Preview

The Great Sorcerer's Failure

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
190 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Great Sorcerer's Failure
In any other quest Nilrem, the Great sorcerer would have been happy to help the hero in his mission, even honored, however, this time she was more willing to kill "the Chosen One" rather than making the journey easier for him.
All of these because of the human that was supposed to save the entire village from a horrible war was Aidan, a young adult that did nothing more than desperate the villagers who also liked to feel superior in any way possible. A total nightmare.
The journey had started long ago and since the beginning Nilrem was already fed up with him. One day she couldn’t resist any longer.
"You are like a fairy godmother, only lamer" Aidan said when she was practicing spells on a break. "THAT´S IT" Nerlim exclaimed pointing her wand at him. “I´m tired of your mediocracy! You are NOT what the prophesy says you could be!"
…show more content…
No one knows what he saw still Aidan changed for the better proving there´s always silver

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    During the novel, there was a lot of internal and external damage done to these guys. They were literally watching some of their best friends be killed. Losing a friend is something no one should have to go through at a young age, especially the way some of them lost their own friends. Some try to blame it on themselves. One man named Norman Bowker, thought he was to blame of Kiowa’s death.…

    • 494 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay Tom Brennan

    • 757 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The story begins with the Brennans fleeing town. They packed all their belongings and left. They were ashamed of what went down just weeks recently. The harsh whispers that washed over and through the neighbourhood. They couldn’t handle it.…

    • 757 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In contrast with this horrible imagery is the description of 'the little villagers' which gives a quite calm and relaxed feeling to the village and the description used sound like a fairy tale where little is repeated to suggest that the villagers lead unimportant lives and begin there days with the same repetitive routines and have 'dreams that rarely amounted to anything' illustrating there lost hope for the future and being stuck in the same small place everyday. This imagery could however suggests that the villagers are like innocent prisoners with no place to go and nothing to look forward to therefore again makes the reader feel uneasy.…

    • 447 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    People take their lives for granted too easily today. We do not know when something could happen to us or a loved one. Unexpected events take place to people all the time. In the book Forgotten Fire Adam Bagdasarian tells the real life story of how his uncle survived the Armenian Genocide in 1915. Vahan Kenderian, Adam’s uncle, was only twelve when many events started occurring. These events were unexpected and tragic in many ways to not only Vahan and his family, but also all of the Armenians. In a short time, Vahan lost his home and family and, to survive he was forced to live a life he could never have dreamed of. He went through many struggles and saw many horrors that a boy of that age should not have to go through or should have seen. Though, most of these events were very traumatic and life altering, Vahan was able to learn important life lessons as a result of the events. He was a strong and confident young boy and even through all of the hard times he still remained strong and was able to grow not only physically, but mentally and emotionally as well. The three most crucial events that helped him learn life lessons were when he witnessed his two older brothers’ murders, meeting a girl named Seranoush who became his friend, and how he had to work hard and fight for a place to live and survive.…

    • 1801 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Sorcerer is more than happy to be taken hostage by Matheyus. She later tells him that she only went with him so willingly because Memnon kept her prisoner since she was a child. She was being used her entire life by a man that just wanted to be feared by everyone and rule everything. It portrays society’s typical stereotype of women. Do everything the man wants and please him in any way you can without a…

    • 918 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Crabbie

    • 339 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Another problem is that this book had poor character development. Mary is referred as a criminal and leaving her town after killing her husband .Crabbe’s mom is clueless on what is going on with his son’s life, his dad is rude and ungrateful. His family does not show much support to his son. He’s addicted to alcohol and telling young grade 9’s to drink and always constantly drinking and in need of it 24/7 is horrible. Crabbe has also left home and running away is showing bad decisions to the youth. It’s giving those ideas on what to do if they hate there family or get depressed. This book is just setting bad examples towards the youth.…

    • 339 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Incendies Worksheet

    • 501 Words
    • 2 Pages

    She does this through forgiveness; forgiveness for herself and forgiveness for her son. She allows her children to bury her with a gravestone and hoped for a reassured sense of peace for Nihad.…

    • 501 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    "He was only a man who had meant well, who had been spurred along the course of thinking by an eccentric necromancer with a weakness for humanity. Justice had been his last attempt-to do nothing which was not just. But it had ended in failure" (White, OAFK 634). The "he" in this passage refers to King Arthur, the main character in T.H. White's The Once and Future King and Book of Merlyn, who failed in his attempt to unite England due to the mistakes made by him and those close to him. Arthur, betrayed by those close to him, not properly educated on the greedy, selfish, and violent heart of man, failed in his attempt to create a stable, progressive, and peaceful society.<br><br>To begin with, those close to Arthur made mistakes that would lead to his eventual downfall. Merlyn's forgetfulness kept him from informing Arthur of his mother's name. "...but suddenly he remembered it in his sleep-the simplest thing! It was Arthur's mother's name which he had forgotten to mention in the confusion!" (White, OAFK 310). If Arthur had known the identity of his mother he would not have slept with his own sister, "...but it seems, in tragedy, that innocence is not enough" (White, OAFK 312). This account with his sister created Mordred, who, taught by his mother that revenge had to be taken, would be his father's killer. Others close to Arthur betrayed him as well. Gwenever's selfishness and jealousy as well as Lancelot's "evil steak" played an important role in the King's downfall. They chose to sleep with each other behind the King's back, knowing that the discovery of their affair would destroy his life's work. If Gwen and Lance could have just come to the realization that they could not sleep each other and still be loyal to their King, this tragedy would not have taken place. Perhaps Lance put it best when he said "...your friend can hardly be your friend if he is also going to be your betrayer" (White, OAFK 336).<br><br>Arthur did not receive a proper education on the…

    • 1108 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fear In Lord Of The Flies

    • 844 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The group of boys who, once had innocent and pure lives turned into a group of monsters who wreaked havoc against anyone who opposed them. Fear led the boys to make illogical choices and the overall thirst for power and dominance caused them to act uncivilized to one another. After being on the island for so long, the boys became aware that it wasn’t crashing on an island that drove them to savagery, but that it was having to deal with each other that led them to the lifestyle they lived. The deterioration of morality among the boys caused them to act in ways they wouldn’t have if they hadn’t crashed on the island. As a group, the boys were not able to live in peace with each other due to their fear and greediness for control and that soon led to the downfall of their…

    • 844 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Long Way Gone

    • 973 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Throughout the novel, Ishmael and his friends begin to those their humanity and become completely different individuals because of their exposure to the war. The children slowly begin to make unethical decisions, and lose all morals and sense of natural right; they were transformed into ruthless killing machines. “Our innocence had been replaced by fear and we had become monsters” (Beah 55). During their time as child soldiers, instead of being educated on how to grow up as a normal, civilized adolescents, Ishmael and his friends were taught how to kill and steal. They were brainwashed into becoming trained assassins, wanting nothing more than to kill the enemy, the people who had destroyed their lives and murdered their families. The boys were told the same would happen to them, if they did not take on the rebels. Army commanders instilled fear into children of the war, they were given a choice, fight to stay alive at whatever means necessary, or die.…

    • 973 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Long Way Gone Analysis

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages

    To me this was one of the more disturbing aspects of the war; even if you were to make it out of your village alive, there was a very slim chance that you would ever find your family. Ishmael was a twelve year old boy when his village was taken over by the rebels and from then on he never saw his family again. The traumatizing effect that the loneliness alone would implement on someone of that age is…

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Long Way Gone Essay

    • 953 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The war that changed everyone’s life in Sierra Leone took everything from everyone; It stripped down people to nothing. The rebels took families, killed them, took all their belongings, took the children and made them drug addict killers. Unfortunately, Ishmael Beah was subject to it all. While reading A Long Way Gone, Beah clearly shows the gradual slipping of his childhood. He reflects on a memory of himself realizing how different was from before the war started when he says, “One evening we actually chased a little boy who was eating two boiled ears of corn himself” (30). The loss of being innocent started off when the boys got really hungry. The war had kicked them into the woods to fend for themselves, and they had no choice but to start doing bad things for food. Like chasing that little boy and stealing his corn. They slowly became savages, but couldn't help themselves. They had to become thieves and also try to justify what they were doing by telling themselves that it was…

    • 953 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The reason would be that it shows how harsh society has become through the ages and how our morality has changed.We have became a more individualistic society, we worry what others think of us and how our reputation is perceived. Also, because of this we are more succumbed to peer pressure and the effects it has on us. We have accepted it more the idea of going against the thought of what our peers think is more of a punishment now. For example, in the late 60s if you were caught doing drugs you would have been seen as a loser who was going nowhere in life, but today when a joint is passed around at a party and you don't take a hit then you're seen as a loser. This thought is also at play at the man in the well, they're playing a game with the man seeing how long they can last before they actually help him, well none of the kids wants to be the first to go and tell their parents for help so they wait and let others decide for the fear of what their peers may think. However, none of the children crack under the pressure, which in turn results in the man’s fatality, so some speculators may conclude, due to the changing of our culture through times that maybe if one of the children broke under the pressure and stood up for what was right the outcome of the story may have ended quite differently. The children are also a bit harsh in how they just stand aside and watch at the brutality of how…

    • 1264 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Being stuck on an uncolonized island and having no idea if they would be saved, drove the boys insane. As much as they tried to be civilized and to have structure as a whole, it failed because of the feeling of having power and the evil found within them. William Golding catches the children’s worst times of corruption and makes them significant by using the literary devices zoomorphism, imagery, and conflict. Always having compassion in our hearts is just as true as always having evil in our hearts because it is human nature. No one is completely righteous; we all have our…

    • 866 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sorcerers of the sylvan bloodline have been greatly romanticized by the common folk sometimes calling them "fairy godparent's" - which is actually a misnomer since few members of this bloodline are actual godparents and even fewer still are fey or even good in nature.…

    • 183 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays