Correct me if I'm wrong, but filial mean parental. So it could be a parent speaking with pride....
Correct me if I'm wrong, but filial mean parental. So it could be a parent speaking with pride....
神話―月
Shinwa-Tsuki
Myth-Moon
Need a name for your character, ability, item, or location. I might be able to help, see this entry for more information .
It's actually the opposite
Repost for new page:
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
Nope!
vivis grandpa?
Artemisis, whatever the purple moogle's name is?
Neither of those.
Hm, Freya about Fratley?
神話―月
Shinwa-Tsuki
Myth-Moon
Need a name for your character, ability, item, or location. I might be able to help, see this entry for more information .
Nope, sorry.
Are we looking for an item, or something else?
神話―月
Shinwa-Tsuki
Myth-Moon
Need a name for your character, ability, item, or location. I might be able to help, see this entry for more information .
Not an item.![]()
Hm, an event?
神話―月
Shinwa-Tsuki
Myth-Moon
Need a name for your character, ability, item, or location. I might be able to help, see this entry for more information .
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.
神話―月
Shinwa-Tsuki
Myth-Moon
Need a name for your character, ability, item, or location. I might be able to help, see this entry for more information .
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.