|
Post by warrl on Mar 1, 2010 17:10:05 GMT
Up until this story line, I thought of Coyote as yes, all-powerful, but with no more sense than a child. Now I see he's brilliant. I'm seriously impressed at how Tom managed to convey that without showing us anything different from the Coyote we've seen before. No "new" facet to his character, but by seeing the result of one of one his seemingly capricious actions, we now understand him a bit better. Oh, Coyote is extremely wise. The problem is, he's also the star (and primary audience) of Short Attention Span Theatre.
|
|
krael
Junior Member
Posts: 95
|
Post by krael on Sept 17, 2012 17:22:57 GMT
Hey people, Like everybody here, I created the account after a suitable amount of lurking and now having the idiot idea to have something to add. The question of which Ysengrin is which is one I often came back to. (that's why I shamelessly revive the thread, sorry for that) Anyway, I think it would be possible to formulate an answer on the terms of coyote's latest revelationIf Coyote's story checks out, the ether-version of Ysengrin is born from human stories: the ether-version is what others see (read: make up) when they look at a regular wolf (the regular wolf being what Ysengrin really is, according to Coyote's story). That in turn leaves the tree-armor-version as something that Ysengrinn made up himself when he got his fearsome gardening skills. I thought this could be a new view, as most posts above seem to suggest that ysengrinn is really some poor ether with self-image issues, poisturing to others. What do you say? cheers
|
|
|
Post by theikles on Sept 17, 2012 17:47:10 GMT
Krael, I like your interpretation best, because it works with coyotes theory.
But BigC might be lying. It also collides with the "real renard" statement.
|
|