CHAPTER
2:
ELVES
HE
MOST ANCIENT TALES SPEAK OF ELVES
a s the
children of the god Corellon. Unlike
many
similar myths involving other races,
these tales are true.
Elves are all descended
from a deity, and their origin
Jed to a trag-
edy that shapes their culture to this day.
The gulf between the elves and Corellon
,
and the
split between Corellon and Lolth, arose
from
the same
transgression. That one incident set
all the
many races of elves on th
eir present paths, determined
their unique life cycle,
and triggered an unflagging
hatred
between the drow and the elves of
the Material
Plane. No other event has had s uch momentous
impact
on elven history as the one that began it a
ll.
A RACE DIVID
ED
O NCE WE FOLLOWED I N CORELLON
' S FOOTSTEPS, BUT
we strayed from that
path. For our whole existence, we pay
penance for a misstep.
It is just? Mayhap not, but when is
love just?
Is loss and longing a matterforjudges to
decide?
The heart knows what the soul
wants.
- Amlaruil Moonflower, Last
Queen of Evermeet
Long before elves existed, Corellon
danced from world
to world and
pla ne to plane. A bein g of consummate
mutability and infinite grace, Corellon
was a god like
no other-able to
take the form of a chuckling stream,
a teas ing breeze,
an incandescent beam, a cavor ting
fiame, or a crackling bolt of lightn
ing. On nothing more
than a whim, Corellon's body co
uld become a school of
fish, a swarm of bees, or a flo
ck of birds. When consort-
ing with
other gods, Corellon often adopted their
ap-
pearan
ces- male, female, or something else- but
just as
often
kept their company in the form of a rose bl
ossom
or a delicate doe.
Corellon's flamboyant,
mercurial personality showed
through
no matter which for m the entity took.
Corellon
loved wholeheartedly, broke oaths without
reservation,
and took pleasure from every encounter
with the other
divine beings of the
multiverse.
Most of the gods
accepted Corellon's mutability
and passionate
behavior, but these traits infuriated
Gruumsh , the
greatest of the ore gods. Gruumsh's
wrath was almost universally res
pected , even among
the divine powers, but Corellon
blithely took no heed of
h im. Perhaps it was this seeming
hauteur that enabled
Gruumsh to get close enough
to wound Corellon, ignit-
ing the legendary conflict
that cost Gruumsh one of his
eyes. Depending on who
does the telling, the battle was
a clash
of titans fought across many planes
and worlds,
or
it was little more than an a nnoyance to
Corellon. But
the legends all agree
that the first elves emerged from
the blood that Corellon shed.
CHAPTER 2 I ELVES