Ursula K Le Guin - Earthsea 1 - A ...

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Ursula K Le Guin - Earthsea 1 - A Wizard Of Earthsea, e-books, Ursula K. Le Guin, English
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A Wizard of Earthsea
Ursula K. LeGuin
1968
Only in silence the word,
only in dark the light,
only in dying life:
bright the hawk's flight on the empty sky.
-The Creation of Ea
------
1 Warriors in the Mist
------
The Island of Gont, a single mountain that lifts its peak a mile above the
storm-racked Northeast Sea, is a land famous for wizards. From the towns in its high
valleys and the ports on its dark narrow bays many a Gontishman has gone forth to serve
the Lords of the Archipelago in their cities as wizard or mage, or, looking for adventure, to
wander working magic from isle to isle of all Earthsea. Of these some say the greatest, and
surely the greatest voyager, was the man called Sparrowhawk, who in his day became both
dragonlord and Archmage. His life is told of in the Deed of Ged and in many songs, but this
is a tale of the time before his fame, before the songs were made.
He was born in a lonely village called Ten Alders, high on the mountain at the head
of the Northward Vale. Below the village the pastures and plowlands of the Vale slope
downward level below level towards the sea, and other towns lie on the bends of the River
Ar; above the village only forest rises ridge behind ridge to the stone and snow of the
heights.
The name he bore as a child, Duny, was given him by his mother, and that and his
life were all she could give him, for she died before he was a year old. His father, the
bronze-smith of the village, was a grim unspeaking man, and since Duny's six brothers
were older than he by many years and went one by one from home to farm the land or sail
the sea or work as smith in other towns of the Northward Vale, there was no one to bring
the child up in tenderness. He grew wild, a thriving weed, a tall, quick boy, loud and proud
and full of temper. With the few other children of the village he herded goats on the steep
meadows above the riversprings; and when he was strong enough to push and pull the long
bellows-sleeves, his father made him work as smith's boy, at a high cost in blows and
whippings. There was not much work to be got out of Duny. He was always off and away;
roaming deep in the forest, swimming in the pools of the River Ar that like all Gontish
rivers runs very quick and cold, or climbing by cliff and scarp to the heights above the
forest, from which he could see the sea, that broad northern ocean where, past Perregal, no
islands are.
A sister of his dead mother lived in the village. She had done what was needful for
him as a baby, but she had business of her own and once he could look after himself at all
she paid no more heed to him. But one day when the boy was seven years old, untaught and
knowing nothing of the arts and powers that are in the world, he heard his aunt crying out
words to a goat which had jumped up onto the thatch of a hut and would not come down:
but it came jumping when she cried a certain rhyme to it. Next day herding the longhaired
goats on the meadows of High Fall, Duny shouted to them the words he had heard, not
knowing their use or meaning or what kind of words they were:
Noth hierth malk man
hiolk han merth han!
He yelled the rhyme aloud, and the goats came to him. They came very quickly, all of them
together, mot making any sound. They looked at him out of the dark slot in their yellow
eyes.
Duny laughed and shouted it out again, the rhyme that gave him power over the
goats. They came closer, crowing and pushing round him. All at once he felt afraid of their
thick, ridged horns and their strange eyes and their strange silence. He tried to get free of
them and to run away. The goats ran with him keeping in a knot around him, and so they
came charging down into the village at last, all the goats going huddled together as if a rope
were pulled tight round them, and the boy in the midst of them weeping and bellowing.
Villagers ran from their houses to swear at the goats and laugh at the boy. Among them
came the boy's aunt, who did not laugh. She said a word to the goats, and the beasts began
to bleat and browse and wander, freed from the spell.
"Come with me," she said to Deny.
She took him into her hut where she lived alone. She let no child enter there usually,
and the children feared the place. It was low and dusky, windowless, fragrant with herbs
that hung drying from the cross-pole of the roof, mint and moly and thyme, yarrow and
rushwash and paramal, kingsfoil, clovenfoot, tansy and bay. There his aunt sat crosslegged
by the firepit, and looking sidelong at the boy through the tangles of her black hair she
asked him what he had said to the goats, and if he knew what the rhyme was. When she
found that he knew nothing, and yet had spellbound the goats to come to him and follow
him, then she saw that he must have in him the makings of power.
As her sister's son he had been nothing to her, but now she looked at him with a new
eye. She praised him, and told him she might teach him rhymes he would like better, such
as the word that makes a snail look out of its shell, or the name that calls a falcon down
from the sky.
"Aye, teach me that name!" he said, being clear over the fright the goats had given
him, and puffed up with her praise of his cleverness.
The witch said to him, "You will not ever tell that word to the other children, if I
teach it to you."
"I promise."
She smiled at his ready ignorance. "Well and good. But I will bind your promise.
Your tongue will be stilled until I choose to unbind it, and even then, though you can speak,
you will not be able to speak the word I teach you where another person can hear it. We
must keep the secrets of our craft."
"Good," said the boy, for he had no wish to tell the secret to his playmates, liking to
know and do what they knew not and could not.
He sat still while his aunt bound back her un-combed hair, and knotted the belt of
her dress, and sat crosslegged throwing handfuls of leaves into the firepit so that a smoke
spread and filled the darkness of the hut. She began to sing, Her voice changed sometimes
to low or high as if another voice sang through her, and the singing went on and on until the
boy did not know if he waked or slept, and all the while the witch's old black dog that never
barked sat by him with eyes red from the smoke. Then the witch spoke to Duny in a tongue
he did not understand, and made him say with her certain rhymes and words until the
enchantment came on him and held him still.
"Speak!" she said to test the spell.
The boy Could not speak, but he laughed.
Then his aunt was a little afraid of his strength, for this was as strong a spell as she
knew how to weave: she had tried not only to gain control of his speech and silence, but to
bind him at the same time to her service in the craft of sorcery. Yet even as the spell bound
him, he had laughed. She said nothing. She threw clear water on the fire till the smoke
cleared away, and gave the boy water to drink, and when the air was clear and he could
speak again she taught him the true name of the falcon, to which the falcon must come.
This was Duny's first step on the way he was to follow all his life, the way of
magery, the way that led him at last to hunt a shadow over land and sea to the lightless
coasts of death's kingdom. But in those first steps along the way, it seemed a broad, bright
road.
When he found that the wild falcons stooped down to him from the wind when he
summoned them by name, lighting with a thunder of wings on his wrist like the
hunting-birds of a prince, then he hungered to know more such names and came to his aunt
begging to learn the name of the sparrowhawk and the osprey and the eagle. To earn the
words of power he did all the witch asked of him and learned of her all she taught, though
not all of it was pleasant to do or know. There is a saying on Gont, Weak as woman's magic,
and there is another saying, Wicked as woman's magic. Now the witch of Ten Alders was
no black sorceress, nor did she ever meddle with the high arts or traffic with Old Powers;
but being an ignorant woman among ignorant folk, she often used her crafts to foolish and
dubious ends. She knew nothing of the Balance and the Pattern which the true wizard
knows and serves, and which keep him from using his spells unless real need demands. She
had a spell for every circumstance, and was forever wearing charms. Much of her lore was
mere rubbish and humbug, nor did she know the true spells from the false. She knew many
curses, and was better at causing sickness, perhaps, than at curing it. Like any village witch
she could brew up a love-potion, but there were other, uglier brews she made to serve men's
jealousy and hate. Such practices, however, she kept from her young prentice, and as far as
she was able she taught him honest craft.
At first all his pleasure in the art-magic was, childlike, the power it gave him over
bird and beast, and the knowledge of these. And indeed that pleasure stayed with him all
his life. Seeing him in the high pastures often with a bird of prey about him, the other
children called him Sparrowhawk, and so he came by the name that he kept in later life as
his use-name, when his true-name was not known.
As the witch kept talking of the glory and the riches and the great power over men
that a sorcerer could gain, he set himself to learn more useful lore. He was very quick at it.
The witch praised him and the children of the village began to fear him, and he himself was
sure that very soon he would become great among men. So he went on from word to word
and from spell to spell with the witch till he was twelve years old and had learned
from her a great part of what she knew: not much, but enough for the witchwife of a small
village, and more than enough for a boy of twelve. She had taught him all her lore in
herbals and healing, and all she knew of the crafts of finding, binding, mending, unsealing
and revealing. What she knew of chanters' tales and the great Deeds she had sung him, and
all the words of the True Speech that she had learned from the sorcerer that taught her, she
taught again to Deny. And from weatherworkers and wandering jugglers who went from
town to town of the Northward Vale and the East Forest he had learned various ticks and
pleasantries, spells of Illusion. It was with one of these light spells that he first proved the
great power that was in him.
In those days the Kargad Empire was strong. Those are four great lands that lie
between the Northern and the Eastern Reaches: Karego-At, Atuan, Hur-at-Hur, Atnini. The
tongue they speak there is not like any spoken in the Archipelago or the other Reaches, and
they are a savage people, white-skinned, yellowhaired, and fierce, liking the sight of blood
and the smell of burning towns. Last year they had attacked the Torikles and the strong
island Torheven, raiding in great force in fleets of redsailed ships. News of this came north
to Gont, but the Lords of Gont were busy with their piracy and paid small heed to the woes
of other lands. Then Spevy fell to the Kargs and was looted and laid waste, its people taken
as slaves, so that even now it is an isle of ruins. In lust of conquest the Kargs sailed next to
Gont, coming in a host, thirty great longships, to East Port. They fought through that town,
took it, burned it; leaving their ships under guard at the mouth of the River Ar they went up
the Vale wrecking and looting, slaughtering cattle and men. As they went they split into
bands, and each of these bands plundered where it chose. Fugitives brought warning to the
villages of the heights. Soon the people of Ten Alders saw smoke darken the eastern sky,
and that night those who climbed the High Fall looked down on the Vale all hazed and
red-streaked with fires where fields ready for harvest had been set ablaze, and orchards
burned, the fruit roasting on the blazing boughs, and urns and farmhouses smouldered in
ruin.
Some of the villagers fled up the ravines and hid in the forest, and some made ready
to fight for their lives, and some did neither but stood about lamenting. The witch was one
who fled; hiding alone in a cave up on the Kapperding Scarp and sealing the cave-mouth
with spells. Duny's father the bronze-smith was one who stayed, for he would not leave his
smelting-pit and forge where he had worked for fifty years. All that night he labored
beating up what ready metal he had there into spearpoints, and others worked with him
binding these to the handles of hoes and rakes; there being no time to make sockets and
shaft them properly. There had been no weapons in the village but hunting bows and short
knives, for the mountain folk of Cont are not warlike; it is not warriors they are famous for,
but goat-thieves, sea pirates, and wizards.
With sunrise came a thick white fog, as on many autumn mornings in the heights of
the island. Among their huts and houses down the straggling street of Ten'Alders the
villagers stood waiting with their hunting bows and new-forged spears, not knowing
whether the Kargs might be far-off or very near, all silent, all peering into the fog that hid
shapes and distances and dangers from their eyes.
With them was Duny. He had worked all night at the forgebellows, pushing and
pulling the two long sleeves of goathide that fed the fire with a blast of sir. Now his arms so
ached and trembled from that work that he could not hold out the spear he had chosen. He
did not see how he could fight or be of any good to himself or the villagers. It rankled at his
heart that he should die, spitted on a Kargish lance, while still a boy: that he should go into
the dark land without ever having known his own name, his true name as a man. He looked
down at his thin arms, wet with cold fogdew, and raged at his weakness, for he knew his
strength. There was power in him, if he knew how to use it, and he sought among all the
spells he knew for some device that might give him and his companions an advantage, or
at least a chance. But need alone is not enough to set power free: there must be knowledge.
The fog was thinning now under the heat of the sun that shone bare above on the
peak - in a bright sky. As the mists moved and parted in great drifts and smoky wisps, the
villagers saw a band of warriors coming up the mountain. They were armored with bronze
helmets and greaves and breastplates of heavy leather and shields of wood and bronze, and
armed with swords and the long Kargish lance. Winding up along the steep bank of the Ar
they came in a plumed, clanking, straggling line, near enough already that their white faces
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