Tablets of Pharyssolnyth

The Tablets of Pharyssolnyth, or the Pharyssolnyth Tablets, were a collection of writings by the silver dragon Pharyssolnyth of Yrlaphon. They detailed the secrets of dragon magic and were considered the definitive treatise on the subject.

Description
The Tablets consisted of thirty-seven large slates, obsidian black, with one side polished smooth and the other rough and natural. They seemed strange in appearance and strange to feel. They were in fact the permanently enlarged scales of a black dragon. Altogether, they weighed. They were kept in a long strip of soft leather bearing thirty-seven pockets.

Appearing blank, the polished sides were actually covered with minute, invisible etchings and scrawls, in a form of tactile writing unknown to any race that once inhabited Myth Drannor, but eventually considered to be a form of Draconic. Either way, it was extremely difficult to notice and read, needing close examination and a sensitive touch. On the raw sides, meanwhile, the elven examiners recorded their translations, notes, and theories in ancient moon elvish, and these were almost as hard to read.

History
Pharyssolnyth dwelt in the elven city of Yrlaphon, among the eastern woodlands of Cormanthor, in the first century after its founding in −1535 DR. There she recorded the tablets that were named for her.

Following the fall of Yrlaphon in −722 DR, the Srinshee took the Tablets with her to Srinshinnar. When Srinshinnar also fell, the Srinshee and the survivors carried the tablets with them to Cormanthor.

The Tablets of Pharyssolnyth then came into the possession of Windsong Tower when the Srinshee accepted a place among the Tower Elders there. For centuries, they were hidden and locked away, examined only by permission of the Tower Elders or the Tower Master. There they remained as late as 650 DR.

Research
In their time, the Tablets of Pharyssolnyth had been kept hidden for centuries. The Srinshee and other researchers also spent long ages examining them. It took several centuries just to determine that the Tablets were fashioned from enlarged black-dragon scales, and many years after to find the carvings. Examiners spent nearly four centuries studying and interpreting them, inscribing their translations and notes on the backs of the scales, as they were by the mid–7 century DR. Referring to them on any matter required the skill to read both the draconic and elvish scripts, and took some ten minutes, while it took a full tenday of study to examine them all.

Contents
The Tablets were a treatise on how dragons understood, learned, and practiced magic, whether as spells or in magic items. All in all, it was a trove of lore on dragonkind, knowledge precious in its own right.

Any non-dragon who managed to read all the Tablets gained great insights into the powers of dragons, their attitudes towards magic and its casting, and an enhanced ability to resist magic used by dragons. They could grant this last benefit but once a century.