Belgariad: Difference between revisions

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(King Incognito and Master Actor examples. Partially copied from my own edits on TVTropes.)
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:In any case, all the sorcerers encountered in the books get immortality as a package deal with their powers, and witches like Vordai have a few more centuries than the average person in them (magicians' lifespans are never specified, though it's likely few reach their natural span ''anyway'', considering how [[Evil Is Not a Toy|dangerous]] what they do is).
* [[Who Wants to Live Forever?]]: Mostly averted - the [[Magic A Is Magic A|local rules of magic]] mean that learning sorcery instantly conveys immortality. Sorcerers never bitch about it, and instead find ways to stay busy for all of those years. This is [[Justified Trope|explored further]] in ''The Malloreon'' and the supplemental novels. Sorcerers do spontaneously pop up from time to time, but there's some attrition due to accidentally (or deliberately) unmaking themselves. The ones that survive this process are the ones who learn how to handle immortality. Belgarath even admits that part of the sorcerer aloofness and tendency to hole up in their towers in study and ignore the passing of a few centuries, every now and then, is a vital coping technique, lest grief drive them insane. It also makes Polgara that much more incredible, as she was forced to forgo this tactic for a thousand years...living with a family line whose every member (''every'' member, ''from birth to death'') she was intimately involved with. It would be interesting to see how Garion copes in ten to twenty years time when the [[True Companions]] start dying off...<ref>Silk, the oldest non-immortal member of the group, is pushing fifty by the end of the ''Mallorean''</ref>
** Played very straight with Belgarath. Two of his socerersorcerer brothers – who he has lived with in the Vale for hundreds of years – take their own lives due to depression. After losing his wife of 500 years, he goes insane and has to be chained to his bed and constantly supervised to make sure he doesn't take his own life. After a year he starts [[Walking the Earth]] and becomes [[Drowning My Sorrows|a drunken beggar]] and eventually ends up [[Sex for Solace|entertaining women in Maragor]].
* [[Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?]]: Silk's dislike of enclosed spaces is tipped over into a full-blown [[Claustrophobia|phobia]] after a traumatic event in the first series. He also doesn't like snakes. This becomes a major plot point when his love interest in the second series starts to carry a highly venomous snake in her bodice. Some have speculated that she did this strictly to mess with Silk; however this is neither stated nor even strongly implied in the books. She has, however, commented on more than one occasion that Zith was cold and it was a place for her to be warm. Liselle is a pragmatist as well, and it is suggested that (possibly at the unknown prompting of the Prophecy of Light) she began doing so because it might be useful in the future. And it was. She did admit to Silk that the first time she did it it made her skin crawl and it was all she could do to keep from screaming.
* [[With Us or Against Us]]: Invoked by Belgarath in ''The Malloreon'', but it's at least [[Justified Trope|justified]] by the fact that there really ''are'' only two sides in the great conflict.