Semitas Arcana Temuair - The Paths of the Secrets of Temuair

 

Postlude

 And, as all good things come to an end, so does this treatise on the Secrets of Temuair. Hopefully, the time you have spent here was as informative and intellectually stimulating as intended.

As is my ever-constant belief regarding Philosophy, the answers you were seeking may not have been given directly, as to why each path of Temuair is given the secrets to harness the arcane energies the way they do. However, I am confident that you were able to form your own questions, and that is all that matters, for without questions, one can never arrive to answers.

After all, answers are not definitive, and they only hold veridity through one's faith to the very truthfulness of the answer. Perhaps now, when invoking a secret to harness your willpower, you will think of why you were given such a gift. 

As such, I do hope this entry has at least cultivated a sense of gratitude within the Aislings it has been examined by as to how blessed they are just by being given the chance to learn the secrets they possess. For every secret grants strength; one way or another.

I urge said Aislings to never give up on their quest for Knowledge for answers may be out there waiting for us; not within tomes of written information and the likes. But without these tomes to raise the questions in the first place we're nothing. And, indeed, the positions outlined in the prelude were successfully defended throughout this entry, the Monk; the Steward of Nature, the Rogue; the Master of Tomfoolery and Artifice, the Wizard; the Master of Nature and Seeker of Knowledge, the Priest; the Empath and Mental Companion, the Warrior; Tactical Genius, sometimes Knightly - sometimes gone berserk. Of course, a number of exceptions to expected outcomes were seen, but what are rules without exceptions? These exceptions should only make us grateful for the flexibility they grant upon the different Paths, if anything.

And, finally, the time has come for me to stop writing, as the first rays of sunlight penetrate through the curtain. It is time to close the book, and open the window to the world. 

                                                                                                      ~Dionia Autumne de La Croix