30th Day of Spring
514 AV
514 AV
Elias looked about his room and grimaced. This shykehole was nauseating to look at, let alone live in. He had no idea it would be so... so... he sighed. He desperately needed a distraction, and that's where magic came in. For today, it would be glyphs. Both an experience and a challenge, for they were more complicated than Elias cared to admit. Daunting really, especially to those who had too little patience to draw them. They were, if he was being truthful with himself, a pain in the ass. As a magecrafter worth his salt though, the young Ravokian refused to be beat. If there was anything that was true about the Caldera, it was their diehard, foolhardy persistence in the pursuit of whatever they wanted. Today he wanted glyphs, and once he had undertaken a certain study, Elias would absolutely, downright never abandon it simply because things got difficult.
As a field of magic, glyphing may not have been as flashy or as impressive as the others, but that did not mean it was in anyway less than they were. Glyphing was its own beast, unlike anything else, and that was what the professors in Zeltiva had drilled into him from day one. He could admit that reimancy came easier to him than the magical symbols. One could even say it was more fluid.
Ha!
He understood the powerful nature of the elements because on a deeper level, the ability to create and control something so personal as your own djed appealed to something primal deep inside. He could breathe storms, flick a fire to life, weave the water, and even raise the earth to his whim.... Well... not all of that, not yet anyway, but there was a much simpler connection between him and manipulating res that simply couldn't be found through the art of glyphing. No, glyphing was its own beast, and one had to play by its rules to tame it.
Regardless, Elias prepared himself for go at it, a serious one this time. There he sat within his room scribbling in his book or doodling on bits of parchment attempting to gain some semblance of a greater understanding. It was frustrating at times, especially when his carefully crafted works of magical greatness often shared a strikingly suspicious resemblance with that of naked women, but he was not deterred! He didn't care how many crumpled ladies he had to throw into the bin before he got it right, today was the day he forged ahead.
Elias began the slow, steady process of drawing his focus. Dipping his quill into the ink vial situated right next to him he carefully set about tracing the lines of the intricate pattern onto the surface of the parchment. With due diligence he drew a coin sized circle on the center of the parchment. He was thankful of the fact that he had spent a great deal of time working on the actual method of drawing a circle. It was ridiculous to consider, but this was how he had spent many a day, just doing simple shapes and patterns. There were many times when even the slightest deviation from a proper glyph had spelt disaster. Elias had no intention of becoming another warning to overly impatient apprentices. 'Don't be like that Caldera boy,' they'd say 'idiot blew himself up and summoned a sky full of candy gumdrops because he couldn't draw his glyphs right, blah blah blah, magic is not a toy, blah.' Nope, not Elias. He was nobody's lesson in failure.