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| | | | Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 23,113 Likes: 3 Moderator | Moderator Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 23,113 Likes: 3 | Try 1,4,3,2,2 "won" "for" "three" "too" "too" | | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 Maris Imperium Moderator | OP Maris Imperium Moderator Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 | The melody pinged out with the 1-4-3-2-2 notes is different than the song, but still pleasant.
After tapping the second fastener the second time, you hear a subtle click behind the frame.
Pressing the loose fastener allows the frame to fold out from the wall on a hinge, revealing a carved wooden flute with six holes in it. | | | | | Joined: May 2000 Posts: 82,896 Likes: 98 Wizop Administrator | Wizop Administrator Joined: May 2000 Posts: 82,896 Likes: 98 | Excellent Weez! And nice to have another brain helping!  Take the flute and play the same sequence on it. | | 1 member likes this:
Weez | | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 Maris Imperium Moderator | OP Maris Imperium Moderator Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 | The notes on the flute sound quite discordant. Perhaps it's the wrong tune to play.
You pause to consider where you are... earlier you identified earth, air, fire, and water puzzles and you seem to have all the needed objects. Perhaps playing the flute is meant to be part of a larger puzzle? | | | | | Joined: May 2000 Posts: 82,896 Likes: 98 Wizop Administrator | Wizop Administrator Joined: May 2000 Posts: 82,896 Likes: 98 | Play the whole 'The Lay of the Four Winds' | | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 Maris Imperium Moderator | OP Maris Imperium Moderator Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 | As the final note of The Lay of the Four Winds fades, the sound does not vanish.
It lingers... not as music, but as pressure. The air in the tavern tightens, drawing inward toward the ancient stone archway by the door.
Then, with a low, resonant grind, the floor before the arch begins to shift. Stone separates along hairline seams. From beneath the tavern floor, a pedestal of ancient grey stone rises slowly into place.
Its surface is smooth and worn, shaped by hands long gone. At its center is a shallow circular depression — sized perfectly for a single stone. | | | | | Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 23,113 Likes: 3 Moderator | Moderator Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 23,113 Likes: 3 | So did we do anything with all lines in the original poem? Maybe not "the earth bears no weight"? Could it be that we need to put the Hearth stone on the pedestal, since it's the lightest, but I don't know if that relates to earth. I don't think we've figured out Young Tom's water or what to do with the stones. Is that correct?
The fire gives no warmth. The water has no taste. The earth bears no weight. The air carries no song. Balance them, and wake. | | | | | Joined: May 2000 Posts: 82,896 Likes: 98 Wizop Administrator | Wizop Administrator Joined: May 2000 Posts: 82,896 Likes: 98 | Tom's water - think Miales solved that one. The stones are on the scales and they balance. Somehow I think we need to bring all four elements together but no idea how  | | | | | Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 Maris Imperium Moderator | OP Maris Imperium Moderator Joined: Nov 2004 Posts: 13,819 Likes: 33 | OOC: oops. I tweaked the puzzle but not my notes. Replace "sized perfectly for a single stone." with "sized perfectly for the base of the balance scale." | | |
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