Regestoy: Difference between revisions

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A completed Book enables its user to physically travel to the place described within its pages. Underlying the Art was the foundational belief that writers were not creating new worlds, but merely linking to places that existed in parallel universes. The D'ni called these parallel universes [[Age]]s.  
A completed Book enables its user to physically travel to the place described within its pages. Underlying the Art was the foundational belief that writers were not creating new worlds, but merely linking to places that existed in parallel universes. The D'ni called these parallel universes [[Age]]s.  


The Art was made possible through specially-formulated [[ink]] and paper—which was bound together in a hard leatherbound volume—and a special written dialect{{clarify|reason=a "dialect" is a variety of a language, but the dictionary entry defines them as symbols}} called ''{{Parsed D'ni|gahrohev|-tee}}''—literally, "great words"—which allowed writers to express extremely complex ideas in a compact space.
The Art was made possible through specially-formulated [[ink]] and paper—which was bound together in a hard leatherbound volume—and a special written dialect{{clarify|reason=a "dialect" is a variety of a language, but the dictionary entry defines them as symbols}} called ''{{dni-text|gahrohev|-tee}}''—literally, "great words"—which allowed writers to express extremely complex ideas in a compact space.


Blank Books, called ''{{Parsed D'ni|kor|-tee}}'{{Parsed D'ni|neeah}}'', were carefully guarded by the [[Guild of Writers]], as were the formulae that described the manufacture of their individual components. While access to the practice of Age writing was primarily the province of the Writers' Guild, others are known to have learned it as well.<ref>Most prominently, [[Aitrus]] learned the Art and used his skill in it to write an Age called [[Gemedet]] with [[Ti'ana]].</ref>
Blank Books, called ''{{dni-text|kor|-tee}}'{{dni-text|neeah}}'', were carefully guarded by the [[Guild of Writers]], as were the formulae that described the manufacture of their individual components. While access to the practice of Age writing was primarily the province of the Writers' Guild, others are known to have learned it as well.<ref>Most prominently, [[Aitrus]] learned the Art and used his skill in it to write an Age called [[Gemedet]] with [[Ti'ana]].</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 03:20, 17 July 2024

RegestoyregestO), or "the Art", is the D'ni discipline of writing Descriptive Books or Linking Books. The word itself is a combination of the definite article prefix "the" ( re) and the word for "art" ( gestO).

Described as both an art and "the science of precise description",[1] an author uses the Art to describe a physical place, like an island on a planet, in exacting and comprehensive detail. This is a skill which took many years of practice to hone, and even more to master.

A completed Book enables its user to physically travel to the place described within its pages. Underlying the Art was the foundational belief that writers were not creating new worlds, but merely linking to places that existed in parallel universes. The D'ni called these parallel universes Ages.

The Art was made possible through specially-formulated ink and paper—which was bound together in a hard leatherbound volume—and a special written dialect[clarification needed] called gahrohevtee—literally, "great words"—which allowed writers to express extremely complex ideas in a compact space.

Blank Books, called kortee'neeah, were carefully guarded by the Guild of Writers, as were the formulae that described the manufacture of their individual components. While access to the practice of Age writing was primarily the province of the Writers' Guild, others are known to have learned it as well.[2]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Myst Reader. Ebook, Myst: The Book of Atrus, chapter 10.
  2. Most prominently, Aitrus learned the Art and used his skill in it to write an Age called Gemedet with Ti'ana.