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Re: I do like to think I made a good effort though fionwe1987 Send a noteboard - 28/08/2015 10:43:16 PM

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They might have been gearing up for a long-term stay, but they didn't really have a clear plan of dissent or agenda to regain their places.

Exactly, and that is what Siuan chastised them for. Her lie confirmed to them they had to stay, and her exhortations started making them plan for it, but they wouldn't have just gone back without her.

You forget that a bunch of these women actually led an assault to free Siuan. Siuan, or her lie, had nothing to do with them taking that very drastic step. And we've seen time and again that they consider Rebellion to be small compared to sisters fighting sisters in the White Tower. For any number of these women, that ultimate step was already taken.


The notion that they were separatists is beyond absurd (as it would be for any woman raised pre-EotW), and Siuan's ideas to seize legitimacy were obviously completely new to them.

Insofar as they made Elaida even more illegitimate in their eyes, yes. But a large number of Blues and Greens, at least, had led a violent assault against a "legal" Amyrlin on the illegitimacy of Siuan's deposal. Separatism is small pickings compared to that. And remember, they had word out to other sisters to come to Salidar, hardly something you do if some kind of separate front is not anticipated.
I think without Siuan's arrival, Tarna would have found them a lot more receptive to her negotiating them back into the Tower, with assurances that there were not going to be any penalties for their fighting and maybe no more show trials or anything like that, that they'd just put the whole mess behind them and move forward.

With Sheriam running the show? Small chance. I also doubt people like Romanda would have let themselves be deterred like that. Siuan's lie gave them the way to draw in more sisters, I'm sure, and to keep some of them there. But I see no way in which the core bunch would just fold to Tarna.

Remember, well before they could be aware of Siuan or her lie, the Ajah Heads sent over Sitters to try and soothe the Rebels. And with enough instructions, apparently, to make sure only younger women were chosen Sitters, so they could be replaced once the Tower was unified. Its pretty clear they could anticipate the formation of a Rebel Hall, as it has happened before in Tower history, if not with the present geographic separation. Every Ajah but the Red was represented among the Rebels, and it seemed beyond obvious they would choose a Hall, to the original Ajah Heads. There was no way, once Siuan arrived and had Leane suggest the formation of a Hall in Salidar, for those Sitters to ask for instructions from Tar Valon. They were either already there or on their way. Between Siuan's arrival in tFoH, and the prologue of LoC, the Hall has already been chosen. No time to compare strategies with the Ajah Heads in the Tower, yet we know from Romanda that Magla insisted on Salita for the Hall, and similar stuff happened in all other Ajahs but the Blue.


And that was what Elaida was still offering. Ironically, I would not be surprised if in an alternate timeline, the former rebels turned out to be more cooperative and amenable to what Elaida would call reforms. Grateful to be back in the Tower, embarrassed at having rebelled, they'd be less persnickety about the limitations of her office and authority.

Wait, a group deeply suspicious of her, enough to oppose her actions violently, and to flee the Tower when that failed would somehow accept their lot and have fewer issues with her seizing more power?
The way the Ajah heads' youth movement succeeded so well at such remove suggests they are no more anti-authoritarian than any sisters. They were, after all, on strike against the removal of an Amyrlin who had exceeded her authority and acted in a high-handed and unilateral fashion.

I'm confused what you mean here. The too young Sitters in the Rebel Camp were Egwene's strongest supporters when it came to keeping the Rebellion alive. All of them stood without prompting when Egwene declared war on Elaida. It was the old ones, even among the Blues, who did not.

If the aim of the original Sitters among the Rebels was to bring in Sitters they could control and therefore keep the Rebellion low key, they failed miserably.


BTW, while "keeping secrets" might not be grounds for stilling, that IS what is done with deposed Amyrlins.

No it isn't. We know Shien Chunla was deposed and exiled, and only smothered to death when yet another plot was discovered to put her back on the Amyrlin Seat. Hardly something that would be possible if she was stilled.
And Siuan's performance was definitely grounds for removal. The Hall is there for a reason, and the Amyrlin does not get to unilaterally govern the Tower as a dictator, without the Hall's permission. Much less on something as important as the Dragon Reborn. Keeping secrets is one thing, hiding the signs of the apocalypse is something else entirely.

But she didn't hide it. She did reveal it to the Hall once Rand took up Callandor, and there was no doubt who he was.

The Halls pique was that Moiraine's presence meant Siuan had known before that. But Siuan had good reason to keep that knowledge close. Till there was definite proof Rand was the Dragon Reborn, there was too much chance some moron Aes Sedai (most likely from the Red) would try to gentle him. As Siuan knew very well, the Blacks had once before been able to use the Red's overzealousness to engineer a large number of illegal gentlings. How was she to prevent that without keeping things secret till there was a clear sign that Rand was the Dragon Reborn, and no one could doubt her evidence?


Her rationale for doing so was utterly ridiculous anyway, since Siuan herself was the one who reasoned out that the Black Ajah must be aware of the Dragon's Rebirth.

But not who he was or how old.
The only people in the dark at the point Moiraine found Rand, were the forces of the Light. The news started reaching the rest of the Darkfriend community before it got to the Dragon Reborn himself, as we see in the Darkfriend social, from which Ingtar returns before Moiraine and Siuan tell Rand.

Not because the Black Ajah knew, but because of Ishamael! How was Siuan to know he was free, had access to Rand's dreams, and able to impart that info to other Darkfriends?

Secondly, it wasn't just the Blacks she had to fear. The Reds might well be used as their catspaw again, if they didn't believe he was actually the Dragon Reborn.


Largely through Siuan's efforts.

But not only hers.

These are Aes Sedai. They don't think outside the box well. Every other Amyrlin who was deposed was stilled, so of course Siuan had to be as well. Given her later behavior with Meidani, I would bet that Elaida, given her druthers, would have preferred to keep Siuan in the kitchens, or enjoy the idea of her working a farm, if Siuan was right about the grudge Elaida bore her. Had Siuan fallen and broke her neck, been replaced by Elaida and then the united Tower decided to pull Elaida down for transgressions akin to Siuan's, and no more deserving of stilling, they'd have done the same thing. It's what people have done with deposed Amyrlins for 2,000 years, and they're not, by the Light, going to change now.

This is completely untrue, so I'm not sure what to say. Also, even if stilling was commonplace, declaring the former Amyrlin a Darkfriend almost certainly was not, yet Elaida did just that to try and bolster her paper thin case. That was a move of staggering idiocy, and instead of bolstering her case, only made any number of Aes Sedai sure that she had just created a false case to depose Siuan and seize power.
But it was also based on an extreme overreaction and a grudge from her training days not unlike Joline's toward Merilille.

They're hardly the same. Joline's grudge is that Merillile made Joline feel ashamed she didn't know the answer to her questions. Siuan's grudge, such as it was, was rooted in Elaida physically assaulting her and her best friend for three nights.
Elaida was not punished for being too hard on Siuan and Moiraine, but for coming too close to the real stresses of the test, because she wanted that badly to see them succeed.

That is why she was punished. But that is not the only thing she did wrong. Not one single Aes Sedai test we have seen involved constant physical assault through all 100 weaves with barely any break. Even if it had been, "I only beat you because I want you to succeed" is hardly acceptable as any kind of excuse.

What Elaida did is a major offense by Aes Sedai law, since she physically assaulted an initiate with the One Power. The technicality that she was doing this to "help" them was what allowed Merean (for whatever her goals were) to not have Elaida birched and exiled. That doesn't, however, take away from the fact that this was an atrocious way for a teacher to treat a student. And comparing it to Merrillile's actions is absurd and cheap.


Recall too, at that point she had been the ONLY woman in the Tower (except maybe Gitara) who was working towards Tarmon Gaidon.

Siuan was to know this how?

Further, at that very time, Tamra and a bunch of her searchers were doing far more for Tarmon Gaidon than Elaida was. Elaida misinterpreted her Foretelling, and then did worse with it. If Siuan is to be chastised for keeping the Dragon Reborn hidden from the Hall, how in the world is it okay for Elaida to keep what she believed was the salvation of the world from the Hall? Instead of doing that, she used her knowledge for personal gain. She tied herself to who she saw would be the Royal Family, and got herself named as the advisor to Morghase. Siuan at least had the fear of the Black Ajah to explain her secrecy. What reason did Elaida have?


Elaida would have had ample motivation to want strong, promising sisters being raised to the shawl.

So much so that on the mere suspicion that Siuan and Moiraine had gone to Merean, Elaida tried her hardest to fail Moiraine? Please. We know enough of Elaida to know that even her best intentions don't stand the test of her megalomania. She probably figured that breaking the rules to have two powerful sisters indebted to her, who may otherwise be her rivals, was a good way to make sure she was in command come Tarmon Gaidon.
Cadsuane expressed a similar rationale for keeping an eye on Moiraine.

But did not knock her on the head with the Power and have her bundled off to the Tower, you will notice.
This all makes the version they were told about Elaida's punishment fairly plausible,

To us maybe. And there are several holes in that version visible even to me with my deeper knowledge on this compared to Siuan. All she and Moiraine saw were a power mad woman who set impossible standards for them go overboard once again.
but Siuan wouldn't let it go.

She did, by all accounts. How exactly did she let this grudge affect her decisions?
Twenty years later, she's surprised when Elaida proposes something she herself wants to do, and only in hindsight does she realize it is a perfectly natural response.

Because Elaida was a Red, not because she abused her as an Accepted.
While the Mistress of Novices at the time deserves her share of credit for exacerbating the breech (foster division between two of the strongest young sisters in the Tower and poison the good will that existed [if only one way at that point] between a Red and two Blues? Black Ajah jackpot! ), but there's no excuse for Siuan taking a ghetto mentality to the affair.

But when did she? Pre-coup, she didn't treat Elaida particularly meanly or anything. She was wary of her and didn't treat her as a confidante, but in this her treatment of Elaida is no different than her treatment of Leane!
I think Siuan did most of her growing up after reaching the shawl, and her immaturity at the time of her raising is probably an unspoken factor in the Ajah taking her in hand and forcing constructive work down her throat at the outset of her career.

Cetalia can hardly lie. She makes it clear the only reason she wants Siuan is because Siuan has a reputation for being very good with puzzles.
Recall that she had no agenda or cause at the time (aside from finding Rand, though that was both new and a secret), and just wanted to go out and have adventures, despite being well past the age at which people in their society are supposed to have settled down to a grownup lifestyle.

Then Cadsuane is also a child, at 300? Please. Wanting adventure is a feature of Blues and Greeens, according to Romanda. Siuan wanted to see the world, hardly an idiotic notion at that age. The moment a worthwhile cause came her way, though, you see her drop those plans. We also see her quickly adapt to her forced confinement in the Tower and see the advantages in it for her cause. Two years from the end of New Spring, she could have easily dumped Cetalia's job and gone off searching for the Dragon, like Moiraine, but she stuck to the job and used it to help Moiraine. Hardly the signs of immaturity.
In the normal course of affairs, she'd have probably matured into a very capable sister, but in the pressure cooker of the Tower's internal politics, her development was warped and calcified into something of an extreme personality, and she was given too much authority way too young.

She certainly got too much authority too young, but calling her an extreme personality is weird. None of her actions suggest extremity to me. She's flexible and adaptable, as even Fain notes.


At the time Siuan was raised, Elaida could possibly have made a much better choice, with more than a dozen years advising the ruler of the most powerful country in the world.

And her need for glory that made her keep the importance of the Trakands, as she saw it, secret?
She might have still needed her wakeup call about the limitations of her office (the downside of being away from Tower politics for so long), but not coming to power in an aberrant and aggressive faction, she would not have the opportunities to blunder as she did in real life.

How is this better than Siuan? Elaida being raised when Siuan would make her better as Amyrlin than when she forced herself into power, but that doesn't in any way make her better than Siuan herself. Siuan, remember, was picked for her vast administrative experience for one so young. Since that judgment was made by a White Sitter, this can't just be her role as Blue Spymaster. If, among a bunch of women who are trapped in the Tower doing nothing but administration, you stand out for administrative skills, it seems clear you're better at it than someone who advised a Queen who seemed to ignore you more often than not.
Once on the Amyrlin Seat, I think she'd have been more in touch with real world stuff, and her Red Ajah pragmatism might have been a better quality in an Amyrlin than Blue idealism (which all too often has intolerance as a flip side; even a Black Red like Liandrin has something of that quality, especially given what she says to Nynaeve and Egwene about having to work with people you don't like. Not a very Siuan thing to say at all - note how she appointed her closest friends as Keeper & Mistress of Novices, rather than balance her inexperience or pick a complementary personality type; I'm not saying she CAN'T work with enemies, she just doesn't really seem to, ever).

Whoa there's so much wrong here... Of course Liandrin spouted something about working with someone you don't like. That benefitted her here! It had nothing to do with being a Red.

The Red Ajah has an official policy banning friendships with any other Ajah. How the heck is that pragmatic? That is insular, and frankly stupid. The best Reds now have no chance to have friends in other Ajahs advocating for them when it comes to picking Amyrlins, neatly explaining why no single Red made it to the Amyrlin Seat in a 1000 years. Pragmatic? Bah!



Mat noted her strength and intensity, but did not trust her a hair, and beat feet as soon as he could.

As he did no woman who could channel, really. But you will notice his views on her were very different than his views on more typical Aes Sedai like Moiraine or Verin.
Whatever good impressions Rand and Perrin had of Siuan, it certainly gave Rand no confidence in her leadership of the Tower.

That's a stretch. He did not believe he should let himself be beholden to her, certainly. But never once did he say or think anything that implied he thought Siuan wouldn't be able to handle the Tower itself.
He had no confidence in her ability to pull off the strategy Moiraine revealed, and which in hindsight, seems hopelessly naive. "Oh, we'll just tell everyone the truth and they'll cooperate!"

That was hardly the plan. The plan was for Siuan to use her influence to gather the nobles and rulers of the land behind Rand. She was certainly well suited to that task. Better than Elaida, who focussed on Andor to the exclusion of everything else.
Rand's own experiences in Tear alone put the lie to that, and the real Dragon Reborn might very well have inspired enough terror or worry or lust for power to overcome the usual diffidence toward the White Tower.

Exactly what Siuan was worried about, in her conversation with Min. As she says, there were any number of people who would have tried to have him killed, Prophesies or no Prophesies. Which is why her support as Amyrlin, and her use of her extensive network of agents could have helped.
I don't even think Siuan would have been carrying out that plan by the time Rand became public news. She gave no sign of it, and her own chagrin at the state of the world as she expressed to Moiraine in tGH suggests, she might have hesitated or moved more slowly in springing news like that when push came to shove.

If Rand had followed Moiraine's advice, he would have attacked Illian. With conformation from a Sister that Illian was ruled by Sammael, Siuan would have been able to gather quite a bit of support for Rand's cause, tying multiple rulers to him. I'm not saying it was a foolproof plan, but it could have worked.
In any event, the idea that taking the Aiel across the Dragonwall might discredit Siuan and ruin her coalition made not the slightest impression on Rand. Had it been Egwene, he might have thought twice about it, as we see him take care not to defy her more than he has to.

Sure, but I never said Rand harbored any love for Siuan. But he could safely have trusted her not to kidnap him, for instance, and certainly not to want to keep him locked away from the world. As you can see from her conversation with Min in tSR, her biggest fear is that he would get himself killed. She may have sent him support, argued with some of his schemes, but in the long term, she'd have helped him, especially if Moiraine was by his side to foster communication between them.
Because she'll be dead. She won't care.

And she knew this before hand? How is her eventual death relevant here?
Other than that, she does, even as far back as Ravens, want to be the most important woman in the world.

No, she wants to be the best at her task. Importance doesn't enter into it.
And yet, she never thinks of it once.

She does. She thinks Siuan had always thought too much of herself for being a fisherman's daughter. The only time Siuan "defied" Elaida, as far as Elaida knows, is when she supposedly told Merean about Elaida's beatings.
Even Siuan doesn't go that far, claiming it is resentment of Siuan getting the Amyrlin Seat ahead of her. Elaida had enough insight on Siuan and Moiraine to figure out that they were up to something.

Certainly, she remembered they were close, and therefore must be in cahoots. I don't see how any of this proves Siuan let her resentment of Elaida rule their interactions.

IDK, she might have if Moiraine recommended it. She had no ideas anymore than Elaida did.

Elaida did have ideas. She wanted Rand dead, before she found out he was the Dragon Reborn. She wanted to kill a ta'veren because he might bring strife to Andor. Once she found out he was the Dragon, she wanted to capture him, and regretted that she had let him get away when she had him in her hand.

Siuan was definitely influenced by Moiraine, but that only made sense. Moiraine was on the field, and knew Rand better. Rather than go with preconceived notions, Siuan was content to let the woman she trusted, and actually knew what was happening on the ground do the work, while she remotely worked to support those plans once she knew of them.


A Tower puppet ruler, you mean.

Puppet how? Siuan never gave a hint of wanting something from Rand. Other than wanting him alive for Tarmon Gaidon, and well supported. She certainly never saw Tower interests as above Rand, like Elaida did. How would Rand have been her puppet, if Siuan's only agenda was to get Rand the support he needed to fight Tarmon Gaidon, and keep him alive for that?
And Rand figured out near the end that he was letting things like that tie him down. It was the wrong track, and one that Moiraine got him started on, though understandably, because from the point of view of the circumstances in which he took Callandor, it was the natural progression.

But that tied him down at the end, but it was certainly critical earlier. I don't think Rand as a monk who forsook all political power would have achieved anything at all. It was useless chaff when time came to go to Shayol Ghul. Not before.

Again, not necessarily a bad thing, especially from the PoV of the Dragon, who has to buck the established institutions to get his job done.

But Siuan would have let him buck them. She damned well did when she was Amyrling. Once deposed, she worked to let him continue doing what he had to do. That's the point about her being someone easier to bend but harder to break. She wouldn't hold on tightly to everything she thought she valued and the Dragon Reborn be damned, like Elaida did.

Me, either. I had a huge grin the whole time. As far as the post-KoD stuff goes, my thing was really about half an exercise in absurdity and farce and the other half trying reconcile the B-Sand crap with the real series as a sort of thought exercise or "fannon" development.

Yeah, but I don't see ways for that reconciliation. Take Nynaeve teaching Egwene the importance of Aes Sedai marrying and being part of society. RJ had her learn and ruminate on that way back in Book 6. Yet in ToM, Brandon has her seem "troubled" by what Nynaeve says? It makes no sense! She spends books arguing that she is correct to let old women with ties to society become Aes Sedai, yet we're to believe the idea of Aes Sedai having links to society troubles her?

The same kind of nonsense can be seen with all the characters, of course. Which only confirms that RJ was right when he said there was only one book left. There wasn't a lot of character development to do, so Brandon just regurgitated old ones.

This message last edited by fionwe1987 on 28/08/2015 at 10:44:35 PM
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