For many of the reasons you list, Elayne is in a superlative position. An argument could be made that SHE is the most powerful woman in the world (or has the greatest potential power), and not the Amyrlin Seat. This places her in the best position to break the supremacy of the Tower over the wetlands and put it in its proper place as no more than an equal polity, and maybe even first among equals socially, but not exercising any authority or influence over the governance of any land save that of a peer and neighbor. Elayne is an Aes Sedai which gives her a personal basis for defying sisters and the Tower such as rulers have dreamed of for three thousand years. What is more, she came to that status under highly unusual circumstances and lack the years of being molded into a devotee of the White Tower that other rulers who have worn the shawl openly or secretly have received. Beyond that, look at her advantages (the Seanchan being a possible exception to all superlatives, of course):
- She rules the most powerful nation in the wetlands in her own right
- She has been accepted as the ruler of the sole significant rival to Andor (her other neighbors lacking power or size and other nations of similar power being too remote)
- Her domains are the keystones in a nascent network of allied nations
- She controls the most advanced military technology in the world, with the dragons, an alliance with the Two Rivers longbowmen [RJ & B-Sand have not by a long shot come close to giving an idea of the rarity and utility of that skill], and control over both academies and access to the technology seen in development there (steamwagons, repeating crossbows, optical technology, nascent flight and powered ships)
- She is allied to the best organized and most professional military organizations in the world, stated in the BWB to be the Children of the Light and the Band of the Red Hand, which now works for her second only to her Warder and the father of her children. It is almost inconceivable that EITHER of those groups could ever support the hegemony of the White Tower or betray Elayne or Andor to the Tower. Particularly in light of the idiosyncrasies of their commanders.
- She is partnered with a channeling organization. While that group is currently the least of all such groups in the world, they are the only one with financial incentives and free market inclinations and thus have the greatest potential for growth.
- Aside from Rand al'Thor, she has the closest relationship of ANY ruler with the foreign cultures and their advantageous specialties.
- As far as the impending Last Battle will impact the geopolitical situation, Elayne uniquely has official working relationships of one variety or another with all three of the ta'veren who will be responsible for the outcome.
And where are all of these advantages placed? In the hands of a woman who will not turn against Egwene for ANYTHING. Elayne almost always chooses loyalty to her friends over her duties. Her acquiescence to the Wise One's requirements for her adoption of Aviendha, her appointments of Birgitte as Captain-General, Nynaeve as her Aes Sedai advisor (a position of public, formal significance in Andor, unlike most other nations), and Thom as official court bard, regardless of their issues that might render them unfit for the job or political embarrassments (a blanket pardon issued to the murderer of the last ruler of Cairhien right before claiming the throne herself outweighs even Nynaeve's & Birgitte's aversions to diplomacy or public decorum), and grants them extreme latitude in their attention to those offices as well as her brothers' divided loyalties. She pursues a relationship with Rand regardless of the possible costs to her political career or opposition from personal authority figures or the difficulties he has created for her claim. She lies to Aes Sedai, whom she has been raised to revere, for his sake, views the Tower split for how it can be turned to Rand's advantage and turns against Elaida who made the gardens bloom for her to play in when she shows possible hostility to Rand. When it might have been more prudent to allow Morgase to remain publicly dead, Elayne openly restores her mother to prominence. At almost every turn or point of decision Elayne comes down on the side of friendship regardless of the consequences for her country or political aspirations (though it is a testament to her ability that she manages to service the latter goals in spite of conflicts with her apparent priority).
Even worse is that she never turns on Egwene no matter what. In addition to the issues with Rand mentioned above, none of which do the slightest to dissuade her from pursuing an relationship as immediately as their circumstances and her own intimacy issues permit, she expresses a willingness to defy her mother, the woman who raised her and the expectations of her position and the Tower for Rand. She accepts, in the abstract anyway, the possibility of sharing him with other women, long before she learns the women in question will be her friends, much less acceptable partners in such a relationship. When she does get accustomed to her friends' feelings for Rand, she is open to the idea of polygamy and is arguably the strongest force for it, even more than 2 women who have prophetic certainty of its inevitability, one of whom has been raised to see it a preferable institution. For Rand she will go this far and possibly beyond. In fact, there is only ONE thing she has proven she will not do for Rand or to get a relationship with Rand (even pulling a Lanfear and turning to the Shadow has never explicitly been ruled out): turn against Egwene. She momentarily entertained the idea of tying up her oldest friend to prevent her from going to Rand, she contemplated stabbing Aviendha for admitting having slept with him (though Berelain had her sure he was already used goods), but she never once thought of pursuing him so long as Egwene had claim, however neglected, and no matter how indifferent to him Egwene showed herself. She spent several weeks under the same roof with a man she loves, and never so much as flirted with him, because he belonged to Egwene, no matter how little interest Egwene herself showed in that relationship or how much Egwene insisted he was unfit for a relationship. Min's reaction was to call bullshit on that position in a heartbeat. Aviendha felt strongly enough to give in to her feelings at least once in spite of her envisioned prior claimant actually showing interest in maintaining said claim, and their close mutual friend's disapproval. Elayne? Where Egwene is concerned, she waits her turn. Are we supposed to believe she'll do what is necessary to move the world out from beneath the stifling influence of the White Tower as long as Egwene sits on the Amyrlin Seat?
- She rules the most powerful nation in the wetlands in her own right
- She has been accepted as the ruler of the sole significant rival to Andor (her other neighbors lacking power or size and other nations of similar power being too remote)
- Her domains are the keystones in a nascent network of allied nations
- She controls the most advanced military technology in the world, with the dragons, an alliance with the Two Rivers longbowmen [RJ & B-Sand have not by a long shot come close to giving an idea of the rarity and utility of that skill], and control over both academies and access to the technology seen in development there (steamwagons, repeating crossbows, optical technology, nascent flight and powered ships)
- She is allied to the best organized and most professional military organizations in the world, stated in the BWB to be the Children of the Light and the Band of the Red Hand, which now works for her second only to her Warder and the father of her children. It is almost inconceivable that EITHER of those groups could ever support the hegemony of the White Tower or betray Elayne or Andor to the Tower. Particularly in light of the idiosyncrasies of their commanders.
- She is partnered with a channeling organization. While that group is currently the least of all such groups in the world, they are the only one with financial incentives and free market inclinations and thus have the greatest potential for growth.
- Aside from Rand al'Thor, she has the closest relationship of ANY ruler with the foreign cultures and their advantageous specialties.
- As far as the impending Last Battle will impact the geopolitical situation, Elayne uniquely has official working relationships of one variety or another with all three of the ta'veren who will be responsible for the outcome.
And where are all of these advantages placed? In the hands of a woman who will not turn against Egwene for ANYTHING. Elayne almost always chooses loyalty to her friends over her duties. Her acquiescence to the Wise One's requirements for her adoption of Aviendha, her appointments of Birgitte as Captain-General, Nynaeve as her Aes Sedai advisor (a position of public, formal significance in Andor, unlike most other nations), and Thom as official court bard, regardless of their issues that might render them unfit for the job or political embarrassments (a blanket pardon issued to the murderer of the last ruler of Cairhien right before claiming the throne herself outweighs even Nynaeve's & Birgitte's aversions to diplomacy or public decorum), and grants them extreme latitude in their attention to those offices as well as her brothers' divided loyalties. She pursues a relationship with Rand regardless of the possible costs to her political career or opposition from personal authority figures or the difficulties he has created for her claim. She lies to Aes Sedai, whom she has been raised to revere, for his sake, views the Tower split for how it can be turned to Rand's advantage and turns against Elaida who made the gardens bloom for her to play in when she shows possible hostility to Rand. When it might have been more prudent to allow Morgase to remain publicly dead, Elayne openly restores her mother to prominence. At almost every turn or point of decision Elayne comes down on the side of friendship regardless of the consequences for her country or political aspirations (though it is a testament to her ability that she manages to service the latter goals in spite of conflicts with her apparent priority).
Even worse is that she never turns on Egwene no matter what. In addition to the issues with Rand mentioned above, none of which do the slightest to dissuade her from pursuing an relationship as immediately as their circumstances and her own intimacy issues permit, she expresses a willingness to defy her mother, the woman who raised her and the expectations of her position and the Tower for Rand. She accepts, in the abstract anyway, the possibility of sharing him with other women, long before she learns the women in question will be her friends, much less acceptable partners in such a relationship. When she does get accustomed to her friends' feelings for Rand, she is open to the idea of polygamy and is arguably the strongest force for it, even more than 2 women who have prophetic certainty of its inevitability, one of whom has been raised to see it a preferable institution. For Rand she will go this far and possibly beyond. In fact, there is only ONE thing she has proven she will not do for Rand or to get a relationship with Rand (even pulling a Lanfear and turning to the Shadow has never explicitly been ruled out): turn against Egwene. She momentarily entertained the idea of tying up her oldest friend to prevent her from going to Rand, she contemplated stabbing Aviendha for admitting having slept with him (though Berelain had her sure he was already used goods), but she never once thought of pursuing him so long as Egwene had claim, however neglected, and no matter how indifferent to him Egwene showed herself. She spent several weeks under the same roof with a man she loves, and never so much as flirted with him, because he belonged to Egwene, no matter how little interest Egwene herself showed in that relationship or how much Egwene insisted he was unfit for a relationship. Min's reaction was to call bullshit on that position in a heartbeat. Aviendha felt strongly enough to give in to her feelings at least once in spite of her envisioned prior claimant actually showing interest in maintaining said claim, and their close mutual friend's disapproval. Elayne? Where Egwene is concerned, she waits her turn. Are we supposed to believe she'll do what is necessary to move the world out from beneath the stifling influence of the White Tower as long as Egwene sits on the Amyrlin Seat?
Cannoli
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*
"She knew Egwene wanted Cairhien..."
05/11/2010 03:22:29 AM
- 2389 Views
Do you have a reference that we can look at?
05/11/2010 03:24:39 AM
- 906 Views
Re: "She knew Egwene wanted Cairhien..."
05/11/2010 03:49:16 AM
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Re: "She knew Egwene wanted Cairhien..."
05/11/2010 01:42:54 PM
- 882 Views
Not if it allows the Seanchan freedom to conquer Randland. I'd rather have Egwene over the slavers.
07/11/2010 07:32:20 PM
- 930 Views
We all know Egwene is going to save the day while getting everything she wants and more
05/11/2010 04:14:55 AM
- 1041 Views
Egwene also needs to talk to her mother and father
05/11/2010 04:25:43 AM
- 857 Views
Re: Egwene also needs to talk to her mother and father
05/11/2010 01:53:17 PM
- 872 Views
Re: Egwene also needs to talk to her mother and father
05/11/2010 02:00:37 PM
- 942 Views
why?
05/11/2010 03:10:39 PM
- 968 Views
Re: why?
05/11/2010 04:23:16 PM
- 932 Views
They're the ones who raised her this way! That's the last thing she needs.
06/11/2010 03:38:17 PM
- 939 Views
Um, can we assume her parents raised her that way?
08/11/2010 04:57:05 AM
- 793 Views
She's a short, female, youngest child of influential parents. Arrogance would come naturally to her.
09/11/2010 02:08:29 AM
- 884 Views
Huh
09/11/2010 07:56:15 AM
- 910 Views
Wow. What the fuck did your parents do to you? *NM*
09/11/2010 03:35:07 PM
- 446 Views
09/11/2010 06:14:30 PM
- 648 Views
I try to avoid projecting myself onto fictional characters. Or real people.
09/11/2010 06:45:14 PM
- 798 Views
Why don't you compare her to a summer's day while you're at it? *NM*
09/11/2010 07:45:20 PM
- 380 Views
well...
09/11/2010 08:18:08 PM
- 715 Views
I'm teasing you because you lay it on a little thick sometimes *NM*
10/11/2010 01:10:39 AM
- 507 Views
So?
05/11/2010 09:53:22 AM
- 836 Views
i agree. and this is part of the reason why i don't understand why people have a hard time w/ egwene
05/11/2010 03:56:48 PM
- 900 Views
Because many of us don't see trying to achieve power for its own sake to be a good thing
05/11/2010 06:53:27 PM
- 874 Views
She didn't say that. You changed the wording and read it without context.
05/11/2010 03:29:27 PM
- 979 Views
So?
05/11/2010 04:04:54 PM
- 814 Views
The engima that is Egwene
06/11/2010 01:41:43 AM
- 836 Views
I wonder if...
06/11/2010 05:17:45 AM
- 818 Views
You might have paid more attention than me when reading
06/11/2010 06:50:46 AM
- 815 Views
The reason rand didn't tell Egwene about why he needs to break the seals is simple
22/06/2011 10:49:25 PM
- 868 Views
That's the problem with Elayne that has emerged.
06/11/2010 03:31:41 PM
- 1004 Views
Or, you know, she's being cleverer than you give her credit for...
06/11/2010 04:45:10 PM
- 868 Views
This is the problem with rulers - what is smart for them equals increasing their power. Which is bad
06/11/2010 08:40:19 PM
- 820 Views
The Andoran houses should ask one question of Elayne - and remove her if she answers wrongly
08/11/2010 02:03:08 AM
- 884 Views
Maybe it's typo
08/11/2010 06:38:26 PM
- 1024 Views
I was proven to be right - it's typo since it was corrected in the Ebook version
02/06/2011 11:59:02 PM
- 769 Views