Correct me if I'm wrong, but filial mean parental. So it could be a parent speaking with pride....
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but filial mean parental. So it could be a parent speaking with pride....
It's actually the opposite :D
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There I am, at a distance
in the calm after perilous chase
There I come, to assistance
the argenteous danger to face
Spoken of with filial pride
when yearned for man returned
Spoken of no more; I hide
in dual infinity turned
Blank?
Nope!
vivis grandpa?
Artemisis, whatever the purple moogle's name is?
Neither of those.
Hm, Freya about Fratley?
Nope, sorry.
Are we looking for an item, or something else?
Not an item. :)
Hm, an event?
Try to make some guesses and give reasoning for them and I'll comment on that instead. I don't want to narrow it down too much too quickly. ;)
There I am, at a distance - someone standing from afar
in the calm after perilous chase - after a chase
There I come, to assistance - that person comes to someones aide
the argenteous danger to face - to deal with a dangerous 'argenteous' - which is argenteous?
Spoken of with filial pride - with the pride of a lover/sweetheart
when yearned for man returned - who is longing for one's 'man' to come back
Spoken of no more; I hide - the 'man' is no longer spoken of but the person hides from
in dual infinity turned - an eternal circle of dualism
Something makes me think of the Ipsen story.
It's not related to the Ipsen story.
You're a bit off in your thoughts about the second stanza. "Filial pride" is not the pride of a lover, but (here) of a child towards their parent. The "man" referred to is not the same as the riddle's answer, and is not what the last two lines refer to. The last line is a little trickier as it is a bit of a mini puzzle.