Annotation Mistborn 2 Chapter Forty-eight
The following is commentary, written by Brandon, about one of the chapters of MISTBORN: THE WELL OF ASCENSION. If you haven’t read this book, know that the following will contain major spoilers. We suggest reading the sample chapters from book one instead. You can also go to this book’s introduction or go to the main annotations page to access all annotations for all books. For those who have read some of MISTBORN 2, any spoilers for the ending of this book will be hidden, so as long as you’ve read up to this chapter, you should be all right.
Chapter Forty Eight
Vin and Elend’s Marriage
A very simple wedding, all things considered. I found that appropriate, as I though that Sazed would approach such things in the most elegent–but simple–way possible.
This is also kind of a strange scene, when you think about it. I write myself into some interesting situations in this series. I don’t know that I before this moment, I’d ever thought I would be writing a wedding involving a half-naked eighteen year old girl who is bleeding from three wounds, one in one of her breasts.
Some people have complained that this is just too quick a marriage. Ine thing to remember is what Sazed explains. For a thousand years, the only way to get married was to get the witness of an Obligator. Even for skaa, an obligator was required to authorize a wedding. And that’s ALL it took. If an obligator said you were married, then you were. Sometimes, the nobility or the skaa had their own cerimonies surrounding a wedding, but they were more civil than religious. In fact, it’s a tiny bit of a stretch to even have Elend associate a wedding with religion.
Of all the people in the book–heck, in this entire world–Sazed is probably the closest thing to a real spiritual leader one could find. In that way, Vin and Elend were quite fortunate to have his blessing. Breeze and Allrianne, for instance, didn’t bother with a wedding. Now that the Lord Ruler is gone, those sorts of things have lost a lot of meaning–if, indeed, there ever was any meaning to them in this society.