Magic, in a nutshell, was complicated.
It required intense concentration, force of will, and the ability to be equally comfortable out in the field or cloistered away in a library. So few people tried to become magicians simply because the process to learn even a basic spell was both tedious and fraught with danger.
If one was smart, though, one would realize the best way to learn magic was through a mentor. Someone who could guide an aspiring mage into becoming a force of nature. Someone who knew many of the intricacies of magic, and was willing to take on an apprentice to teach them such minutiae.
Malan was one such mage. He had learned from his own mentor, two hundred and seventy three years ago, and he had retained and grown his vast repertoire of knowledge. Spells? He knew hundreds of them, plus their variations. Enchantment? He could weave magic like no one's business. Alchemy? He could bottle fame, brew glory, and even put a stopper in death.
The one thing he couldn't do, however, was pass on his knowledge. All of his apprentices had left him, either losing patience with his craft, driven away by his personality, or abusing his knowledge for their own gain at the risk of everyone else.
The latter group saddened him the most.
So here he was, magically de-aged to the ripe year of 65, and over three hundred years old. So what did he do in his magically expanded shack in the outskirts of the city of Durian? He read, and read, and read. Occasionally he crafted a new, experimental spell, but mostly he read, keeping up with the times, and keeping abreast of new breakthroughs in magic - or at least, the few breakthroughs that were deemed too important or too mundane to keep cloistered away in some other mage's personal library.
Fortunately, Malan was about to be broken out of his funk, and fairly soon at that.
It required intense concentration, force of will, and the ability to be equally comfortable out in the field or cloistered away in a library. So few people tried to become magicians simply because the process to learn even a basic spell was both tedious and fraught with danger.
If one was smart, though, one would realize the best way to learn magic was through a mentor. Someone who could guide an aspiring mage into becoming a force of nature. Someone who knew many of the intricacies of magic, and was willing to take on an apprentice to teach them such minutiae.
Malan was one such mage. He had learned from his own mentor, two hundred and seventy three years ago, and he had retained and grown his vast repertoire of knowledge. Spells? He knew hundreds of them, plus their variations. Enchantment? He could weave magic like no one's business. Alchemy? He could bottle fame, brew glory, and even put a stopper in death.
The one thing he couldn't do, however, was pass on his knowledge. All of his apprentices had left him, either losing patience with his craft, driven away by his personality, or abusing his knowledge for their own gain at the risk of everyone else.
The latter group saddened him the most.
So here he was, magically de-aged to the ripe year of 65, and over three hundred years old. So what did he do in his magically expanded shack in the outskirts of the city of Durian? He read, and read, and read. Occasionally he crafted a new, experimental spell, but mostly he read, keeping up with the times, and keeping abreast of new breakthroughs in magic - or at least, the few breakthroughs that were deemed too important or too mundane to keep cloistered away in some other mage's personal library.
Fortunately, Malan was about to be broken out of his funk, and fairly soon at that.