Sunday, August 29, 2021

The Great Hunt by: Robert Jordan: The White Tower, Manipulation, and a Disappearance (Chapters 18 to 21)

 

““If I must learn all this,” Nynaeve broke in stiffly, “ Would as soon learn something useful.  All this – this . . . . ‘Make the air stir, Nynaeve.  Light the candle, Nynaeve.  Now put it out.  Light it again.’ Pah.”  Egwene closed her eyes for a moment.  Please, Nynaeve.  Please keep a check on your temper…The Amyrlin was silent for a moment. “Useful…Sometehign useful.  You wanted a sword.  Suppose a man came at me with a sword.  What would I do? Something useful, you can be sure.  This I think.”  For an instant, Egwene thought she saw a glow around the woman at the other end of her bed.  Then the air seemed to thicken; nothing changed that Egwene could see, but she could surely feel it.  She tried to lifetr arm, it did not budge any more than if she were buried to her neck in jelly.  Nothing could move except her head.” – The Great Hunt, p. 276.

 

Looking throughout The Eye of the World, I fear I have perhaps not done justice to Nynaeve al’Meara and Egwene al’Vere.  Yes, I have discussed Nynaeve, her coming to terms with the idea that she could channel and some of the real world allegory that implies, and begun to discuss some of her blocks with channeling, but that actually begins to really form here.  “To the White Tower” is Chapter 18 of The Great Hunt and essentially chronicles the journey of Egwene and Nynaeve, learning more about the White Tower, saidar, and the structure between Novices, Accepted, and full Aes Sedai.  The quote above is from one of their lessons where Siuan Sanche is overseeing them, and ends with her essentially showing them the lesson.  There’s this quip from the Mistress of Novices that the hard work of Novices isn’t so bad, at least when compared to the Accepted, and Nynaeve as a character is the one to be the most like an Aes Sedai, yet is denying it.  She’s not taking anything for granted, but is still at the point where she has a lot to learn in terms of controlling her temper and essentially letting others in on.

 

The above quote is Siuan giving the girls both a lesson and getting Nynaeve to get angry enough to channel, and she rises to the bait, continuously screaming to be let go until this happens: “Nynaeve squawked furiously as she slowly rose, still in the sitting position, until her head almost touched the ceiling…Suddenly the Amyrlin flew backwards her head rebounded from the wall, and there she stayed” – The Great Hunt, p. 276-277.  She is the one giving pushback, but immediately backs off after this point, Nynaeve realizes that she has gone too far and needs to back off.  Once the lessons are over Nynaeve’s pride essentially browbeats Egwene into staying silent about Nynaeve’s essential breaking down.  She’s a character of pride and that pride and stubbornness is what’s causing this block on her character.  There is a struggle to use honorifics towards the Aes Sedai which is consistent as she still doesn’t see herself as one of them, the One Power may be a part of her, but The White Tower and the Aes Sedai will never be (in her mind).  This entire chapter is also from an outsider perspective, all coming from Egwene, who is essentially along for the ride.  Egwene is also put against a wall by Siuan and she is terrified and quiet.  The essay opened with that description and it is Egwene whom Siuan apologizes to, an apology for forgetting about her in her sparing with Nynaeve.  The perspective of Egwene only confirms her uncertainty from The Eye of the World, she is still looking to Nynaeve and all of the Aes Sedai as figures of authority and they are essentially both being manipulated into the choice that the Amyrlin wants.  The Tower is in a position where there aren’t many Novices and the Aes Sedai need all the sisters they can get especially since Siuan knows that the Dragon has been reborn and the Last Battle is coming.

 

This manipulation is also what happens throughout the subsequent three chapters with the character of Selene.  Rand has been constantly losing a lot of himself in Selene since she appeared.  She has been the one coaxing him towards using Saidin and this is the point where they get the Horn of Valere and the ruby dagger back, sneaking into a camp.  This is Selene’s reaction to finding the Horn: ““Tia mi aven Moridin isainde vadin,” Selene said.  “’The grave is no bar to my call.’  You will be greater than Artur Hawkwing ever was.”” – The Great Hunt, p. 296.  Rand has no trouble in denying her, but it is continual.  At the opening of the next chapter, she attempts to get the Horn down using Loial and his timidity to do so.  The case is where they’ve stored the dagger, Rand completely understanding it’s danger and the fact that nobody should touch it.  This chapter also sees a giant statue which Selene attempts to get Rand away from, but that also tempts Rand into nearly using saidin again.  It is described as singing to him, something sweet even though previously there was the descriptor.

 

Rand also begins to push Selene away by questioning if she could be Aes Sedai, to which she reacts as such: “Aes Sedai!  Always you hurl that at me!...I am what and who I am.  And that is no Aes Sedai!” – The Great Hunt, p. 301.  He acquiesces and agrees to take her to Cairhien, but it is Selene’s final actions which are telling.  Once at an inn in Cairhien (which is a country and a city) there is some expository worldbuilding about the Great Game of Houses which is something which will be discussed in later essays once it actually is introduced outside of the brief mention of it being a political game here, but Selene runs off the next morning, leaving a note. “The wax had been impressed with a crescent moon and stars.  I must leave you for a time.  There are too many people here, and I do not like Caladevwin.  I will meet you in Cairhien.  Never think that I am too far from you.  You will b in my thoughts always as I will be in yours.” – The Great Hunt, p. 318.  She’s essentially run at the first sign of trouble, but the wax seal on the letter is important.

 

Rand is left confused, but the reader already has been given some hints about moon imagery way back in “Blood Calls Blood” where Verin’s reading of the Dark Prophecy announces the walking again of the Daughter of the Night, implying a connection to the moon.  The moon imagery goes further, Selene being a name taken out of Greek mythology, a moon goddess outside of Artemis also connected with connotations of love and infatuation.  Infatuation with Rand is what has been guiding the manipulation and his infatuation back has been the temptation.  The goddess Selene fell in love with Endymion whom Zeus would put into an eternal sleep so she could love him forever, as analyzed by Overly Sarcastic Productions as an example of aesthetic attraction and not love, hence Selene in The Great Hunt, being infatuated with Rand and not really in love.  There is also clearly an identity underneath here, something I will not spoil, but the name is important for where this character will be going.  Rand doesn’t fall here to temptation, but that is something that he easily could not have been overcoming.  Next time we will also be discussing tests, but also getting more into the women of The Wheel of Time as it’s the first section entirely from the point of view of the female characters.

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