't help but think of Changer (Fitz) when I just noticed the following in Chapter Six, and possibly a little earlier as well: *CoD spoiler* What exactly I don't know, but there's something there! Though I know those beings known as 'thul will likely not agree..."There you go again, Farseer"... Oh, crikey, now (on a tangent that has nothing really to do with the above!) I'm thinking how great it is that to forge something is to give form or shape to it...like the forging of a dragon and sometimes through the process of Forging besides! "Words...they're all just words, Farseer...!" RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - 'thul - Mar-16-2012 The capital letter comes more likely from it being an object, a noun. the act of forging, on the other hand, that is a verb. If you look at the German language, you'll see that nouns are generally always capitalized. While not the policy in English to do the same, it can be used for names or to put extra force behind a term. The German. The English. The Six Duchies. The Forged. (see the pattern?) RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - Farseer - Mar-16-2012 (Mar-16-2012, 12:28 PM (UTC))Farseer Wrote: I could acknowledge that Forged, too, begins with a capital letter. There I go giving you beings ammo against my theories and you take it! Yes, the pattern exists in reality, and is also very apparent in the books. Not only is there (not sure why I am really spoiler tagging this but anyhoo!) *CoD spoiler* and Forged but there is also the Skilled ones and the Tattooed as well as the Others, the Three Ships folk, the Red Ships, the New Traders, the White Prophet, the Catalyst etc etc... ...but, as I said, seeing as I am being fanciful and not practical, I am going to ignore all of those 'capital' connections! As for your comment re "The cultural roots for the Six Duchies and Bingtown/Rain Wilds have been clearly defined different", well, have they truly? Certainly there do exist current differences, and each considers the other strange or barbaric, but Changer is Changer and the Catalyst for the world, not just the SD. Not only is he a descendant of Taker, who did not begin in the SD but rather founded them, he is also descended from Elderlings and Elderlings, as a group, were not limited to one region (eg the SD) only. As far as I can see, in this, Fitz very much shares cultural roots with the Elderlings and the difference between the SD and B/the RW is of no import to the possible connection between *CoD spoiler* *Another CoD spoiler as an afterthought* I'm debating but my head and heart are far off in the Rain Wilds ...onward to my reading! RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - Narya - Mar-18-2012 In reading the SoM again, it seems clear to me that the real "farseers" in the RotE are the dragons, because they see down through the generations of shared memories. And somewhere it was mentioned in the Tawny Man series, that there was a little bit of "dragon" in the Farseer line. So could "Farseer" just be a synonym for "Dragon-kin"? Also, as an aside, I noticed that as Kinnet was establishing his kingdom, he was repeatedly referred to as a "taker", not unlike the first Farseer, King Taker. Perhaps the high nobility of Shrewd's and Verity's kingship had the same base sorts of roots. RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - 'thul - Mar-18-2012 Both of those ring potentially true, Narya. The ideas are intriguing and feel most possible. RE: [split] What does the name "Farseer" really mean? SPOILERS ALL BOOKS - Lady Persephone - Apr-10-2019 (Aug-23-2010, 02:52 AM (UTC))NeverBeenWise Wrote: Oh goodness, I just thought of something that might have been in the plot for the next trilogy with Fitz, if it ever comes into existence. It relates, I promise! I'd originally just thought of the Skill ability as the origin of the name. Maybe the Fool's comment refers to the first Skilled Farseer's gift coming forward in time to grace Fitz with the same gift? But I really like the other theories a lot. BINGO! Neverbeenwise, you are wise! You foresaw all that Robin would write in her last (so far) RotE trilogy! Except Bee is not Fitz, just his and Beloved's beautiful and powerfully gifted daughter. She's already changed the whole world at the age of 10. Can you imagine what she'll do in the next decades, centuries even? I'd like to see her wind up with Boy-O. That's just the romantic in me. ;p Something tells me she'll be the bridge between all the kingdoms of the realm, not to mention what she'll be able to do in Kelsingra! Definitely Dragon-kin and White combined. <3 |