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Regring
Home City Elden Root
Race Wood Elf Gender Male
Health 25,974
Reaction Justice Neutral
Pickpocket Hard Profession Priest
Other Information
Faction(s) Spinners
Regring

Regring is a Wood Elf spinner found near the wayshrine in Elden Root.

DialogueEdit

If you talk with him, he will tell you a story if you really want him to:

"Hello. I'm a Spinner, as in a spinner of tales and stories, yarns and … tales. Being a Spinner is a pretty important thing. I'm sure you'd agree, unless you wouldn't, in which case you don't.
But we speak myth for Y'ffre."
"Greetings. Uh, if you want to hear a story I guess I can tell you one.
I'm just full of stories, because I'm a Spinner. We're made of fiction, haven't you heard?"'
I'd like to hear a story.
"I know a lot of stories, I guess. But mostly, I try to tell things how they happened. So go on, ask me how something happened.
Maybe a story about why nature works. Or why we Bosmer drink all the time. Or the way Falinesti was, when it was."
Tell me why nature works.
"A long, long time ago, shortly after the beginning of time, Y'ffre crystallized and became Himself. This is common knowledge. Everyone knows this. Well, mostly everyone.
Anyway, for a while after the World was made, everything was chaos. All of it."
What do you mean by 'chaos'?
"Well, mostly, for some reason we—we mortals, I mean—were all plants and animals and people all at the same time.
I'm not really sure how that would work. Like were-creatures, maybe. Except, you know, always changing, all the time."
How did the chaos stop? / I see. Go on.
"Y'ffre sang to the chaos and told it to stop being so chaotic. They formed a committee, or something, and from the chaos came Nature and its laws.
Trees are trees, and trees grow. Beasts are beasts, and graze or prey on one another. You know."
What about mortals?
"Oh, well the mortals could understand these laws. So that gave them—us, really, I should say—a feeling of safety in the world.
Because it was no longer really chaos, you know? Through our ability to grasp it, we could live with it or control it."
Did any of this really happen?
"Maybe. Probably.
I don't know, does it really matter? It's the way things are."
Why do Bosmer drink all the time?
"Oh, I love this story. I always end up with a drink after it. So, drinking is a sacrament to Y'ffre. Can you guess why that is?
Never mind, let me tell you. It's because it's his way of reminding us not to take things too seriously."
Too seriously?
"Well, yes. You know how the other Elves are. Altmer have their crystal towers, and that's how they want to be—cold and perfect. And Dunmer are just like their Red Mountain—smoldering and dark.
We just want to have a drink and not worry about it."
Isn't there more to it than that?
"Well, there is, but it's not really important. So don't worry about it.
After all, if you worry about it, you're living contrary to how Y'ffre would want you to. You see?"
What's that about Falinesti?
"Falinesti was and is a walking city. A city in the trees, as any good Bosmer city must be, but the graht-trees in which Falinesti was built, themselves, were big walkers.
They loved a good hike, you know? So they hiked all the time."
"Was and is"? What does that mean?
"I should've said "probably is," I suppose. Falinesti had … four? Four sites it would stop and rest at, one for every season of the year. So I suppose it didn't hike all the time. Not always, at least.
Anyway, it hasn't been seen for some time."
Why not?
"I could tell you a hundred reasons why, but none of them would be true. So I won't.
The truth is, nobody seems to know. King Camoran might—the Camorans used to keep their throne in Falinesti—but you'd have to ask him about it."
If nobody knows, why even tell the story?
"Well, you asked me to. And it's interesting to think about, isn't it?"