Saturday, October 1, 2011

Saintly Saturday: St. Romanos the Melodist

Today is the feast of St. Romanos the Melodist, one of the Orthodox Church's most celebrated hymnodists. He was born in Syria in the 5th century to Jewish parents. He later moved to Constantinople, where he became a sacristan (someone with the duty of upkeep and care of a church building) at Hagia Sophia.


Romanos was not born with a good singing voice nor was he a talented reader. In fact, on one Christmas Eve during services he read so badly that another reader had to take his place. He was devastated.

The next day, grief-stricken, he went before an icon of the Mother of God. He was then granted a vision, where the Virgin gave him a scroll which he was commanded to eat. Thus, he was given the gift of understanding, composition and hymnography as well as a gorgeous singing voice. That evening he sang his first hymn (called a kontakia, in reference to the Virgin's scroll). We still sing this hymn in the Orthodox Church every Christmas:


On this day the Virgin beareth the Transcendent in Essence; to the Unapproachable, the earth doth offer a small cave; Angels join in choir with shepherds in giving glory; with a star the Magi travel upon their journey; for our sakes is born a young Child, He that existed before the ages as God.

This is a reminder that there is one historical/literary archetype that the three/four core classes of D&D don't necessarily do very well — the bard. One could argue that a bard can be accomplished by simply re-skinning any of those core classes. St. Romanos himself seems to be a model for re-skinning the cleric, for example.

Personally, the bard is one of those class concepts that really intrigues me. There is a lot of potential here — well beyond the poofy-sleeved-lyre-playing-fop. For example, I would argue that King Henry V, as portrayed by Shakespeare, is a bard. His oratory prowess inspires his small, rag-tag band of an army to smash the superior French force despite being vastly outnumbered. I have always been interested in playing a bard in a similar light.

Unfortunately, I have never been satisfied with any version of the bard in any version of D&D or its derivatives. I can't quite put my finger on it, but something in the concept, the mechanics or just the way D&D does combat just doesn't do the bard justice. Rather than have fun with the character (which I have managed to do with virtually every other class in the game), I always seem to feel that something just doesn't work.

Therefore, I am going to end with a pair of questions:

  1. What is your favorite version of the bard class and why?
  2. Is there another class concept that you feel D&D has never done justice?

6 comments:

Anthony said...

Beautiful hymn, but how odd to hear a chant with English lyrics! :)

Regarding the bard, I've never seen a version I've truly liked, though I seem to recall some decent alternatives in the pages of Dragon.

Geoffrey McKinney said...

My favorite is the Castles & Crusades bard. I like this version's lack of spell-casting and its toughness (1d10 for hp). It has nothing to do with a strolling Ren Fair lute-player. Instead it is more of a warrior who uses the power of speech and of song to inspire his allies.

Anonymous said...

I like the idea of Gandalf as a bard, it is very creative.

I have always been intrigued by bards as lore-masters first, keepers of the secrets and ancient knowledges.

Russ said...

This makes me think that a church might have several different character classes (in this case, at least cleric and bard) represented among it's clergy- each performing according to his gifts (xarismos?).

I prefer to think of Shakespeare's Henry V as a C&C cavalier, but that's just my opinion. I appreciate what Geoff and fictive have to say about bards. I like the way C&C dropped unnecessary spellcasting from classes. And one of my favorite things about the 1st ed AD&D bard class was the legend lore ability- and just the general sense that the bard had been places and done things, that he was someone who had real perspective on the spiritual (druid spells) because he had lived a dirty, dangerous life before hand.

Even though I never liked the old dual-classing rules, it puts me in mind of a character who starts off as a fighter and who has taken too much life, turns his life to repentance and spiritual warfare, but eventually finds the spiritual balance to (to some extent) use his old talents with his new calling.

FrDave said...

@Russ
In other words, you would combine the 1ed AD&D bard with my idea about old school prestige classes:
http://bloodofprokopius.blogspot.com/2011/08/prestige-classes-old-school-style.html
That does have a lot of appeal...

Russ said...

FrDave, I don't know. What do you have in mind? I like your approach to OSR prestige classes. I'm curious what came to your mind with combining them and the 1 ed bard?