Excerpts from The Antiquities War

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Excerpts from The Antiquities War
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Origin Dominaria
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Excerpts from the Antiquities War, by Kayla bin-Kroog: A New Translation and Commentary is a short work by Taysir of Rabiah.

Text

Excerpts from the Antiquities War, by Kayla bin-Kroog.

A new translation and commentary by Taysir of Rabiah.

Introduction

It is my purpose to provide a contemporary version of The Antiquities War, a classic in Argivian literature. Although "The Story of Urza and Mishra" is well-known throughout Terisiare, a modern interpretation was overdue. The text speaks for itself. I shall therefore confine my expository comments to footnotes.

"The Story of Urza and Mishra" takes place thousands of years after the fall of the mysterious Thran Empire. Some say that the Thran discovered a source of great power, but they were not ready to use this power properly-- and it destroyed them.

During the time of Urza and Mishra, Fallaji nomads routinely searched for Thran artifacts in the Western Desert. With caravans filled with bits and pieces of the past, the Fallaji traveled east-- to the edge of the desert, where they traded with various city-states and schools specializing in the study of Thran antiquities.

Sometimes, the nomads brought more than artifacts to the schools. Following the deaths of their parents, the two brothers came to one of the archeological schools. Here is where the tale of Urza and Mishra begins.

The Story of Urza and Mishra

This is the story of Urza and Mishra, brothers from Argive.

Urza was the older brother, quiet and clever--

While Misha was rash and hot-headed.

With both parents in the land of the dead,

The two brothers made the journey to the School of Tocasia.

The language of The Antiquities War is very compact, like the language of myth. We are told only what is important, and left to uncover the meaning for ourselves. "The Story of Urza and Mishra", the fourth of a five-part cycle, was written in the High Argivian "pictoglyph" language and takes the traditional form of sixty five-line stanzas, which are further divided into groups of five "facets." We will examine this gem symbolism in greater detail as our study progresses.

The School of Tocasia was in the land of Argive.

Urza and Mishra lived for many years at her school,

Where they studied the secrets of a lost race.

One day, after the brothers had learned much from Tocasia,

They found treasure buried beneath the surface of things.

One of the definitions of the phrase, "beneath the surface of things," in High Argivian, is "the world of the senses." In the thinking of the old Argivian scholars, the world of the senses is an "outer world" contrasting with the "inner world" of the soul. The reader should examine how this symbolic process relates to his own "inner world," where jewels may still await discovery.

After Urza and Mishra had studied for many years,

They went with Tocasia deep into the Western Desert,

Where they found the secrets of the Thran in the Cave of Koilos.

Beneath the Earth, Urza and Mishra found what was lost,

And each brother took his first step on the path of fate.

The word "koilos" is a derivation of the High Argivian word for "secret." The brothers and Tocasia traveled deep into the Western Desert-- a place no one else dared go. Only those willing to face the unknown will ever find the stone of power waiting inside their own "inner worlds."

In the cave, Urza and Mishra found the secrets of the Thran.

There, the brothers discovered something long forgotten--

They found the crystal; it gave them power, but they were foolish, and now they're dead.

Two stones of great power left behind in the darkness.

The stones-- each with six facets of five sides, were two halves of a perfect whole.

These Thran stones of power had lain hidden in the cave for a thousand generations. Each half of the twelve-sided gem stone, had six facets of five sides, which represented the five forces of mana. Twelve multiplied by five gives sixty-- the number of stanzas in "The Story of Urza and Mishra."

Urza and Mishra left the darkness of the cave,

As if they had stepped from the world of dreams.

The sun sparkled on the stones and each brother coveted both.

Tocasia was the first to see the path before them--

A dark path of fate that had to be followed.

Urza and Mishra left the cave on a dark path.

Urza's stone was the Mightstone, and he hid it from Mishra.

Mishra's stone was called the Weakstone,

And it complimented him in being smooth and cool, even as

Mishra was rash and hot-headed.

The Weakstone's characteristic is to draw the power from objects. Urza's stone, the Mightstone, possesses the opposite characteristic. The individual stones are halves of a complete whole, each incomplete without the other. As with the stones, so were the brothers. Urza and Mishra were separated by their obsessions and greed. They thought only of their own desires, not the balance of the whole.

Urza's stone was the Mightstone, and Mishra's the Weakstone.

But Urza and Mishra, each determined to possess both stones,

Decided that a contest would best decide the fate of the stones.

After the struggle, Tocasia left Argive for the Land of the Dead.

And the brothers buried Tocasia beneath her school.

We can only speculate about the contest between the two brothers. The narrative is mute regarding the details, except that the victor would possess both stones. As a result of the contest, Tocasia was killed and her school was most likely destroyed. The Mightstone remained with Urza, and the Weakstone with Mishra. Following the death of Tocasia, the brothers chose separate paths... paths that took them in very different directions. But when those paths crossed, the consequences were devastating.

After the struggle, Urza left Mishra and the School of Tocasia.

Urza went far away, to the City of Kroog, where the king

Held a contest of strength to find a husband for the princess.

With the power of the Mightstone, Urza built his Avenger

And Urza found the first secrets on his path of fate.

This is the first reference to the artifact called Urza's Avenger. Little is known about it. It was probably Urza's first attempt at creating an artificial warrior. Urza continued this line of research with the Yotian soldiers, of which we will learn more. In the next stanza, we meet Kayla bin-Kroog, the author of "The Story of Urza and Mishra." Throughout the text, Kayla breaks with the canons of Argivian poetry and never refers to herself in the first person. She also does not present herself in a wholly flattering light. This trait of honesty gives the reader an objective image of Kayla's experience with Urza.