Elliott Grimm
From Circle Of The Crone
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
- | '''Philosophy''' - A reasonable number of individuals had queried Elliott's refusal to attend "certain rituals" without his ever specifying which ones he objected to. This became a lot more clear when [[ | + | '''Philosophy''' - A reasonable number of individuals had queried Elliott's refusal to attend "certain rituals" without his ever specifying which ones he objected to. This became a lot more clear when [[Julia Kincaid]] publicly referred to him as a follower of the "Left Handed Path". |
Elliott spends a lot of time arguing that the Circle should take a political stance of non-interference. This seems to be a common theme in the United Kingdom. | Elliott spends a lot of time arguing that the Circle should take a political stance of non-interference. This seems to be a common theme in the United Kingdom. |
Revision as of 11:46, 30 April 2006
Player - Tim Edwards
Name - Elliott Grimm
Clan - Gangrel (Status 2 - Elliott is not a typical Gangrel, but spends a lot of time on clan business.)
Age - Neonate. Has claimed to be a vampire less than a decade.
Location - Nomadic, but currently settled in London, England as Hierophant.
Specialties - Politics, information gathering, gossip
Brief history - A member of the Nocturnis Templar lineage of Gangrel, Elliott often plays his cards close to his chest. He lived in Edinburgh a few years but recently moved to London. Many of his lineage are based in Birmingham, England. He is remarkably quiet about his past, usually brushing off enquiries and changing the subject.
It is widely suspected he sleeps around, but he's remarkably discrete as to who with.
Philosophy - A reasonable number of individuals had queried Elliott's refusal to attend "certain rituals" without his ever specifying which ones he objected to. This became a lot more clear when Julia Kincaid publicly referred to him as a follower of the "Left Handed Path".
Elliott spends a lot of time arguing that the Circle should take a political stance of non-interference. This seems to be a common theme in the United Kingdom.