Folklore
- Proverbs and Sayings The spoken folk-register of Elshore: the everyday sayings of the Maan, the Bar, and the Erg, alongside the weightier Proverbs of Randenism. Each people turns the same world into its own idiom, and the faith of shaping lends its own moral grammar to the rest.
- The Recitation of the Months A calendrical verse that names the turning year of Elshore month by month. It binds the seasons to the sacred calendar of Randenism, naming the gods Namii and Liir among the months and walking the year from tempest to dream.
- The Cordae Blessing A short blessing spoken over Cordae tea, the brew of the old Cordae tree. It is a quiet rite of release: pain and sorrow are surrendered to the earth and the deep silence, that none of it be carried further.
- The Song of the Debt A song sung in Arram, the in-world language, that carries the burden and accounting of a debt across five verses. Its refrain - Alahïd, Alahïd - tolls beneath each verse like a heartbeat, naming the gods of Randenism as it passes.
- The Path Song of the Forest A path-song of Kironism, carried and sung by Sila, that aligns the singer with the forest-web and the moving Kiron. Its chorus, "The Noisy Daughter," refuses silence and names the singer as the forest's own; its verses anchor her to the celestial turn and to the warning of a thinning glass.
- Songs of the People A pair of songs from the broader repertoire of Elshore: "Just Stay With Me," a desperate plea over a fevered loved one, and "Unbound, Unbent, Unbought," Sila's anthem of the forest-web and a life lived by omen rather than law. Both are sung in English performance text and carry the gods and creatures of the world in their lines.