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The Second Letter, written by the dragon, Frost, is a response to the letter written by Hoid in The Way of Kings. The letter reveals more about Hoid's motives and history as well as that of the Cosmere.

The Second Letter

Main article: The Second Letter
Chapter Epigraph Sources
Fifty-nine I'll address this letter to my old friend, as I have no idea what name you're using currently.[1] It has been confirmed by Brandon, through the husband of a reader (#46) on tor.com, that the recipient of the original letter is a dragon.[1] Therefore, it can be reasonably inferred that the writer of this letter is that dragon (i.e., Frost).
Sixty Have you given up on the gemstone now that it is dead? And do you no longer hide behind the name of your old master? I am told that in your current incarnation you've taken a name that references what you presume to be one of your virtues.[2]
Sixty-two This is, I suspect, a little like a skunk naming itself for its stench.[3]
Sixty-three Now, look what you've made me say. You've always been able to bring out the most extreme in me, old friend. And I do still name you a friend, for all that you weary me.[4]
Sixty-four Yes, I'm disappointed. Perpetually, as you put it.[5]
Sixty-six Is not the destruction we have wrought enough? The worlds you now tread bear the touch and design of Adonalsium. Our interference so far has brought nothing but pain.[6]
Sixty-seven My path has been chosen very deliberately. Yes, I agree with everything you have said about Rayse, including the severe danger he presents.[7]
Sixty-eight However, it seems to me that all things have been set up for a purpose, and if we - as infants - stumble through the workshop, we risk exacerbating, not preventing, a problem.[8]
Sixty-nine Rayse is captive. He cannot leave the system he now inhabits. His destructive potential is, therefore, inhibited.[9]
Seventy Whether this was Tanavast's design or not, millennia have passed without Rayse taking the life of another of the sixteen. While I mourn for the great suffering Rayse has caused, I do not believe we could hope for a better outcome than this.[10]
Seventy-one He bears the weight of God's own divine hatred, separated from the virtues that gave it context. He is what we made him to be, old friend. And that is what he, unfortunately, wished to become.[11]
Seventy-two I suspect that he is more a force than an individual now, despite your insistence to the contrary. That force is contained, and an equilibrium reached.[12]
Seventy-four You, however, have never been a force for equilibrium. You tow chaos behind you like a corpse dragged by one leg through the snow. Please, harken to my plea. Leave that place and join me in my oath of nonintervention.[13]
Seventy-five The cosmere itself may depend upon our restraint.[14]

References

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