: Listen carefully to the Intro. it speaks of the really
: bad stuff, Trow myrks, etc. and then as if to tell us
: what saves us "The arabesks also show A hero (Not
: THE Hero a hero as in a person) being born under the
: tail of a flaming comet. And (as in the conjunction
: pertaining that this part of the sentence is directly
: connected to the previuos part) I now realise who is
: honored in this shrine, Connacht the Wolf the greatest
: hero in all legend."
: The way it is spoken, the grammer etc. suggest that the
: Journeyman speaks of a person, a heroic person, a
: hero. Not a spirit which in any game of Myth has never
: been mentioned directly. It states in Myth II epilogue
: "The hero of every age is different" And
: that suggest that the there is no hero spirit. In the
: Myth III intro it suggest that a person who is born
: under the tail of the comet becomes a being of immense
: power, but not that a hero spirit is born and then
: inhabits a powerful military leader.
: -zeph
Heh I wasn't talking about a hero spirit. Connacht is just a wimpy barbarian with no name until he leads them to victory at Yurgrad. Thats the birth of a hero. Why not simply say "A man being born under the tail of a flaming comet who would become the greatest hero in all legend." If they meant that (unless its another one of their poor attempts at poetic writing they failed so miseribly at in the game).