**On the western edge of the city center, towering high above the Guild Square, stands the Star Chamber, the home of the Fraternity of Mages in Ash.
Seven stories tall, the Chamber is an idiosyncratic amalgam of native and more recent architecture. The lowest two stories are rudely carved from the living rock of the mountain, rough and unevenly hewn with windows of varying sizes, all filled in with clear crystal. Somewhere between the second and third stories the stone is replaced by spiraling crystal, rising an additional four stories into the air to a sharp, faintly-glowing peak.
Inside, the Chamber is simply if comfortably furnished, with plentiful rugs and thick-cushioned chairs and couches. This chapter's master is an ancient and absent-minded dwarven scholar by the name of Gimrir Hardheart, who--if he can be found among the stacks of the library--runs the day-to-day duties of the establishment.**
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Sing lustily and with good courage.
Be aware of singing as if you were half dead,
or half asleep:
but lift your voice with strength.
Be no more afraid of your voice now,
nor more ashamed of its being heard,
than when you sang the songs of Satan.
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Seven stories tall, the Chamber is an idiosyncratic amalgam of native and more recent architecture. The lowest two stories are rudely carved from the living rock of the mountain, rough and unevenly hewn with windows of varying sizes, all filled in with clear crystal. Somewhere between the second and third stories the stone is replaced by spiraling crystal, rising an additional four stories into the air to a sharp, faintly-glowing peak.
Inside, the Chamber is simply if comfortably furnished, with plentiful rugs and thick-cushioned chairs and couches. This chapter's master is an ancient and absent-minded dwarven scholar by the name of Gimrir Hardheart, who--if he can be found among the stacks of the library--runs the day-to-day duties of the establishment.**
Be aware of singing as if you were half dead,
or half asleep:
but lift your voice with strength.
Be no more afraid of your voice now,
nor more ashamed of its being heard,
than when you sang the songs of Satan.