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Sunday, November 5, 2023

The Shadow Rising by: Robert Jordan: Seeds of Shadow (Chapter 1)

 

“The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend.  Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again.  In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose on the great plain called the Caralain Grass.  The wind was not the beginning.  There are no beginnings nor endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time.  But it was a beginning.” – The Shadow Rising, p. 13.

 

It has been a year since I last took a look analyzing Robert Jordan’s The Wheel of Time, largely due to not wishing to overstep on while the second season of the Amazon adaptation was airing, but now that the second season has come and gone to considerably better reception than the first, and the third is confirmed to be adapting The Shadow Rising, it feels the opportune time for entering that fourth novel.  The Dragon Reborn as a novel ended the shift of structuring these entries by having the Emond’s Field Five largely together at the beginning of the novel, going their separate ways, and coming back together by the climax of events, The Shadow Rising having the mission statement of breaking the world once again, though metaphorically, with the trajectory of the characters changing once and for all.  Jordan as an author is quite fond of being reactive when writing, Crossroads of Twilight is a novel that is entirely reactive to the final moments of Winter’s Heart, and the seeds of that are in how The Shadow Rising opens.  The Dragon Reborn sees Rand al’Thor naming himself the Dragon, but Jordan decides to move the timeline back slightly in the opening chapter of The Shadow Rising, setting up the novel from three different perspectives.  This is also specifically labeled to be Chapter 1 instead of a prologue, one of only two installments to do so, a specific distinction is fascinating as the prologues of The Wheel of Time begin to denote plotlines that may not progress in a particular installment, something not the case for the massive first chapter of The Shadow Rising.  “Seeds of Shadow” is split between four points of view and three distinct locations, all integral for The Shadow Rising.

 

It is easier to begin at the end of the chapter, mainly because the final point of view is from High Lady Suroth of the Seanchan.  The last time the Seanchan were properly seen was The Great Hunt, Suroth having found herself on top after the defeat of her people in Falme, the importance of this section being Suroth’s specific goal of finding the man who has claimed himself the Dragon Reborn.  Suroth, as with the Seanchan as a culture, are increasingly sadistic and tortuous, having already established herself as sul’dam over a damane Aes Sedai, and the Seanchan’s current clash are not with Andor but the Sea Folk, the Atha’an Miere.  Suroth’s specific motivation is being set on her own away from the Empire, being afraid of returning without having conquered the Westlands.  This allows the character to have a chance to explore her own agency with her final thoughts on the situation being “when I take him, do I give him to the Empress?  That is the question.” – The Shadow Rising, p. 50.

 

The theme of this chapter overall is preparation, working backwards a group of Children of the Light from the perspective of Dain Bornhald in Taren Ferry, one of the early towns the Emond’s Field Five passed through in The Eye of the World.  A character called Ordeith, described as a man whose accent is constantly slipping and going on about how “We will scour the Two Rivers…We will flog them, and flay them, and sear their souls!  I promised him! He’ll come to me, now!  He will come!” – The Shadow Rising, p. 43.  Bornhald is dealing with the death of his father Geofram Bornhald who also died in The Great Hunt, these consequences labeling the people of the Two Rivers as entirely Darkfriends.  Ordeith is believed to be a madman, but is bound to this group of Whitecloaks by the Lord Captain Commander, this idea being that the Two Rivers and surrounding villages due to their isolation from the taxes of Queen Morgase in Caemlyn has led to the fall to the Shadow.  It is also clear that Ordeith has no scruples about killing, three Tinkers are found to be missing, setting up this murderous intent and ability while contrasting with the moral dilemma of Dain Bornhald.  Bornhald as a character is able to look past Ordeith’s obvious insanity because he fully blames Perrin Aybara for the death of his father, and he will have his revenge.

 

The other two points of view are equally setting up pots being ready to boil over, though both involving the White Tower.  First, Min Farshaw has been sent to the Tower with a message from Moiraine for Amyrlin Seat Siuan Sanche.  Min’s entry into the Tower is fascinating as Jordan explicitly sets up a tragedy that is about to occur.  This is the first time where Min’s viewings are seen from her perspective, her point of view chapters in The Great Hunt are generally with characters whom she had already had viewings of, and the viewings here are all of tragedy, from three Aes Sedai who will die on the same day, to several of Gawyn Trakand in a bloody mask with images of weapons around him, and several of the major Aes Sedai characters.  Jordan specifically makes these visions to be off-putting and wrong, Sheriam is shown to be battered and bruised, Leane having a screaming mask, and one for Siuan especially.  “Not that she wanted to be disrespectful—that did not even occur to one facing a woman like Siuan Sanche—but the bow she usually would have made seemed foolish in a dress, and she had only a rough idea of how to curtsy.  Halfway down, with her skirts already spread, she froze like a crouching toad.  Siuan Sanche was standing there as regal as any queen, and for a moment she was also lying on the floor naked.” – The Shadow Rising, p. 28.  The use of “regal as any queen” is in line with the particular characterization of Siuan, who responds to the information with a serene calm and taking actions to keep Min in the tower, something that will force her to stay in the dress she is wearing as a disguise.  Min’s gender presentation is one of those interesting aspects of The Wheel of Time that sadly never gets explored to its fullest extent partially due to Robert Jordan being a straight white man writing in the 90s and early 2000s, and partially because as the series grows Min often gets sidelined.  Siuan specifically uses femininity as a disguise for Min, something that she revolts against, demanding the disguise being taken further with the use of makeup, curls, and the use of the full name she despises, Elmindreda.  The text explicitly refers to it as a trap, one shackling Min to something that she is not and giving the very manipulative Siuan Sanche what she wants, immediately paralleled with the revelation to the reader that Elaida discussing with Alviarin, a White Sistetr who has been vaguely important to this point, of dealing with Siuan.  This first chapter are the literal rising shadows of the title while the literal Shadow and its forces will be continued as the novel continues.

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