Внутреннее тестирование Вики/E-VII — различия между версиями

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{{Внутреннее тестирование Вики|
 
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{{NavChap|[[Chapter VI - The Awakening]]|[[Chronicles of the First Crusade#Table of contents|Table of contents]]|[[Chapter VIII - Lies]]}}
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{{NavChap|[[Chapter VI - The Awakening]]|[[The Sacred War#Table of contents|Table of contents]]|[[Chapter VIII - Lies]]}}
 
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The bombardment gradually ceased, and soon the creatures flooded the pit. The tidal wave of stings and fangs crashed through the shields with staggering violence. The atmosphere, stained and darkened by the battle, shifted again as the first spells flew over the warriors: jets of flame, shockwaves, beams of electricity, tongues of acid, spurts of poison, and icy breaths. The air became charged with inflows of energy, and compressed behind his shield, muscles sheathed and feet sunken in sawdust, Pü felt the spiritual particles that made up his being resonate with those of his comrades. The sensation was increased tenfold as the line of warriors received healing salvos from the healers. The healing process of the soldiers, accelerated thousands of times, had erased the last traces of fear remaining in them. Every open wound closed immediately, every broken bone was instantly resoldered. As a result, even if every opening in the black wall allowed the monsters to reach the homins in their flesh, they never hesitated to fight back, carried as they were by a feeling of invincibility. Their souls remained out of reach. It took only a few minutes for Ceremonial Square to overflow with insects. Those who did make it to the floor above were instantly wiped out by the war mages. The carcasses gradually accumulated to the point where a mass grave several meters high covered the entire ground. Minutes passed and the monstrous wave seemed to subside. Yes, the creatures were fewer and fewer in number. Yet their behavior did not change. They charged at the homins, inexorably, as if there was still a chance, or as if that was all they knew how to do. Paws torn off, carapaces broken and flesh burned. Nothing could stop their crazy race, except the extinction of their motor functions. It was there, their weak point. As numerous and armed as they were, they were missing something. A spirit, a soul. Pü had observed the subtlety of animal behavior many times. And these monsters were not, they were less than that. They were like tools. Objects without consciousness. Therein lay the cause of their defeat.
 
The bombardment gradually ceased, and soon the creatures flooded the pit. The tidal wave of stings and fangs crashed through the shields with staggering violence. The atmosphere, stained and darkened by the battle, shifted again as the first spells flew over the warriors: jets of flame, shockwaves, beams of electricity, tongues of acid, spurts of poison, and icy breaths. The air became charged with inflows of energy, and compressed behind his shield, muscles sheathed and feet sunken in sawdust, Pü felt the spiritual particles that made up his being resonate with those of his comrades. The sensation was increased tenfold as the line of warriors received healing salvos from the healers. The healing process of the soldiers, accelerated thousands of times, had erased the last traces of fear remaining in them. Every open wound closed immediately, every broken bone was instantly resoldered. As a result, even if every opening in the black wall allowed the monsters to reach the homins in their flesh, they never hesitated to fight back, carried as they were by a feeling of invincibility. Their souls remained out of reach. It took only a few minutes for Ceremonial Square to overflow with insects. Those who did make it to the floor above were instantly wiped out by the war mages. The carcasses gradually accumulated to the point where a mass grave several meters high covered the entire ground. Minutes passed and the monstrous wave seemed to subside. Yes, the creatures were fewer and fewer in number. Yet their behavior did not change. They charged at the homins, inexorably, as if there was still a chance, or as if that was all they knew how to do. Paws torn off, carapaces broken and flesh burned. Nothing could stop their crazy race, except the extinction of their motor functions. It was there, their weak point. As numerous and armed as they were, they were missing something. A spirit, a soul. Pü had observed the subtlety of animal behavior many times. And these monsters were not, they were less than that. They were like tools. Objects without consciousness. Therein lay the cause of their defeat.
  
Pü stopped at this conclusion. Yet he, the master jeweler, must have known that the responsibility for a failure does not fall to the tool, but to the person who uses it. It is by forging that one becomes a blacksmith and learning always involves making mistakes. His mother had nevertheless taught him that. A few hundred meters below his feet, the kinkoo knew nothing of the extent of his failure. But it was only a matter of time. For a kipesta that had been watching the battle was already scurrying toward the kitin general's headquarters via another network of galleries. If the emissary could not feel fear, he knew that the inevitable angry reaction his master would have to the news of defeat  could cost him his life. But more than anything, he knew that the kitin general would then condemn these arrogant primates to a fate far more terrible than death itself: extinction.}}
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Pü stopped at this conclusion. Yet he, the master jeweler, must have known that the responsibility for a failure does not fall to the tool, but to the person who uses it. It is by forging that one becomes a blacksmith and learning always involves making mistakes. His mother had nevertheless taught him that. A few hundred meters below his feet, the kinkoo knew nothing of the extent of his failure. But it was only a matter of time. For a kipesta that had been watching the battle was already scurrying toward the kitin general's headquarters via another network of galleries. If the emissary could not feel fear, he knew that the inevitable angry reaction his master would have to the news of defeat  could cost him his life. But more than anything, he knew that the kitin general would then condemn these arrogant primates to a fate far more terrible than death itself: extinction.
{{NavChap|[[Chapter VI - The Awakening]]|[[Chronicles of the First Crusade#Table of contents|Table of contents]]|[[Chapter VIII - Lies]]}}
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{{NavChap|[[Chapter VI - The Awakening]]|[[The Sacred War#Table of contents|Table of contents]]|[[Chapter VIII - Lies]]}}
 
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[[Category:Chronicles of the First Crusade‎]]
 
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Версия 16:23, 29 мая 2022

Шаблон:Внутреннее тестирование Вики