Fable, The Tale Spinner Character in Asharith | World Anvil

Fable, The Tale Spinner

God of Stories

By his title, most would assume that the head of the Deific Supra was a formal and straight individual of little humor. Instead, the Tale Spinner was, by all accounts, a joyful individual who enjoyed the odd bit of mischief every now and then. His chaotic touch allowed him much creativity in the process of creating most things of Asharith. As the creator of the Humans, they are seen as the most versatile and adaptable race, using their wit and creativity to overcome many dangerous situations. The Tale Spinner is also often seen as a patron God of adventurers.   Besides his chaotic nature, the Tale Spinner is also a God of peace, having famously forged the pact between Gods and Primordials at the start of the Age of Thread, and ending the Great Ruin in one final push against the Deific Infra and the troops of his brother, the Ruin  

Depiction

The Tale Spinner is often depicted as a dark-skinned, elderly human, with long robes, a bald head and a long grey beard which ends in a thin pen tip. He is always depicted holding a book with his eight-pointed star on either the pages or the cover.

Divine Domains

Many of the Tale Spinner's clerics are granted powers of Life, Peace and Trickery. They are a God of creation, but also of stories and adventure. They promote using your imagination to solve problems. They are a God of peace, they prefer to solve problems through compromise rather than violence.

Artifacts

  • The Quill of Names
  • Divine Ink

Divine Symbols & Sigils

A golden quill.
An eight-pointed star.

Holidays

The Tale Spinner has two holy days which each lead into one another. One at the end of the year and one at the very beginning. Some see these two days as one big Holy Day, though the two days each have a seperate name. The end of the year's festival is referred to as *the Epilogue* whilst the beginning of each year is called *the Prologue.* They also have an entire week in their honour, known as the Week of the Words. It is not an week of celebration, but a week of sharing stories with one another. Libraries will often hire bards to act as storytellers, so that people can come listen to their collected tales during the week.
Divine Classification
Supra Deity
Children

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