Dthlrd.: The Tragedian of Death's Thousandfold Passion Plays

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Jutlander

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The Tragedian of Death’s Thousandfold Passion Plays


In the ranks of great generals determined to march their armies of the dead into Creation, master politicians putting nations under their heels with politics and bureaucracy, and mad God-kings preaching Oblivion; one in particular stands out among the 13 Deathlords as being none of the above.


The Deathlord known as the Tragedian of Death’s Thousandfold Passion Plays commands no great army; he wields no unstoppable political machine; and Creation houses no widespread cult praising him as a chthonic god. The Tragedian is an artist and his weapon of choice is the pen.


When on the Isle of Stygia, the Tragedian appears as a small androgynous man of indeterminable age. He has long silky, black hair that frames the soulsteel tragedy mask hiding the Tragedian’s face at all times adding to his already eerie presence. He usually appears dressed in simple, stylish, loose-hanging black robes keeping his feet bare.


The Tragedian’s make his home in the Broken Smiles’ Playhouse in a minor port city, Tjeleso, at the eastern shores of the Isle of Stygia far from any shadowland of a considerable size. This does not seem to bother the Tragedian much for while this makes it troublesome for him and his servants to reach Creation, forcing them to travel to more distant shadowlands, it also serves to defend his realm from the living. With no plans for martial conquest in the lands of the living, a little traveling for him and his servants to reach Creation seems a fair trade for security.


The Broken Smiles’ Playhouse


The Broken Smiles’ Playhouse was once referred to as an architectural nightmare by the ghost of a First Age architect as he witnessed it for the first time.


Huge and imposing, the black stone buildings that make up the Broken Smiles Playhouse towers over all the surrounding buildings with its spires, arches and grotesque gargoyles.


It is a chaotic mess to look at, but alien geomantic designs and structures adds an unnerving beauty to the almost impossible architecture.


Parts of the buildings are rive with activity of the Tragedian’s many ghostly servants while others have been practically empty for centuries except for the occasional soul that lost his way.


It is here, in one of the lonely towers looking out over the inland Sea of Shadows, that the Tragedian spends great parts of his eternity completing his grand work of art.


Also  part of the Broken Smiles’ Playhouse is an actual playhouse where ghosts, Abyssal exalted and anyone else foolish or brave enough to make their way this far into the Underworld can watch scenes from the Great Tragedy played out by the ghostly servants of the Tragedian.


The Great Tragedy


Since he first entered the Underworld, the Tragedian has been plying his art as a playwright crafting innumerable tales of tragic fates from all over Creation. In order to write these stories, the Tragedian has agents throughout Creation at all times searching for suitable settings and protagonists for their master to use in his plays.


Once reports of a suitable leading character reach him, the Tragedian usually travels incognito into Creation and investigates for himself. If he deems the suggested subject worthy for a role in his work of art, the Tragedian starts weaving an outline for a tale involving his new protagonist. While the outlines for these stories some times involve a rise to glory for the protagonist, they are always certain to include a fall from grace as well.


Once the outline is completed, the Tragedian assigns roles to his servants and has them act as antagonists, messengers and mysterious strangers to goat, manipulate and otherwise lead the protagonist to meet the dark fate the Tragedian has designed for him.


Kingdoms have fallen, lovers have killed each other, monks have given into carnal desires and at least one Solar has forsaken the light and pledged his allegiance to Oblivion all as a result of the Tragedian’s elaborate productions that the poor unwitting victims suddenly find themselves a part of.


Alone the stories are macabre and beautiful tragedies, but together they are much more. The fates the Tragedian is collecting each represent a small piece in a much grander and seemingly never-ending project: The epic tale of how all life in Creation ends.


It is uncertain to any except maybe the Tragedian himself how he intends to conclude his epic work. But while it may seem an overwhelming task at first, the tragedy was close to reaching a climactic ending with the Great Contagion almost eight centuries ago so it is by no means impossible. Especially now, with the current instability in Creation the final act of the Tragedian’s epic may very well be at hand.


The Tragedian’s Servants


To implement his master plan, the Tragedian of Death’s Thousandfold Passion Plays has many servants doing his bidding. Many of them are ghosts, some of them are deathknights, and one of them is something entirely different.


One would not have to search long in the Hundred Kingdoms to find a storyteller or maybe an acting troupe that knows the story of the Scoundrelly Circus and their tragic demise. What these stories fail to tell, though, is that after the now legendary acting troupe was killed by their audience, they came to be the most skilled infiltrators among all the Tragedian’s nemissaries honing their skills as actors to perfection.


Some who has encountered the Midnight Caste Abyssal known as Odalisque of Oblivion whisper that she is in fact the antithesis of Mela, the sickly whore, incarnate. Like most of the Tragedian’s servants, she has been known to assume many different appearances and to go by many different names depending on which role she is currently playing, but true for all these roles is an undeniable seductive force behind her breathtaking and often morbid beauty.


No one seems to know who Faceless Under the Mask of the Day Caste was before he was exalted by the Tragedian. And if someone do, they are not telling. The underworldly essence that pours through his being has erased any physical features that could reveal nationality, age and even gender. Faceless Under the Mask has no mouth, eyes, nose or ears. Not a single hair grows on his body and even his genitalia and nipples have been swallowed by his powerful essence and so has every memory of his life except the fact that he, or maybe she, once had a life. The resulting psychosis has left Faceless Under the Mask one of the finest method actors Creation has ever seen. In his search for the face he knows was stolen from him, he has developed a unique power that enables him to completely steal the physical features and memories of the people he kills leaving them as featureless corpses. Unfortunately, for periods of time Faceless Under the Mask often forgets that he is not the life he has stolen and is currently living. This makes him one of the Tragedian’s most dangerous tools: A perfect infiltrator that gets so enamored in the life of his victims that he forgets he is in fact an infiltrator is a double-edged sword indeed.


The Tragedian’s most recently exalted Abyssal, the Costumier Draped in Shrouds, distinguishes herself as a craftsman rather than an actress. Of the Daybreak Caste she serves the Tragedian as his foremost soulforger, necrosurgeon and necromancer. Antisocial in the extreme, she is the Tragedian’s most trusted servant behind the scenes, so to speak.


Not much is known about the creature known as Dreams of Death except that it came to the Tragedian in the time after the Great Contagion and that Dreams of Death is probably not its true name. Receiving occasional grave offerings from the living and heading a small underworld cult, Dreams of Death would logically be assumed to be a ghost, but no arcanoi matches the mystical world-shaping arts that Dreams of Death have been witnessed to master. The truth of the matter is that Dreams of Death is a noble raksha of the Artisan Caste that was trapped in the Underworld as the Fair Folk were forced to flee Creation almost eight centuries ago. The Tragedian has no true friends, but there exists a mutual respect between these two other-worldly storytellers that is unmatched between the Tragedian and any of his other servants.
 
Jutlander said:
Great idea.
WE DEMAND DETAILS.
I do not check these forums often enough, it appears.


I am glad that you liked it.


What kind of details are you thinking of?
I'd like to hear more about the Tragedian himself: his personality, his mannerisms, his history.  Maybe a hint of who he was when he was a Solar?  His relationship with the Malfeans & lack thereof with other Deathlords would be good.  You might also tell us more about how he came to choose the Great Work over the other approaches to destroying Creation.


The Great Work, and the way he implements it, are such excellent ideas.  As a writer, let me tell you, I derive unclean enjoyment from the Tragedian.  And I like the descriptions of his servants (mad props for giving him a Fair Folk "deathknight").


Oh, also: is the Playhouse a Manse?  I figured it was, what with the alien geomancy and all (Lovecraft what?), but you didn't say it was, so I thought I'd check.
 
I second that.


... this reminds me of a certain signature Eclipse character (that I quite like I might add).
 
Hmmm...


I have an exam and a trip to Ireland coming up in the immediate future, but as soon as I am done with those things, I will see into detailing the Tragedian.

Solfi said:
... this reminds me of a certain signature Eclipse character (that I quite like I might add).
Though I realize that there are certain similarities between the two characters, I was in fact not aware of the Mirror Flag when I first came up with the Tragedian.
 
Jutlander said:
Though I realize that there are certain similarities between the two characters, I was in fact not aware of the Mirror Flag when I first came up with the Tragedian.
:shock:


woah. Well then, what can I say... you rock.
 
The Great Work' date=' and the way he implements it, are such excellent ideas.  As a writer, let me tell you, I derive unclean enjoyment from the Tragedian.  And I like the descriptions of his servants (mad props for giving him a Fair Folk "deathknight").[/quote']
Thank you once again for your praise. I never got around to answer the questions you asked, and I am not going to be as detailed as I first expected to when I promised to answer them. Real life has a tendency to require time as well, it seems.

Oh' date=' also: is the Playhouse a Manse?  I figured it was, what with the alien geomancy and all (Lovecraft [i']what[/i]?), but you didn't say it was, so I thought I'd check.
Yes, it was intended as a manse. Alien geomancy was a nice way of implying it, I thought.

I'd like to hear more about the Tragedian himself: his personality' date=' his mannerisms, his history.  Maybe a hint of who he was when he was a Solar?  His relationship with the Malfeans & lack thereof with other Deathlords would be good.  You might also tell us more about how he came to choose the Great Work over the other approaches to destroying Creation.[/quote']
The question of how he chose this approach and who he was in life are both rather simple to answer and closely tied together.


As a Solar, the man who became the Tragedian was a playwright. More than anything, he chose the Great Tragedy because he knew no other way. He was never a great warrior, politician, or a preacher. He was, and always will be, an artist.


That said, I see him as a young Solar slightly critical of the Solar Deliberative voicing his opinions in satire. As the centuries passed, though, he probably grew as jaded as anyone else around him and somewhere along the way the satire became tragedy.

Democritus said:
I demand the right to rip this for the WW Wiki!
What would that entail precisely? I doubt I will mind (I always like to widen my audience, narcissistic bastard I am), but if this is posted anywhere by anyone besides me, I expect to be given full credit for it (that is, please attach my name, Niels-Martin Josefsen, and/or handle, Jutlander, to it).


And please take the slightly edited version found here: http://boneandebony.livejournal.com/478.html.


Thank you.
 
Fantastically original and well written.  You're absolutely right about the canon Deathlords all falling in a few certain categories.  (Contrarily, my Abyssal campaign is about just how different the Walker in Darkness is from his anemic description in the book.)  I like your approach to *everything* about this guy.  My strong favoritism to him comes from an inner ego stroke: I'd wager you and I have similar plot structuring mechanics.


I can also say that my players, should they read this, might have a brush with this distinguished gentleman.   :twisted:
 

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