Sunday, September 5, 2021

The Great Hunt by: Robert Jordan: The One Power and Testing (Chapters 22 to 24)

 

““Do you remember the first time we met, Lan?”  She was watching for some sign, or she would not have seen the quick twitch of his eyebrow.  It was not often she caught him by surprise.  This was a subject neither of them ever mentioned; nearly twenty years ago she had told him – with all the stiff pride oof one still young enough to be called young, she recalled – that she would never speak of it again and expected the same silence of him.  “I remember,” was all he said.  “And still no apology, I suppose?  You threw me into a pond…Every stitch I had was soaked, and in what you bordermen call new spring.  I nearly froze”” – The Great Hunt, p. 321.

 

While Twitter of Time is rightly losing its mind on the release of the Amazon Prime adaptation’s teaser trailer this week, the section of The Great Hunt on the docket is three chapters, all from different perspectives, finally opening up the worldbuilding and seeing the White Tower, testing to move up in the Aes Sedai ranks, and characters whose point of view had been lacking in The Eye of the World.  “Watchers” is an exploration of Lan and Moiraine’s relationship.  Lan as a character didn’t actually get much depth outside of certain parallels to The Lord of The Rings and his budding relationship with Nynaeve.  This particular chapter gives the reader an actual explanation as to what the bond between Aes Sedai and Warder entails, though not without some obfuscation.  It is a bond with the One Power, one that can be moved if necessary from Aes Sedai to Aes Sedai.  This is the first time where Moiraine gives some of her plans for Lan’s bond moving to somebody else, preparing for the possibility that she will not somehow not make it out alive.  “Myrelle…yes, she would have to be a Green or else some slip of a girl just raised to full sisterhood…Not a pet but a parcel.  Myrelle is to be a – a caretaker! Moiraine, not even the Greens treat their Warders.  No Aes Sedai has passed their Warder’s bond to another in four hundred years, but you intend to do it to me not once, but twice!” – The Great Hunt, p. 323.  Lan’s emotional state her is incredibly important, giving the reader a real sense of how deep the Warder bond goes, moving it would cause pain but is something that Moiraine clearly has a plan for.  She’s already seen just how Lan is around Nynaeve, and Myrelle has promised to pass the bond to one who suits Lan better.  Lan’s outrage here is completely justified, and could easily be explained if Moiraine made her plans known, she sends him away and the rest of the chapter discusses the possibility of the Forsaken having made it out of their entrapment.  The Eye of the World already establishes this as something which is happening, as well as discussing the numerous false Dragons, obviously Logain being captured but another by the name of Mazrim Taim.  There is also the whisperings of the Black Ajah, an evil group of Aes Sedai who have not been confirmed to exist, yet.

 

“Nynaeve shivered. “And you want me to walk into this one?” The light inside the arches flickered less, now, but she could see what lay in it no better.  “We know what this one does.  It will bring you face to face with your greatest fears.” Sheriam smiled pleasantly. “No one will ask you what you have faced; you need not say, no more than you wish.  Every woman’s fears are her own property…”“I just walk through one and out another? Three time’s through, and it’s done?”” – The Great Hunt, p. 336.

The second chapter is “The Testing,” all about Nynaeve being tested to become an Accepted, the middle rung of the Aes Sedai while Egwene has already had her name placed in the Novice book.  While there is an opening description of the White Tower, the main event here is the testing and what it reveals about Nynaeve.  She must enter a ter’angreal, a power wrought artifact, three times, as there are three archways.  Each archway makes Nynaeve face her fears of the past, present, and future.  The Aes Sedai, lead by Sheriam, Mistress of Novices, know exactly what emotionally they will be putting her through, Sheriam even offering her one last out, but Nynaeve insists on going through the testing.

 

Each vision she is shown tests a different part of her.  The past looks at her recent past and some unspoken trauma she experienced at the climax of The Eye of the World, with Aginor appearing and threatening her life.  Nynaeve is a woman who doesn’t wish to be helpless when she or those she loves are in danger, and with a Forsaken, while she can attempt to fight Aginor, she gets through only when she realizes that she needs to run away to fight another day.  The second fear is of those who she left behind at home, with the woman who she left in place when she chased after the boys has left and been replaced essentially by an evil Wisdom, representing her fears of the Aes Sedai.  Mavra Mallen, a name that immediately calls the idea of malice and evil, is essentially the stereotype that was in Nynaeve’s head about Aes Sedai from the very beginning.  Remember that this is the woman who refused to believe she could channel and believed Moiraine wanted to spirit away Rand, Mat, Perrin, and Egwene for her own evil purposes, and letting go of those prejudices is something that she will have to overcome, when she finishes the test she screams that she hates all Aes Sedai.  The final test is what brings her to this, but this second one is what’s putting her near the edge, the final test seeing herself and Lan happily married and with children.  She has to confront that she could have any real feelings for Lan, and this final test leaves her scarred with thorns in her hands.  Jordan has included several instances of religious imagery, and invoking the stigmata here is an interesting choice connecting Nynaeve to Jesus, already planting the seeds that she is going to be a healer and protector, something which runs through each of the visions of the testing.  She doesn’t see her connected to the Aes Sedai, but the chapter ends with this line, “You are sealed to us, now.” ­– The Great Hunt, p. 354.  Nynaeve has made her fate and while she may not yet accept it, she’s taken the first steps towards that acceptance.

 

““My name is Elayne,” she said.  She tilted her head, studying Egwene.  “And you are Egwene.  From Emond’s Field, in the Two Rivers.”  She said it as if it had some significance, but went right on anyway.  “Someone who has been here a little while is always assigned to a new novice for a few days, to help her find her way.  Sit, please.”” – The Great Hunt, p. 356.

 

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back Elayne Trakand, daughter air of Andor.  Elayne is assigned to Egwene, showing her the ropes of the tower, and both of them have been put to work doing several chores.  This isn’t really a big let’s move the plot forward chapter, but Jordan uses it to really make the reader know that he isn’t going to be doing a love triangle between Rand, Elayne, and Egwene.  It’s the lightest of the three chapters, and does also reintroduce Min, who reveals in a small point of view section at the end reveals that Elaida, the Aes Sedai advisor to Queen Morgase who has a way of getting some information about who Min is (she was called to the Tower by Moiraine) and the three girls here are all essentially outsiders.  Elayne shows her royal sensibilities here, though is good natured, while Min is just adamant that she shouldn’t be here under so many Aes Sedai.  It’s essentially people becoming friends while Min has another vision vaguely foreshadowing things that we don’t learn until much later.

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