So, let's talk about poetry.Library Ogre wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 11:24 am So, my view of the three main branches of learned magic are this:
Spell magic is singing. You sing a prepared song. Composers write new spells; improvisational singing is very hard, especially since everything must be perfect.
Circle magic is stage direction. You are building a story and a stage on which to tell it. Colors and symbols are important, but you might be able to fudge a bit and still get something workable (if you don't have emerald, green glass might work... but it will have side effects for not being exactly right).
Ward Magic is poetry; you combine words, and sometimes shapes and symbolism, to evoke a certain feeling in the universe. In a way, it is similar to creating a spell, or speaking like a Tamarian, with allegories and symbols, understood by the audience (the universe and the diabolist) to have certain meanings... but the combination of symbols can create new meanings. Because you don't activate the poem until you have perfected it, you can build it the way you need to.
When a magic-user sings, directs, or composes their magic, they have two audiences... themselves and the universe. They have to speak in the language the universe understands (power words and symbols), but they can shape it with their own understanding.
Most diabolists have a high school understanding of poetry. Sure, they've written a few haikus, maybe some sonnets, and done free verse and the like. But the Time of a Thousand Magics had villanelles. Odes. Limericks. Sestinas. Demanding and complex forms that are beyond beginning poets, and that you have to specifically learn about in order to use them. You can't do half a sestina and have it be a sestina. Some of these may involve forgotten ward or mystic symbols, but some of them are just reinforcing forms that help to create something that can be appreciated by a knowledgeable audience (like the universe, or the informed diabolist).
Now, circle magic is, in some ways, more forgiving, just like a play can survive some substitutions (non-perfect props, ad-libbed lines), provided they still communicate to the audience what needs to be communicated. You can't go far... you can't use a fish instead of a sword, because the universe knows the difference... but similarity counts for a lot. And, well, you may be a mage, but you won't ever be a circle mage unless you can manage... PRESENTATION!
And, we get back to spell magic. Wizards sing, but, remember, they sing in a language with only four words... Acba Keron Pein Yin. The first is pronounced AK-ba. Or is it ak-BA? Does it change if you have a raising note on the second syllable? If you make the first syllable very hard, practically spitting it? What if you hold it to AKbaaaaaa? Or akbaaaaaA? Is it kerON or KERon? Or kare-ON? Tone, emphasis, length... all can change the meaning of these four words into scores of ideas. If you doubt that, just remember the difference between your mom saying "William, come here", or snapping "WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, COME HERE RIGHT NOW!"