Difference between revisions of "Children of the forest"

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Although people in [[Westeros]] believe the children of the forest to be extinct there are a few that still live in the world of men. A dwindling remnant of their population is located far north of the [[Wall]], in [[cave of the three-eyed crow|a cave system under a hill]]; the entrance is a warded cleft in the hillside.{{Ref|aDwD|34}}
 
Although people in [[Westeros]] believe the children of the forest to be extinct there are a few that still live in the world of men. A dwindling remnant of their population is located far north of the [[Wall]], in [[cave of the three-eyed crow|a cave system under a hill]]; the entrance is a warded cleft in the hillside.{{Ref|aDwD|34}}
  
The caves are home to more than three score living singers and the bones of thousands dead, and extend far below the hollow hill.  The children of the forest live with whom they refer to as ''the [[Three-eyed crow|Last Greenseer]]''. One of the children, [[Leaf]], tells [[Bran Stark]] that even the children of the forest have not explored all of the caves, even though they have lived there for a thousand thousand man-years.[[File:Bran Stark and the Children of the Forest.jpg|thumb|400px|right| Depiction of Brandon Stark with the[[children of the forest|child of the forest]] by  Conor Campbell ©]]] Bran hears them sing sad songs in the [[True Tongue]] so he cannot understand the words, but their voices are as pure as the winter air.{{Ref|aDwD|34}}
+
The caves are home to more than three score living singers and the bones of thousands dead, and extend far below the hollow hill.  The children of the forest live with whom they refer to as ''the [[Three-eyed crow|Last Greenseer]]''. One of the children, [[Leaf]], tells [[Bran Stark]] that even the children of the forest have not explored all of the caves, even though they have lived there for a thousand thousand man-years.[[File:Bran Stark and the Children of the Forest.jpg|thumb|400px|right| Depiction of Brandon Stark with the children of the forest by  Conor Campbell ©]]] Bran hears them sing sad songs in the [[True Tongue]] so he cannot understand the words, but their voices are as pure as the winter air.{{Ref|aDwD|34}}
  
 
Leaf tells Bran the children have:  
 
Leaf tells Bran the children have:  

Revision as of 18:10, 30 May 2014

Child of the forest, in its natural habitat.
A child of the forest. © Kallielef
Depiction of a greenseer singing the song of the earth.
Their hands had only three fingers and a thumb, with sharp black claws instead of nails.

The children of the forest, sometimes referred to simply as the "children" are a mysterious non-human race that originally inhabited the continent of Westeros long before the arrival of the First Men during the Dawn Age more than 12,000 years ago. The giants call them woh dak nag gram ('little squirrel people'). They call themselves those who sing the song of the earth in the True Tongue.[1]

Culture

Little is known about the children. They are a mysterious and magical people who have not been seen by humans for thousands of years. Tales describe them as diminutive humanoid creatures, dark and beautiful, at their tallest no larger than a human child. They are long-lived. Their true names would be too long for human tongues.

The children did not use metal, weave cloth or build cities; instead they lived off the land, using stone implements, wearing bark leg-bindings and shirts of woven leaves, dwelling in caves, crannogs, and hidden tree villages. Males and females both hunted side by side. The children had no books, no ink, no parchment and no written language.[2] They were a people with a deep connection to the land.[3] The children wielded obsidian weapons and bows in battle, but also used powerful magic.

Legends say the children of the forest were gifted with supernatural powers and magic; having power over the beasts of the wood, the ability to wear an animal’s skin, the skill to create music so beautiful as to bring tears to the eyes of any who heard it, the greensight ability (although maesters believe that the greensight was not magic, simply another kind of knowledge) and the ability to speak to the dead.[4] It was the children who carved the faces on the weirwoods to keep watch over the woods.[5] They believe that their wisdom had something to do with the faces in the trees.[5] The children of the forest believed that the weirwood trees were gods, and when they died they became a part of them.[2]

Appearance

The children were smaller than men with nut-brown skin, dappled like a deer's with paler spots. They had large ears that could hear things that no man could hear.

They usually had large eyes, great golden cat's eyes, that could see down passages where a boy's eyes saw only blackness. They have vertical, slit-like pupils; this trait is responsible for improved night vision and typically associated with a nocturnal lifestyle in such creatures as cats (the children's eyes are described in A Dance with Dragons as resembling cats' eyes) and many species of snakes, including nearly all vipers (despite Doran Martell's reference to his brother Oberyn's "viper eyes," the Red Viper is never described as sharing this feature with the children of the forest). A few had green or red eyes; these had the gift of greensight and were known as greenseers.

Their hands had only three fingers and a thumb, with sharp black claws instead of nails.[2] The children were slight, quick, and graceful.

History

“They were a people of the Dawn Age, the very first, before kings and kingdoms, in those days, there were no castles or holdfasts, no cities not so much as a market town to be found between here and the sea of Dorne. There were no men at all. Only the children of the forest dwelt in the lands we now call the Seven Kingdoms.” [6]

It is unknown for how long the children lived alone in their land, nor where they themselves came from, but for thousands of years they had to themselves what later became known as Westeros. Eventually about 12,000 years ago, the children came in contact with the First Men, the first outsiders. These invaders from Essos brought with them bronze, great leathern shields, the first horses, and their own gods. They burned the great weirwoods as they came, leading to war between the two.

For roughly 2,000 years the two races fought a desperate war for dominance. The children used their magic to shatter the Arm of Dorne, the land-bridge through which the First Men came, in a futile attempt to end the invasion and later flooded the Neck - where legend has it that the children called upon their gods from the Children's Tower to send the hammer of the waters to smash the Neck, as they smashed the Arm of Dorne, but it was not enough to stop the advance of the First Men. The histories say that some of the First Men, the crannogmen, grew close to the children of the forest in the days when the greenseers tried to bring the hammer of the waters down upon the Neck.[7]

Eventually the First Men and the children fought one another to a standstill. The two races agreed to peaceful coexistence and signed the Pact on the Isle of Faces, granting the open lands to humanity and the forests to the children.

The Pact lasted for 4,000 years before the enigmatic Others invaded from the uttermost north, bringing death and destruction to both races, during an extended period of winter known as the Long Night. The children of the forest joined with the First Men, lead by the last hero, to fight against the Others in the Battle for the Dawn. Eventually the Others were driven back into the Lands of Always Winter.

After the Long Night, the First Men and the children of the forest lived in relative peace. In these years, the children of the forest began their slow withdrawal from the lands of men, retreating deeper into their forests and beyond the Wall. During the Age of Heroes it was also recorded by the Night's Watch that the children of the forest gave the black brothers a hundred obsidian daggers every year.[8]

The children of the forest taught the worship of the old gods to the First Men, but the old gods were largely supplanted in the south by the Faith of the Seven after the Andal invasion. A hill, now known to the Westerosi as High Heart, was sacred to the children of the forest. There the Andal king Erreg the Kinslayer cut down the children’s grove of thirty-one weirwoods.[9] High Heart is said to be haunted by the ghosts of the children who died there, likely defending their grove from Erreg. Some of the children’s magic is said to still linger at High Heart.

Relations between the children and humans grew distant over the years, until they ceased altogether. By the time of Aegon's Landing, humans had not seen the children for thousands of years.[3]

It is unknown if there is a connection between the children of the forest and the Ifequevron, or "woods walkers", of northern Essos; Vaes Leisi is a ruined settlement of carved trees and haunted grottoes.[10]

Recent Events

A Dance with Dragons

Although people in Westeros believe the children of the forest to be extinct there are a few that still live in the world of men. A dwindling remnant of their population is located far north of the Wall, in a cave system under a hill; the entrance is a warded cleft in the hillside.[2]

The caves are home to more than three score living singers and the bones of thousands dead, and extend far below the hollow hill. The children of the forest live with whom they refer to as the Last Greenseer. One of the children, Leaf, tells Bran Stark that even the children of the forest have not explored all of the caves, even though they have lived there for a thousand thousand man-years.

Depiction of Brandon Stark with the children of the forest by Conor Campbell ©

] Bran hears them sing sad songs in the True Tongue so he cannot understand the words, but their voices are as pure as the winter air.[2]

Leaf tells Bran the children have:

Gone down into the earth … Into the stones, into the trees. Before the First Men came all this land that you call Westeros was home to us, yet even in those days we were few. The gods gave us long lives but not great numbers, lest we overrun the world as deer will overrun a wood where there are no wolves to hunt them. That was in the dawn of days, when our sun was rising. Now it sinks, and this is our long dwindling. The giants are almost gone as well, they who were our bane and our brothers. The great lions of the western hills have been slain, the unicorns are all but gone, the mammoths down to a few hundred. The direwolves will outlast us all, but their time will come as well. In the world that men have made, there is no room for them, or us.[2]

Although Bran is saddened by Leaf's explanation and demeanor, he later thinks to himself:

Men would not be sad. Men would be wroth. Men would hate and swear a bloody vengeance. The singers sings sad songs, where men would fight and kill.[2]

Known children of the forest

Quotes

Bran, the children of the forest have been dead and gone for thousands of years. All that is left of them are the faces in the trees.[11]

– Maester Luwin to Bran Stark


Osha: The children of the forest could tell you a thing or two about dreaming.
Luwin: The children ... live only in dreams. Now. Dead and gone.[12]

Osha and Maester Luwin to Bran Stark


North of the Wall, things are different. That’s where the children went, and the giants, and the other old races.[12]

- Osha to Bran Stark


The children are gone from this world, and their wisdom with them.[5]

– Maester Luwin to Bran Stark


The children of the forest are all dead. The First Men killed half of them with bronze blades, and the Andals finished the job with iron.[13]

- Lord Commander Jeor Mormont to Samwell Tarly


Leaf and her people were far from childlike. Little wise men of the forest would have been closer. [2]

- thoughts of Bran Stark

References and Notes