Ancient texts and tablets, dusty scrolls from long ago, tell of a dragon incomparable to any known today. The echo of their song has fallen out of the memory of those souls today that wander without so great a love and respect of music, of mystical vibrations that course through the earth, through the vast empyrean. Those sounds are but whispers telling secrets to those who have a spirit that resonates from their area, resonates from the song of the Resonance Dragon.
Appearance:
Different scriptures have revealed different accounts on the appearance of this creature. Various writings, however, reveal some undeniable features of this dragon: Its size is rather large, though not so large as other dragons; It is described as being about 8 peds from head to tail, and being anywhere from 4 to 5 peds wide. No accounts state their weight, but scholars have estimated that they weigh at least a few hundred pygges. One ancient and unknown scholar theorized these dragons could vanish, were evanescent in the sense that they were there one minute and gone the next.
Habitat/Behaviour:
The spirit of the Resonance Dragon certainly seems to be a gentle one. They have never been known to stack or even touch one who witnessed them, but moved with very fluid, very careful gestures. Recordings say that the animal moved slowly, though it is unsure whether the dragon was being careful to not frighten the onlooker or if the dragon was just slow. Most scholars believe that, because of the sensitivity of the Resonance Dragon, these slow movements were to clam and sooth.
The innocence held in the ebony eyes of the dragon suggests a timid manner. Upon first reinitiating research on the dragon, scholars believed these creatures to be extremely shy beasts, which they supported through the various descriptions of people, influenced by the almond-shaped eyes, expressed of the dragon and through the lack of any confrontations with the dragon for so many years. Surely, they believed, it was this shyness that kept the dragon away.
Since then, though, scholars have seriously questioned the manner of the dragon. It’s versatility and ease seems to imply that perhaps the dragon isn’t as timid at first thought. “The eyes may have skewed the perceived behavior of the Resonance Dragon. All accounts refer to the eyes as holding a ‘wise innocence’ that few can explain. Past scholars have taken too much of how the dragon was portrayed in the writer’s mind into consideration to make an accurate conjecture as to the true nature of the dragon. If one looks deeper, past the way the account is written and delve deeper into the actual content, the shyness of the dragon seems to melt away."