First point: In TTH, Brood tells Endest Silann that that Jaghut and FA were at war with each other. He implies that that very war continues to this day.
Second point: Tulas Shorn (whom I realize is a soletaken cousin of Rake, but beyond that I'm not sure who he is) tells Kallor that the Jaghut only went to war once ever, and that war was against death itself.
The Jaghut vs Death point has been discussed ad nauseam and on the surface these two points seem to have no relationship to each other at all. They merely seem to be two different characters telling things from their perspectives, an neither have the whole truth. This is common enough in SE's writing that I didn't think too much of it. One part of that conversation, however, jumps out at me. Shorn:
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"Weep, for me and my fallen kin--who did not hesitate to join a war we could not win." (TTH, p518)
Point three: Check this Heboric thought.
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"A final war had begun. Facing an enemy against whom no defence was possible...I see now with the eyes of the Abyss. I see now with my enemy's eyes, and so I shall speak with its voice. Behold, my friends, I am justice." (DoD p34)
Interesting then, that we have two points of view, one from someone allied with the ancient Jaghut and one from a character that seems to have more knowledge of the coming grand scheme of things--jade giants and all--than anyone else in the story.
Both of these POVs describe an enemy that is basically unbeatable. One of these POVs describes the enemy as "death itself" while another describes it as the "Abyss." Yes, there's obviously a distinction between the two in SEs mythology, but there's obviously similarities as well. Especially when one considers that the Jaghut have no afterlife, it's possible that there's relation to the effect of death = oblivion = the Abyss.
Point four: "Justice." Are not the Forkrul Assail in some respects the very embodiment of justice? Order and justice and civilization; all the things that the Jaghut have been running from?
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"The war that shattered their unity, that made of their life a moribund flight from an implacable enemy." (TTH, p517)
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"They lived apart, you know. No villages, no cities, just single remote dwellings...they feared each other almost as much as they feared the T'Lan Imass." (DG, p491)
What does it all mean? Not sure, but I don't think it's a coincidence. If I had to guess I would say I think it means that the Jaghut and FA started out as one people. I guess that could explain the fact that they share that odd multi-jointedness. Maybe the FA were all about order, justice and civilization and that Jaghut were more inclined to solitude, for they believed there was tyranny in civilization. Fully aware of their own efficacy, they had to know their own potential for such. So the "war" that Brood speaks maybe isn't a war in the sense of armies and clashing, but of two halves of the same thing, warring against it's own opposing nature.
And what does it mean for the final battle that Heboric speaks of? If there's a correlation--and I think there is--it means that there will be something inherent in the nature of civilization itself that has become the enemy. Power maybe? Magic? No idea, but I find the whole things damn interesting.
This post has been edited by Garet Jax: 05 March 2010 - 12:06 AM

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