Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.
Spoilers for those who are unfamiliar with the series. Note that this summary is designed to help people who have already read the books get back up to speed before the release of the final volume in January. First-timers are advised to read the books directly, as in some cases these summaries may spoil things that are not revealed in the books until much later.
And so it begins...Moiraine and Lan lead Rand al'Thor and his friends out of the Two Rivers.
Follow the break for the summary (and yes, this is the first time ever I've had to employ this on the blog, as the summary is quite long).
The Eye of the World
Moiraine Damodred and Lan
Mandragoran, searching for the Dragon Reborn, arrive in the town of Emond’s
Field on Winternight, the day before the Bel Tine festival that celebrates the
spring solstice. After asking some questions, Moiraine discovers that there are
three young men in the town who had all been born within weeks of the Battle
of the Shining Walls: Rand al’Thor, Matrim
Cauthon and Perrin Aybara. Interestingly, both Rand and Mat’s
fathers are skilled archers and, even more interestingly, Rand’s father
disappeared to explore the world for some twenty years, returning with a new
wife and a new son very early in 979 NE. Moiraine is almost certain that Rand
was the one she is looking for, but can’t rule out the possibility that it is Perrin
or Mat either. Moiraine is also startled to discover that there are many girls
in the Two Rivers able to channel the One Power or able to learn, an indication
of how long it has been since Aes Sedai last visited this area. The strongest
channellers are Nynaeve al’Meara, a wilder (someone who has mastered the
One Power without realising it) and village Wisdom, and Egwene al’Vere,
daughter of the Village Mayor (Brandelwyn al’Vere) and Rand’s
sweetheart.
The peddler Padan Fain arrives with news of the false Dragon ravaging Ghealdan, which slightly panics the villagers since Ghealdan’s northern border is just across the White River to the south. The Mayor points out that between Ghealdan proper and the Two Rivers is the dense Forest of Shadows, where most people refuse to travel, and there is no reason for danger to reach the Two Rivers. A gleeman, Thom Merrilin, has arrived with fireworks to perform on Winternight and likewise dismisses the threat, claiming it was old news when he passed through Baerlon a few weeks ago. Thom recognises that Moiraine is Aes Sedai and recalling the fate of his own nephew takes an interest in Moiraine’s questions about the three young men.
Rand and many other young men in the
village (including Mat and Perrin) are slightly disturbed to find themselves
being watched by cloaked figures. Rand and his father Tam return to the
farm, but the farm comes under attack by Trollocs! Tam is wounded and Rand
has to carry him on a stretcher to Emond’s Field. Rand
is startled that his father is a skilled swordsman, wielding a blade marked
with herons, the symbol of a blademaster. Along the way Tam falls into a fever,
muttering about how he found Rand on the mountainside
during a great battle. Rand dismisses it as the fever,
but is still unnerved.
Emond’s Field has also been
attacked, but the Trollocs and Myrddraal concentrated their attentions on the
Luhhan smithy (where Perrin is apprenticed) and the Cauthon household and
caused little damage elsewhere. Moiraine and Lan drove off the Trollocs by
using the One Power. Some of the villagers become angry, thinking that the
Shadowspawn pursued the Aes Sedai here, but Moiraine defuses their fears
somewhat by telling them of the fall of Manetheren during the Trolloc Wars and
their ancestors’ noble stand against the Shadow. The villagers are moved, but
not totally placated. Moiraine tells Rand and his two friends they should flee
the village before the Trollocs return. Thom Merrilin attaches himself to their
party, claiming that he doesn’t want to travel alone, and Egwene is also
allowed to join them, surprising Rand, Perrin and Mat. Moiraine is impressed by
Egwene’s potential strength in the Power and wants to take her to Tar Valon to
be trained as an Aes Sedai.
The party departs Emond’s Field by
night and heads north up the road to Taren Ferry and beyond, to Baerlon and the
rest of Andor. However, just outside the village
of Watch Hill the party is attacked
by a Draghkar. Lan drives it off and they reach Taren Ferry without further
incident. Crossing the river, Moiraine uses the One Power to create an immense
bank of fog stretching down the River Tarendrelle. With any luck, the
Shadowspawn will think they fled downriver and be distracted. The party
proceeds northwards. Along the way Rand learns that
Egwene can wield the One Power and learn to be Aes Sedai. He is slightly
disturbed.
At Baerlon the news is all about the
false Dragon Logain Ablar and his victory over the armies of Ghealdan
and Altara. Logain has announced his intention to take Tear and the fortress
which guards it. Thom tells Rand that the fall of the
Stone of Tear will herald the coming of the true Dragon Reborn. Moiraine is
disturbed by both news of Aes Sedai deaths in the battle, and also of a
detachment of Children of the Light in Baerlon, pursuing rumours of an Aes
Sedai in the district. Moiraine leads the party to a friendly inn she knows of.
During the night Rand, Mat and Perrin share a dream in which a black-cloaked
man with fire for eyes and mouth appears and taunts them, claiming to be Ba’alzamon
(the Trolloc name for the Dark One, apparently). The next day an unnerved Rand
and Mat set out to explore Baerlon and almost get into a fight with a group of
Children of the Light, led by Captain Dain Bornhald. Rand
also sees Padan Fain, but the peddler flees before Rand
can get more than a few words out of him. Thom learns of Rand
and Mat’s dreams and suggests they tell Moiraine nothing of them.
Back at the inn Rand meets a young
woman (though a few years older than Rand), Min
Farshaw, who is an acquaintance of Moiraine’s. Min apparently can see vague
impressions of the future in the form of auras surrounding people. Around
Perrin she sees a wolf, a broken crown and flowering trees. Around Mat she can
see a red eagle, an eye on a balance scale, a dagger with a ruby, a horn and a
laughing face. Around Thom she can see a man - not him - juggling fire and an
image of the White Tower,
which is odd. Rand plucks up the courage to ask about himself and learns that
Min sees images of a sword that is not a sword, a golden crown of laurel
leaves, a beggar’s staff, water being poured on sand, a bloody hand and a
white-hot iron, three women standing around a funeral bier with Rand on it, and
black rock wet with red blood. According to Moiraine, Min’s abilities are
unrelated to the One Power - she cannot channel - but are instead ancient, lost
abilities slowly returning to the human race after an absence of several
millennia.
In the inn Rand
discovers that Nynaeve has arrived, having tracked them from home (impressing
even Lan, who hid their tracks exceptionally well). Nynaeve initially demands
that Moiraine return them home, but after learning her fears agrees they should
go to Tar Valon. Nynaeve attaches herself to their group. That night Rand
encounters a Myrddraal in a corridor and Moiraine decides they should leave,
since the Shadow has once again picked up the scent. She leaves instructions
for Min to travel to Tar Valon by herself at a later date and then flees with
the others. At the gatehouse Dain Bornhald attempts to stop them for
questioning, but Moiraine uses the Power to scare him off. Unfortunately,
Myrddraal can sense the use of the Power and thus now know where their quarries
are.
After two days of fleeing eastwards
Lan scouts ahead and reports that Shadowspawn are closing from both ahead and
behind. Given that there is nothing southwards except the Hills of Absher and
the Tarendrelle, Moiraine turns north. The group heads across-country, fighting
off a Trolloc attack along the way. Lan estimates the pursuit force to number
in the hundreds; there have not been so many Trollocs in this part of the world
for over 2,000 years. Eventually they reach an ancient, ruined city. Moiraine
claims they will not be followed inside. Once within the city they set up camp
in an abandoned house and Moiraine tells them to take nothing from the city.
The group enters the ruined city of Shadar Logoth.
Mat feels restless and convinces
Rand and Perrin to go exploring. In another part of the city they meet a man
who claims to be a treasure-hunter, Mordeth. Mordeth convinces them to
help him move some treasure, but then Rand notices that
he doesn’t have a shadow. Mordeth suddenly erupts into a gaseous-like monster
and the three young men flee. Back in their hiding place Moiraine reveals that
this place is Shadar Logoth, the ruined city of Aridhol
which fell to internal evil during the Trolloc Wars. Mordeth was the King’s
counsellor and the man widely held to be responsible for the city’s descent
into chaos and eventual destruction. According to legend Mordeth lives on in
the city, as does a mist-like creature called Mashadar, apparently the evil and
greed of Aridhol made manifest in some way. Lan returns from his scouting
mission and reports that, with great difficulty, the Myrddraal have forced the
Trollocs to enter the city and look for them. The party flees again, but
Mashadar appears and splits them into two groups. All are then scattered by a
Trolloc attack. Mat and Rand escape through the main
gates and are joined by Thom. They find a boat, the Spray, moored on the River Arinelle and leap on board, waking the
sleeping watchman, Floran Gelb. The captain, Bayle Domon, rallies
his crew and drives off the Trollocs long enough to set sail downriver, despite
Rand’s protests that they wait for the others. Domon
agrees to give the three men passage to Whitebridge in return for coin and also
for exposing Gelb’s laziness. He will be put off the ship at Whitebridge.
Egwene and Perrin escape together,
only to be separated at the river. They meet up the next day across the other
side. Perrin suggests that rather than head downriver they go across country to
Andor’s capital city, Caemlyn. Once there they should be able to find Moiraine
and the others again. Egwene agrees. A few days later they meet a man in the
wilds, Elyas Machera. Elyas is a Wolfbrother, a man able to talk to
wolves telepathically. This is not related to the One Power and is more akin to
Min’s abilities, an ancient human talent that is now returning. Elyas agrees to
guide them to Caemlyn. Along the way he tells them that he was once a Warder,
but had to flee Tar Valon when his abilities were discovered, since the Red
Ajah believed he could channel and tried to kill him. Whilst crossing Caralain
Grass they meet a caravan of the Tuatha’an or Tinkers and travel with them for
a while.
Nynaeve, Moiraine and Lan meet up
again and proceed on foot to Whitebridge. Moiraine tells Nynaeve that she too
can wield the One Power, but she has erected a mental block against being able
to do it. This block, in Nynaeve’s case, is that she can only channel when
angry. Nynaeve agrees to seek advice in the White
Tower, unaware that Moiraine
believes that she has the potential to be the most powerful Aes Sedai in more
than a thousand years. Moiraine also reveals that coins she gave to Rand,
Mat and Perrin are warded with the One Power, allowing her to track them even
over several hundred miles. Two of the coins have vanished (given to Bayle
Domon as payment) but the third remains active. Moiraine suggests they go after
the two that have vanished and collect the third one when they have time.
The journey to Whitebridge is
uneventful for both groups. Thom trains Rand and Mat in
the basics of being gleemen and finds that Rand can
learn the flute and Mat is a good juggler. Whilst travelling downriver Bayle
Domon tells them about many relics left over from the Age of Legends or even
before: a silver tower near the river (they actually see it in the distance)
with no windows or doors; a crystal lattice covering an island which hums in
the moonlight; a spire reaching up from a circular valley in the Black Hills
which can kill a man from a mile away; a great silver hand clutching a vast
crystal ball, reaching out of a hillside on the Sea Folk island of Tremalking,
and others still. Domon reveals that he collects artefacts from the Age of
Legends, and is gloomy because Trollocs have been troubling him ever since he
left Maradon in Saldaea. He doesn’t know why.
Rand al'Thor on the Spray, with the Tower of Ghenjei in the background.
Reaching Whitebridge, Thom, Mat and
Rand depart (and are given their passage fee back, having entertained the crew
so well that Domon will accept that as payment instead; he keeps the Tar Valon
coins, however) and stop at an inn to catch up on the latest news. The barman
tells them that a great battle has been fought near Lugard, the capital of
Murandy, and that an alliance of southern nations led by Aes Sedai and
consisting of Tarabon, Amadicia, Altara, Murandy, Illian, Tear, Cairhien and
Andor has defeated the false Dragon Logain and taken him prisoner. He will be
taken to Tar Valon for gentling, but will be paraded through Lugard and Caemlyn
along the way. Rather unexpectedly, the Council of Nine in Illian has called
the first Great Hunt of the Horn of Valere in more than 400 years. Adventurers
and youngsters from across the West are heading to Illian to swear the oaths
and become new Hunters. Thom asks the barman if he has seen any of their
colleagues and the barman replies no, but others have been asking for them.
Thom decides to leave the town immediately. He tells Rand
and Mat that his nephew Owyn got into ‘trouble’ with Aes Sedai and died for it.
He doesn’t want Rand and Mat to suffer the same fate,
which is why he has helped them. Before they can exit the town gates and cross
the White Bridge,
a Myrddraal appears. Thom thrusts his belongings at Rand
and tells him to flee, asking him to remember the name of an inn in Caemlyn,
the Queen’s Blessing. He then suicidally attacks the Myrddraal. Rand
and Mat escape under the sound of screams.
Perrin, Egwene and Elyas travel
eastwards with the Tinker caravan for some days. Perrin is disturbed by the Way
of the Leaf, which he sees as noble but unrealistic and suicidal when faced
with such dangers as there are in this world. Egwene is more engrossed by it,
but reluctantly agrees with Perrin. Along the way the caravan’s mahdi (‘Seeker’ or leader), Raen,
asks them to help him solve a riddle. Three years ago a Tinker caravan
travelling in the northern Aiel Waste encountered a group of Maidens of the
Spear - female Aiel warriors - slain in battle with Trollocs. The last
surviving Maiden, before she died, claimed that ‘Sightblinder’ means to slay
the Great Serpent and blind the Eye of the World. Sightblinder is the Aiel name
for the Dark One, and the Great Serpent is the universally-accepted symbol of
eternity, but the rest of it is nonsense. Their three guests cannot shed any
light on the subject. Shortly after this they depart, heading southwards
towards Caemlyn.
Moiraine, Lan and Nynaeve pass
through Whitebridge, finding a scene of devastation near the town gates but
no-one willing to explain what happened. Purchasing new steeds, they head east
along the Caemlyn Road
towards the capital.
Rand and Mat
make good time on foot as they journey eastwards. Initially they sleep rough,
or occasionally get a bed in return for helping out on a farm for the day.
However, Rand then starts playing Thom’s flute and Mat
juggles, allowing them to entertain in inns and private homes along the route.
Rand is slightly worried when Mat reveals that he was given an ornate curved
dagger with a ruby in the hilt by Mordeth and took it from Shadar Logoth
despite Moiraine’s warnings (Mat points out that it was a gift and thus not
taken from the ruins in the way Moiraine meant). Mat plans to sell it if
necessary, but never does. Their journey is uneventful until they reach Four
Kings, where an innkeeper tries to rob them of their belongings and also where
a merchant from Whitebridge (and also a Darkfriend) tries to capture them. The
inn is struck by lightning, allowing Mat and Rand to
escape. In the next town, Market Sheran, a young Darkfriend confronts them but
Mat denounces him and the youth is chased out of town by a mob. In the town
after that a young woman tries to murder them whilst Rand
is stricken by a fever, but is driven off by Mat and his dagger. After passing
through Carysford they reach the last village before Caemlyn itself and see a
Myrddraal trying to bribe a merchant into keeping an eye out for them. The
merchant refuses, since the two men have done him no harm. Later, Rand
and Mat approach him for a lift and he agrees. They reach Caemlyn the next
morning. To hide the heron-mark on his sword and scabbard, Rand
buys a red armband and ties it around his weapon.
Reaching the Queen’s Blessing Inn, Rand
and Mat meet the innkeeper, Thom’s good friend Basel Gill. Basel
laughs at suggestions that Thom may be dead and tells them about how Thom used
to be Court Bard at the Lion Palace,
but was driven out of the city after arguing with Queen Morgase’s Aes
Sedai advisor, Elaida do Avriny a’Roihan, about the unlawful gentling
and death of his nephew. Rand suggests seeking Elaida’s
protection until Moiraine arrives, but Gill points out that the Red and Blue
Ajahs are rivals, and also that Elaida would hold any friends of Thom’s in
great suspicion. Gill suggests they hide out in the inn and wait for their
friends to arrive. Rand learns that there is friction in
the city at the moment about Caemlyn’s long-standing alliance with Tar Valon.
Those loyal to the Queen and who support Tar Valon wear red armbands, whilst
those who oppose it wear white armbands and are egged on by a detachment of the
Children of the Light under Lord Captain Eamon Valda. The crisis has
been triggered by both the imminent arrival of Logain and also by the fact that
the Daughter-Heir of Andor, Elayne Trakand, is soon to be sent to Tar
Valon to be trained in the art of politics by the Aes Sedai, as all heirs to
the throne of Andor have been for a thousand years. Her brother Gawyn
will accompany her to be taught in the ways of combat by the Warders, for he
will be her First Prince of the Sword, protector and commander of her armies
when she is Queen. Their half-brother Galad Damodred will accompany them
both to keep an eye on them. Apparently Elaida and the Aes Sedai have taken a
keener-than-usual interest in Elayne, but for no obvious reason. Rand
also meets Loial, an Ogier from Stedding Shangtai, who is staying at the
inn. Though at 90 he is too young to be allowed out of the stedding, Loial wanted to see the outside world and has run away
from home. Rand, instinctively trusting the Ogier, tells
him about his adventures. Loial suggests that Rand and
maybe Mat and Perrin are ta’veren,
those special people who twist time and destiny around them in strange ways. Rand
rejects the idea: he is no new Artur Hawkwing.
Meanwhile, Perrin, Egwene and Elyas
reach the ruins of a huge statue. Elyas tells them that is the great statue of
Artur Hawkwing, erected upon the site where his new capital was meant to be.
The statue, like all monuments of the High King, was torn down during the War
of the Hundred Years, but is so huge that most of it remains intact. Over the
course of their journey Perrin has begun to be able to talk to the wolves, and
like Elyas his eyes have started turning yellow. Perrin is reluctant to embrace
this new ability, but it is forced upon him when a group of Children of the
Light attack. Elyas and most of the wolves escape, but one, Hopper, is killed
whilst mind-linked to Perrin. Perrin goes into a psychotic rage and kills two
Children before he is overcome. Egwene is also imprisoned. Lord Captain
Geofram Bornhald (Dain’s father) and his second-in-command, Jaret Byar,
tell Egwene that she may avoid execution, but for his crimes Perrin will be
hung under the Dome of Truth in Amador. Bornhald has been recalled to Amador on
urgent business, but plans to pass by Caemlyn along the way and learn news of
events there.
The day of Logain’s procession dawns
and Rand goes to see the parade. Mat is ill with a fever
and refuses to rise from bed. Reaching the crowd, Rand
is suddenly accosted by a man in rags and runs off. Escaping to the tallest
hill within the Inner City, Rand climbs on top of a wall
to see the parade. Startlingly, he sees Logain look straight at him and start
laughing. Rand is then startled by a woman’s voice and
falls off the wall.
Regaining consciousness, Rand
finds himself in an ornate set of gardens. A young man and a young woman tend
to his wounds and it is not long before Rand realises he
has fallen into the Royal Gardens
themselves! Elayne and Gawyn agree to smuggle him out of the palace, but he is
discovered by Galad, who alerts the palace guards, led by Lieutenant-Guardsman
Martyn Tallanvor. Tallanvor attempts to arrest Rand, but Elayne instead
orders that he be taken before Queen Morgase. Morgase and her closest advisors
- Captain-General Gareth Bryne and Elaida do Avriny a’Roihan, Aes Sedai
of the Red Ajah - question Rand closely. Elaida doesn’t
believe that Rand comes from the Two Rivers given his
height and hair colour, but Morgase knows the accent of the region and
identifies it in Rand’s speech. Elaida then has a
Foretelling that chaos and fire will engulf the world and that Rand will stand
at the centre of it all. Despite this prophecy, Morgase releases Rand
since he has committed no crimes as yet. Before he leaves Rand learns that
Elayne can channel the One Power and that is why the Aes Sedai are so
interested in her; she will be the first ruler in more than 1,500 years to be
openly Queen and Aes Sedai simultaneously. He also learns that many people take
him for an Aiel because of his height and hair colour.
Moiraine, Nynaeve and Lan approach
Caemlyn, but then Moiraine senses the third warded coin blinking out (it is
confiscated by the Children of the Light). She immediately heads for where she
last sensed it and after a while comes across the Whitecloak camp. Under cover
of darkness and using the One Power to create maximum confusion, she, Lan and
Nynaeve raid the camp and rescue Perrin and Egwene. They escape to Caemlyn
before any pursuit can be organised.
In the Queen’s Blessing a few days
later Rand is startled when a detachment of Children of
the Light enter the inn and demand to know the whereabouts of two Darkfriends
who have escaped Whitecloak justice. Basel Gill and his hired bouncer, Lamgwin
Dorn, stare down the Whitecloaks and evict them from the inn. Then Moiraine
and the others arrive through the kitchen and there is a joyful reunion, cut
short when Mat suddenly tries to attack Moiraine with his dagger. Moiraine uses
the One Power to Heal him of his infection, explaining that the corruption and
evil of Shadar Logoth infested every single object inside Aridhol when it fell.
Unfortunately, should even a pebble from that hated place be carried beyond the
walls, then Mordeth will be made free to terrorise the world again. Mat has
been infected by Shadar Logoth’s evil, but Moiraine has Healed it somewhat.
However, the full breaking of the bond between him and the dagger can only be
done in Tar Valon itself.
The group swaps news and Moiraine
learns about the incident in the Aiel Waste between the Tinkers and the Maidens
of the Spear. The Eye of the World is a special, secret place in the uttermost
north, in the Great Blight itself. Bordermen seek it in the same way
southerners search for the Horn of Valere. A threat to the Eye cannot be
ignored. Loial then tells her that twenty years ago, after the Aiel War, a
refugee was granted safe haven in Stedding Shangtai for some months. During
that time, in a fever, he said that the Dark One wished to destroy the Eye and
time itself. Rand, reluctantly, admits the truth of his
dreams and that in one of them Ba’alzamon said the same thing. Moiraine decides
that the weavings of the Wheel have brought three different accounts of the
same threat to her at the same time for a reason, namely that she should
investigate personally. But the Blight is more than a thousand miles and a
month’s travel away, and the danger now seems urgent. She asks Loial to guide
them through the Ways. The Ogier protests about the dangers of Machin Shin, but eventually caves in.
The trip through the Ways takes two
days, but they emerge near the great fortress of Fal Dara in Shienar, near
Tarwin’s Gap. Lan is convinced that someone is following them, but he cannot
find them by backtracking. At the Waygate in the ruins of Mafal Dadaranelle Machin Shin appears to block the gate,
ending fears of pursuit. The party proceeds into the keep, where they are
welcomed with honour by Lord Agelmar Jagad, inarguably the most
respected general alive, as well as the second-most-powerful man in the Kingdom
of Shienar. Agelmar knows both
Moiraine and Lan well, and tells the others of how Lan is the Uncrowned King of
Malkier and the story of that nation’s destruction fifty years ago. Agelmar has
grave news: Trolloc raids have increased along the entire length of the
Blightborder, paralysing Saldaea, Kandor and Arafel as they prepare for an
invasion. However, Shienaran scouts have discovered a truly vast horde of
Trollocs gathering beyond the Mountains of Dhoom, aimed at Tarwin’s Gap and
Shienar. Though Agelmar has sent riders to the other rulers, it seems that only
the armies of Shienar will ride forth to confront the Trolloc threat this time.
Moiraine remains convinced that the true danger is at the Eye of the World and
even convinces Agelmar, who goes as far as to suggest taking the Shienaran army
with Moiraine’s party. Moiraine dissuades him by pointing out that a smaller
party has a far greater chance of success in reaching the Eye undiscovered.
A man is captured whilst trying to
sneak into the city and Moiraine discovers it is Padan Fain. He is dressed in
rags and Rand recognises him as the man who chased him
in Caemlyn. Obviously he chased them through the Ways, but how he evaded Machin Shin as well is unclear. Moiraine
has him locked him and plans to deal with him when - if - they return from the
Blight.
Moiraine and the group fight their way through the corruption of the Blight.
They set out northwards. After
crossing the Blightborder they enter the foulness and corruption of the true
Blight. After a few days they pass the shattered ruins of the Seven
Towers of Malkier and the
once-beautiful Thousand Lakes,
now poisoned and inhabited by foul creatures. Camping for the night in sight of
the ruins, Rand overhears Nynaeve confessing that she
has feelings for Lan, but Lan pushes her away, telling her he will make no
woman a widow when he inevitably dies in the Blight.
The party approaches the Mountains
of Dhoom and the High Passes
that will carry them beyond, but then Worms appear and begin chasing them. Just
when it seems they will be overcome the landscape shifts and they find
themselves in a beautiful garden full of living things. They have passed
through some dimensional warp and entered the domain of the legendary Green
Man, keeper of the Eye of the World (in reality Someshta, last of
the Nym). The Green Man is confused about his own history, but is aware of what
others are not. He greets Rand as a ‘Child of the Dragon’
and calls Perrin a Wolfbrother. Moiraine tells him of the threat to the Eye and
he takes them to see it. The Eye is hidden in a cave in the side of a hill.
Moiraine tells them that the Eye of the World is the pure, untainted essence of
saidin. It was created by fifty of
the last remaining sane male Aes Sedai during the earliest days of the Breaking
of the World, and then somehow cleansed by fifty female. Though they died in
its making, they achieved the impossible and managed to partially cleanse the
Dark One’s taint on saidin. The
amount of energy stored in the Eye could level a large city if not handled with
care, which is why it was hidden here.
The party emerges from the cave to
be confronted by two men, one withered and ancient and the other hiding his
face behind an iron mask. The ancient one claims to be Aginor and
introduces his comrade as Balthamel: two of the Forsaken! The Green Man
appears and wrathfully commands them to leave his sacred place. When they
refuse he attacks Balthamel and kills him, though in the process is slain
himself. Moiraine distracts Aginor with the Power, allowing Rand and the others
to flee. Aginor pursues Rand, telling him triumphantly
that he is ‘the one’. Suddenly energy swirls around Rand,
the energy of the Eye of the World. Aginor is annihilated in a firestorm and Rand
is suddenly transported by the Power to Tarwin’s Gap, where the Shienaran army
stands on the brink of defeat. Again the Power is unleashed and a mountainside
collapses, burying most of the Trolloc army and forcing the rest to retreat. Rand
then hears a thundering voice telling him that he must do what must be done;
the owner of the voice cannot intervene again in the struggle the world is
facing.
Then Ba’alzamon appears to challenge
Rand to combat. Rand wins, not by
slaying Ba’alzamon but by severing a strange cord of energy that seems to be
coming from him. Ba’alzamon vanishes and Rand finds
himself back in the Green Man’s garden. He is horrified that he managed to
channel the One Power, but only Moiraine, Egwene and Nynaeve saw him vanish and
reappear. Egwene and Nynaeve agree to keep his powers a secret, but Moiraine’s
intentions are unclear. Re-entering the Eye’s cave the party discovers that the
Eye itself has vanished, burned out in Rand’s struggle
(though only Moiraine and Rand work this out). Underneath they discover three
items, apparently hidden along with the Eye. One is a flag made of a material
unknown to any but Moiraine, a material used in the Age of Legends. The banner
depicts a dragon roaring. It is the Banner of the Light, the personal flag used
by Lews Therin Telamon during the War of the Shadow. The second is a golden
horn marked with the legend The Grave is
No Bar to My Call, meaning it is none other than the Horn of Valere itself.
The third item is a circular disk made of cuendillar
or heartstone, indestructible by even the One Power. The disk is emblazoned
with the ancient symbol of the Aes Sedai from the Age of Legends, the Dragon’s
Tooth and the Flame of Tar Valon embracing one another. Moiraine identifies it
as the First Seal of the Dark One’s prison. Horrifyingly, the seal is shattered
into several pieces. Rand thinks the Dark One is dead,
but Moiraine guesses otherwise.
The party returns to a Fal Dara
celebrating a miraculous victory over the Shadow. Lord Agelmar receives the
party in honour and makes them guests of honour at a feast, guessing their
triumph is related to the larger victory. Later, Moiraine questions Padan Fain
and learns that he is a ‘hound’ for the Dark One, sent to sniff out the
location of one man. However, in Shadar Logoth he somehow bonded with the
escaping essence of Mordeth and became something less than human. In the Ways
Fain/Mordeth encountered Machin Shin
and somehow absorbed part of that entity’s essence as well. Now Fain claims to
be utterly opposed to the Dark One and dedicated to its destruction, but he is
prone to rantings and ravings. Moiraine leaves orders for him not to be
released.
Rand confesses his fears to Egwene and Nynaeve, who still claim that they will keep his secret. Meanwhile, using the Power to eavesdrop on their conversation, Moiraine laments, "The Prophecies will be fulfilled. The Dragon is Reborn."
3 comments:
Hi Wert,
I've been careful to avoid reading these WOT posts as I haven't read the series yet. That said, I've been seriously considering giving it a go lately. Would you recommend the series to someone who isn't already invested in it? I normally agree with your reviews and therefore would appreciate your opinion.
I know all about people's opinions in that the middle books are slow but is this slightly less of an issue now that the series is nearly complete?
Ultimately, what I'd really like to know is; am I missing out by not reading WOT?
It's a solid series, but I think more impressive if you are less familiar with the genre and have not already read the likes of Martin, Erikson etc. Coming in at a later point, it will probably be less effective, though things like the worldbuilding and magic system are very well-done.
You can only gain from reading this series to be honest. I started to read the first book over 10 years ago on a whim, and I fell in love with it. The amount of detail and the staggering amount of amazing set pieces and story really make these books stand out. If you enjoy fantasy, give them a try, they are very worth it.
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