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Broken Diamonds
By Ryston Baylor
I rememberas a young lad in Glenumbra Moors my first Broken Diamonds holiday.
The big noisy festivals I remember very well -- Harvests' End, Mid
Year, New Year, the Emperor's Day.
All of these I have memories of that stretch back before I became
truly aware of the meaning of our celebrating. On the 19th of Frost
Fall, every year, my family and I would walk to a ruined castle in
the middle of the wilderness, together with everyone else we knew
in the Moors. Hands clutched in hands, we would form an enormous
circle around the ruins, and head reverently bowed we would sing
a song, the Sepharve.
For years, we did this and I never asked why. It is an odd thing
that normally curious children, from my experience, never ask questions
about Broken Diamonds, and adults seldom volunteer information. Gradually,
as we learn about our homeland through university or the prattling
of ancient relatives, we come to guess and then know the meaning
of Broken Diamonds.
I cannot be objective as a native of Glenumbra Moors, but visitors
have told me that the sorrow -- more often they use the word shame
-- of the natives is almost overwhelming. There is a sense that a
great and ancient crime still burns in the conscience of the people
of the Moors. Though it did not happen in our lifetimes, we know
that the debt is not yet paid.
I refer, of course, to the murder of Her Terrible Majesty, Kintyra
II, Emperess of Tamriel, on the frozen morning of the 23rd of Frost
Fall, in the year 3E 123.
We do not know the name of the castle where she was held; we do not
know the name of her murderer (though the man who ordered the murder
was her cousin and usurper, Uriel III); we do not know where she
was buried. But our ancestors knew that their rightful ruler was
imprisoned somewhere in their land, and did nothing to help her.
For that, we bear their shame.
On that morning, when our great-great grandparents heard of Kintyra's
death, all were stricken with horror and regret at their lack of
action. All the people of Glenpoint and Glenumbra Moors searched
out those responsible in every Imperial castle. They formed barriers
with their bodies to hold the killer within. Flags bearing the Red
Diamond of the Septim family were torn and scattered, and broken
diamonds littered the snow.
The song we sing every Broken Diamonds, as I mentioned before, is
the Sephavre. I asked everyone in Glenumbra Moor what the meaning
of the song is, for it is in Old Bretic, and each generation only
knows it because they were taught by their parents. No one knew the
exact meaning of the words, not even the tone and emotion the words
can be easily translated. When I later talked to a scholar who gave
me an accurate translation of the Sephavre, I began to understand
both why our ancestors chose it as the anthem for the great injustice
of the murder of Kintyra II and the sorrow that still prevades Glenumbra
Moors since that dark morn.
The Sephavre
Souls of our fathers, suffer deeply, For you have
led us to the dark time, When our own souls, filled with air,
Allowed ignorance and villiany to thrive In what used to be our
land. Howl, ancestors, howl and bring us Memories of our conformance
with evil. We do anything we can to survive, Giving up our
minds and hearts and bodies We will not fight, and we will be
torn
And like flotsam in a whirling tide We will be forever the agents
of injustice
But we will mourn it forever.
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