"O Aka, for our shared madness I do this! I watch you watching me watching back! Umaril dares call us out, for that is how we made him!" [And it was during] these fits of anger and nonsense that Pelinal would fall into the Madness, where whole swaths of lands were devoured in divine rampage to become Void." - Song of Pelinal, Volume 6
There is, then, the matter of the following quote, born with the knowledge that Talos = Ysmir, the "Dragon of the North" (or a portion of the Enantiomorph).
"Also during the Late Merethic Era the legendary immortal hero, warrior, sorceror, and king variously known as Pelinal Whitestrake, Harrald Hairy Breeks, Ysmir, Hans the Fox, etc., wandered Tamriel, gathering armies, conquering lands, ruling, then abandoning his kingdoms to wander again." - Before the Ages of Man
We also know that Wulf/Wulfharth utilized the Thu'um:
"The second song of King Wulfharth glorifies his deeds in the eyes of the Old Gods. He fights the eastern Orcs and shouts their chief into Hell." - The Five Songs of King Wulfharth
Finally, Pelinal's proclivity for laying waste to entire swaths of land reminds me of the following:
"Soon the Greybeards made known that they were restless. Already the storms had begun from their murmurs. The Greybeards were going to Speak. The surrounding villages were abandoned as the people fled the coming blast. The villagers warned Talos to turn back, for he was marching to the mountain where the Greybeards dwelt." - The Song of Tiber Septim, Pocket Guide to the Empire
We connect the dots. So the question is this: Todd Howard confirms Talos as one, but was Pelinal (or the Pelinal incarnation variant), himself, a "Dragonborn" in the sense of the protagonist of Skyrim, and did he possess the Thu'um, or Voice? I am leaving all Shezarrine-esque questions aside for the time being.