Tuesday, August 24, 2021

The Great Hunt by: Robert Jordan: Portal Stones and Active Magic (Chapters 13 to 17)

 

“He closed his eyes and formed the flame.  The void came slowly, hesitantly.  He knew his own fear was holding it back, fear of what he was trying.  As fast as he fed fear into the flame, more came.  I can’t do it.  Channel the Power.  I don’t want to.  Light, there has to be another way…He could feel sweat beading on his face.  Determinedly he kept on…And the void was there.  The core of him floated in emptiness.  He could see the light – saidin – even with his eyes closed, feel the warmth of it surrounding him, surrounding everything, suffusing everything It wavered like a candle flame seen through oiled water.  Rancid oil.  Stinking oil.” – The Great Hunt, p. 219.

 

It is at this point in The Great Hunt where something very important happens to Rand al’Thor, he reaches out and grabs saidin on his own for the first time.  He finds himself with Loial and Hurin transported into a parallel telling of the Wheel of Time through what is known as a Portal Stone, only accessible via channeling the One Power, at a time when there were male Aes Sedai.  Rand channeled in his sleep, playing on the idea that he wished to get away from his troubles.  This idea of Rand running away is something shared by Mat and Perrin, both unable to run because of the dagger constricting Mat’s health.  There has been a lot of discussion on Rand being put into a leadership role, it being revealed he’s secretly the second in command of the hunt for the Horn of Valere, but it is at this point where Rand actually has to confront this fact.  He’s the one who can channel and he’s the one who is going to be able to get Loial and Hurin out of this.  There is this display of complete fear from Hurin, which adds realism to the piece.  Hurin to this point had been stoic and fitting into a stock strong armyman trope, but he’s got a family waiting for him: ““My Lord Rand?”  Now on his feet, Hurin seemed calmer, but he clutched his coat at the waist with both hands, his face urgent.  “My Lord Rand, you’ll get us back, won’t you?  Back where we belong?  I’ve a wife, my Lord, and children.  Melia’d take it bad enough, me dying, but if she doesn’t even have my body to give to the mother’s embrace, she’ll grieve to the end of her days.  You understand, my Lord.  I can’t leave her not knowing.  You’ll get us back.  And if I die, if you can’t take her my body, you’ll let her know, so she has that, at least.”  He was no longer questioning at the end.  A note of confidence had crept into his voice.” – The Great Hunt, p. 217-218.

 

Rand has to be the one to lead them through this other world, he’s the one in charge of the group, and having Hurin outwardly be relying on him in that tone makes that come together.  There is an encounter with Ba’alzamon in this other world which is where we get the first real confirmation of Rand as the Dragon Reborn.  He is referred to directly as Lews Therin, and while he is still rejecting the title of Dragon, this is yet another confirmation that Rand is the Dragon Reborn: “Oh, I know the name you use now, Lews Therin.  I know every name you have used through Age after Age, long before you were even the Kinslayer…I know you, know your blood and your line back to the first spark of life that ever was, back to the First Moment.  You can never hide from me.  Never!  We are tied together as surely as two sides of the same coin” – The Great Hunt, p. 242.  This tying together is something which has already been foreshadowed with the idea of the Dark Prophecy already coming to past, though this is something which Rand hasn’t heard, explaining that the Great Lord of the Dark is coming and the Time of Change has come.  There is another prophetic moment here, Rand defying Ba’alzamon’s offer to teach him to channel, something that Rand is still actively avoiding despite having to actually grab saidin in this section of the book.  “The dark eyes became fire again, and that mouth, flame that blossomed and grew until it seemed brighter than a summer sun.  Grew, and suddenly Rand’s sword glowed as if just drawn from the forge.  He cried out as the hilt burned his hands, screamed and dropped the sword…There across the palm was branded a heron.” – The Great Hunt, p. 245.  While he has the strength to resist Ba’alzamon, he does not resist Selene, a woman whom Rand saves and takes along with them.  There are hints that she has been following the party since before the Portal Stone things, as she matches a description of a woman seen, but Rand immediately trusts her.  She gets Rand to discuss legends and promise to take her home, they are chased by Shadowspawn, but aren’t actually there.  Now there is something which gets them back, Selene gives Rand just enough information for him to grab saidin and they get back, but it’s all there subtly.  She is manipulating Rand, beginning Rand’s actual issues with women. This will be discussed with much more depth later on, but Rand is a character easily led when it comes to certain women, like the woman who reminds Rand of Egwene.

 

Finally, while Rand, Hurin, and Loial are traversing this alternate path, Perrin has a minor point of development.  Chapter 14 is entitled “Wolfbrother”, sharing its title with Chapter 23 of The Eye of the World.  This is not the first time Jordan reuses a chapter title, nor will it be the last, but it is important as Perrin essentially parallels Rand’s development here.  This is the chapter where Perrin first actively seeks out speaking with the wolves, and not just allowing them in the background.  They give him a name, Young Bull, and he muses over the fact that he killed men in the last book, something which has been on his mind in The Eye of the World, but because he always looks contemplative it’s something which isn’t changing.  He also has to have the trust to tell Ingtar he is able to essentially keep them moving, because they’re stuck without Hurin.  This leap of trust is important as it’s something that the last time he mentioned he was actively captured by the Children of the Light, something that doesn’t happen here.  There is some obfuscating, telling the party that he has the same gift as Hurin (he doesn’t), but he is the one to notice Verin arriving and asking after Rand (and only Rand).  Perrin is the contemplative one and in parallel actively accepts this part of himself and uses it once he’s accepted.  He can trust Ingtar while Rand is still hung up on being captured and going insane, real concerns, but the refusal to accept is something that starts to break.  This is the point where magic of The Wheel of Time changes from being something for other characters to being actively used by our point of view characters.

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