By Phineas Whooperill
The nature
of magic can be studied and debated ad nauseam. There are several books which
do just that, and I encourage you to peruse the writings of Robleon Arcanis if
you are in dire need of a good paperweight. For the love of all that’s
wonderful Robleon, would it kill you to actually write something useful? …but
perhaps that is hypocritical of me as this book is only useful to a small
subset of casters. If you are concentrated and focused in your studies, save
yourself the time and stop reading here. If however you wandered down a few
arcane paths before settling on one, first there’s no shame in that as many
discover what is known as sorcery before migrating on to wizardry, and second
this book is for you.
Look, what
you need to know is that if you are casting spells, whether you are doing it by
singing, gut instinct , or study, you are basically manipulating the same
forces in ways that only differ cosmetically. I will give you an example using
the sport of hoopball.
In hoopball
the player throws a ball through the air in an effort to pass it through a hoop
mounted in some fashion on a wall, tree, or pole. Now our first player glances
at the hoop, hefts the ball, and throws. On his third try he sinks it. On his
fourth try he remembers how it felt to sink it on the third and applies that
“feeling” to all future shots.
Our second
player measures the distance to the hoop, weighs the ball, does some math, and
shoots. Seeing his shot fall short he adjusts his math for the upward angle’s
fight against the falling principle and tries again. He continues to refine his
calculations until he consistently sinks his shots.
Both players
are doing the same thing the same way. They are both trying to put a ball
through a hoop by throwing it with their arms. The only difference is what they
are thinking about while they do it. So too with magic. In this volume I intend
to illustrate how one can take the ability to spontaneously cast and the
ability to studiously cast, and use one to inform the other. If you are
interested in why some magic seems to be musical in nature I reluctantly
suggest you read Robleon’s Nature of Creation. Assuming you can get through all
the “is a flower really a flower” nonsense without casting a fireball under
your own chin he has some unique and not uninformed observations on the
relationship between music and magic. And now let us compare a sorcerous
casting of the Light spell and a memorized casting of the Light Spell.
Gnomes are disdainful of hoopball, and other games that rely on the manipulation of an inanimate object. A true sport involves a contest of wills between the player and his talisman, usually a small burrowing animal with an unpredictable temperament. Hence, the sportweasel.
ReplyDeleteLil' Baskins had too much value as a familiar, and is now too old to be properly trained as a sportweasel.