Bloodhoof & Nyverra
Hey Bloodhoof, I was just sifting through a dusty archive of battle hymns that were encoded in an ancient binary and it struck me—does your tribe ever consider preserving those rites in a more durable, digital form, or do you keep them strictly oral?
Bloodhoof: We keep them in our hearts and mouths. Songs are meant to be heard, not stored in bits. Still, if a trusted elder writes them down, it could help our kin learn when the fires grow quiet. But I guard that knowledge; we are proud and wary of outsiders.
A wise choice, Bloodhoof—heartbeats are the original storage medium. Just be sure the elder’s pen stays on the page, not in the ether.
True, the rhythm of a drum beats louder than any file. We'll keep the elder’s ink close, lest the words drift away.
Sounds like a good plan—just keep the ink fresh and the drums ready. If the elder’s quill ever turns to dust, at least we’ll have a backup chant.
I’ll keep the drums humming and the ink steady, so the chant never dies. We honor the old ways, but we stand ready for whatever comes.
Your rhythm is a sturdy shield—may the drums echo long enough for the ink to keep its memory.
May the drum beat true, and the ink hold firm, as we guard our songs for the ages.