A Wizard of Earthsea

by

Ursula K. Le Guin

A Wizard of Earthsea: Chapter 4 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
That spring, as Ged resumes his training at the school, he sees little of Vetch and Jasper—as new sorcerers, they now study with the Master Patterner in a secret grove off-limits to prentices. Ged resumes classes with the other Masters, deepening his knowledge of weatherworking, herbalism, and healing. At night, he studies runes on his own. Ged is such an adept pupil that rumors swirl about him throughout the school: some say he has special powers, evidenced by his friendship with the otak, while others say he has been ordained as the next Archmage. Ged ignores his classmates and spends much of his time alone.
Ged is earning a reputation for himself as a powerful young mage, but he refuses to rest on his laurels or give into his classmates’ flattery. Ged still wants more knowledge and more power, and he is determined to keep his head down and learn how to prove himself once and for all.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Ged is now 15. He begins studying more advanced shaping spells with the Master Hand—the Master even gives Ged advanced books, though he warns Ged not to tell the Archmage of the private knowledge he’s passing down to him. Ged begins working with the Master Summoner, who teaches summoning rather than illusion. The Master Summoner makes sure to warn Ged, as the Master Hand once did, that to summon earthly forces is to change the earth itself: such a burden should not be taken lightly. Ged is interested in learning spells to summon the spirits of the dead, but such practices are firmly off-limits. Sometimes Ged’s summoning studies fill him with a dark portent or remind him of the shadows that filled the room back on Re Albi, but he pushes aside his fear.
As Ged delves deeper into his studies than ever before and begins seeking out darker kinds of spells, he alarms his teachers and once again draws their warnings to pay attention to the careful balance of the universe. Ged, however, pushes through his own intuition as he tries to make himself powerful enough to create a grand display that will help him prove himself once and for all. Even though Ged knows that he’s headed down a dark path, he cannot stop himself from the pursuit of power and glory.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
As spring turns to summer, the school gathers for a large feast to celebrate the full moon. The students celebrate alongside their Masters, the townspeople of Thwil, and farmers and villagers from across the island. The first night of the festival is wild and fun, and on the morning of the second day, the whole town sleeps in. On the second night of the festival, Ged, Vetch, Jasper, and several of their fellow students have a picnic and practice illusions beneath the stars. As always, Ged and Jasper find themselves trading  insults disguised as friendly jests. Jasper says he’s sick of hanging around prentices—he wants to be in the company of equals. Ged asks Jasper what sorcerers have that prentices don’t. “Power,” Jasper says. Ged challenges Jasper to a duel, stating he’ll match Jasper’s power.
Jasper and Ged can no longer contain their animosity for one another. Even in the midst of a joyful, happy time, their hatred boils over. Jasper wants to push Ged to the edge—and Ged allows himself to be pushed. Ged has been determined since arriving on Roke to find an outlet for his desire to prove himself: now he has found it, and he is ready to show Jasper what he’s learned.
Themes
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Vetch reminds the two that duels are forbidden. He urges them to come to their senses, yet Jasper and Ged remain resolved to prove themselves. Ged transforms himself into a falcon on the spot before reclaiming his human form. Jasper accuses him of casting an illusion, but Vetch insists Ged has mastered true change. Jasper, however, declares himself unimpressed. Vetch urges Ged not to rise to Jasper’s bait, but Jasper asks Ged to follow him to Roke Knoll and show him what Gontish wizards can really do. Ged agrees to go. Jasper says meanly that he’s looking forward to seeing Ged charm some goats. Ged vows that he will raise a spirit from the dead and leaves the courtyard.
Ged allows himself to be so deeply affected by Jasper’s cruel taunts that he puts himself at risk by attempting increasingly dangerous forms of magic. True changes, as Ged’s Masters have warned him, disturb the balance of the universe and must be performed carefully—and on top of that spell, Ged wants to attempt something none of his Masters have even agreed to let him read about. Ged’s pursuit of pride and glory takes him to dangerous places.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
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Up on the grassy, empty knoll, Ged and Jasper stand several paces away from each other. Ged prepares to perform his summoning—but he no longer cares about impressing Jasper. He simply wants to prove to himself that he has the power to do the unthinkable. Ged announces his intent to call a beautiful maiden of lore. Ged stretches out his arm and begins the summoning spell—the one he read in Ogion’s book years ago. The others watch as Ged falls to the ground and then rises back up with something between his hands. Ged calls out the name of the legendary maiden. The shapeless mass in his hand splits apart to reveal the form of a woman for just a moment—then, a horrible, shapeless shadow leaps out of the mass and attacks Ged violently.
In this climactic scene, Ged decides that it’s himself he wants to impress, not Jasper. Ged has believed since his childhood that he is special and destined for greatness—he believes that if he can pull this off, he’ll never have any self-doubt again (and nor will his classmates doubt his absolute power). Ged, however, fails to perform the spell correctly, and he summons forth something he never imagined.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
Quotes
Jasper hides his eyes, and Vetch alone watches in horror as the faceless, child-sized shadow tears at Ged’s flesh. Vetch tries to pull the creature off of Ged, but something stops him from touching it. Suddenly, a bright light takes over the sky; when it dissipates, the shadow is gone. Ged is unbreathing and covered in bloody, gaping wounds—the Archmage Nemmerle is standing over him. Nemmerle touches Ged with his staff, and Ged gasps for air. Nemmerle kneels, weakened. Vetch looks around and realized that other wizards have arrived—the Masters have been drawn to the scene by the strength of Ged’s spell.
The shadow’s violent attack on Ged seems to be the work of a dark creature from another world. As the novel unfolds, however, and it becomes clearer and clearer that Ged has released from within his very soul the darkest part of himself, this scene can be read as Ged’s dark drive for power and domination taking vengeance against the part of him foolish enough to succumb to the pull of glory, pride, and renown.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
While others from the school arrive to help carry Ged back to school, to the chambers of the Master Herbal, the Master Summoner stays on the hill all night keeping watch for the return of the shadow. The creature, however, does not return—it is hiding somewhere out in the world. The Master Herbal tends Ged’s “evil wounds,” which seep flows of black blood. Ged runs a fever, but no spell can cool him down. In another room of the school, the Archmage Nemmerle, his power spent after casting out the shadow, lays dying. The other Masters stand over him, mourning his loss but understanding that all lives must come to an end. 
Ged’s actions on Roke Knoll reverberate throughout the School, forever changing the fabric of the place Ged calls home. The Masters spoke of the careful balance of the universe for years, but Ged never listens. Now, though, the practical gravity of disturbing the world’s equilibrium is made painfully clear.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
The next day, the nine Masters gather to choose the next Archmage—they settle on a wizard called Gensher of Way who lives far away and send a ship to collect him. Ged knows nothing of this, though—for four weeks, he swims in and out of consciousness, confined to the Master Herbal’s chambers as he slowly heals from his terrible wounds. Finally, one autumn day, Ged is well enough to sit up—but he cannot talk, only weep. It takes another season for Ged to recover, and it is not until early spring that Ged is well enough to leave the Master Herbal’s chambers, rejoin his classmates, and greet the new Archmage.
Ged’s wounds, which nearly took his life from him, take a long time to heal. This represents the profundity and violence of what Ged has unleashed upon the world. He is, after all, a talented wizard of great natural-born power—but he has used that power for evil, and as a result the costs of his schoolyard duel are astronomical and unimaginable. 
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
Ged’s classmates hardly recognize him—the left side of his face is covered in white scars, and he has grown terribly thin. Ged goes straight to Archmage Gensher to swear his loyalty toward him—but when he bends the knee, the Archmage, who knows what Ged did, rejects his offer. Ged asks if he must leave Roke, even if what he wants is to stay, learn, and undo the evil he’s unleashed unto the world. The Archmage insists that if Ged left now, he’d become a gebbeth—a puppet doing the will of the shadow. He insists Ged stay on Roke and learn until he gains the strength to fight the shadow, which is surely awaiting him somewhere in the world. Ged admits he has seen the shadow in dreams.
Ged now sees that his actions have severe ramifications. The balance in the universe his masters always spoke of is not some abstract concept—it has real, practical effects. The Archmage isn’t angry with Ged, but at the same time, he wants Ged to understand the gravity of what he’s brought forth into the world. Ged will be safe at school, but beyond the walls of the building, there is no telling what awaits Ged. He will have to figure that out for himself.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
The Archmage Gensher chides Ged for using his power wrongly and spinning a spell without thinking of how it would affect the balance of all things. Worst of all, the Archmage says, Ged was moved to do so by pride and hatred. Now, the shadow wants to work its evil through Ged. Ged says he wishes he were dead. The Archmage again chides Ged, recalling how Nemmerle gave his life so that Ged could live. All Ged can do now, the new Archmage says, is study and work as hard as he can.
This passage represents a new struggle within Ged—the struggle between craving the oblivion of death and having to deal with the now-arduous fact of being alive. As long as Ged lives, he knows, he will have to fear the shadow—but Gensher urges Ged not to let pride get the better of him twice. Gensher wants Ged to fight through his uncertainty and fear and find a way to make sure the sacrifices of those who’ve attended to Ged are not in vain.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Duty and Destiny Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
Quotes
As Ged returns to daily life, he notices that Vetch and Jasper are seemingly gone from the School. He does not attempt to make any new friends and he struggles in his studies, afraid of casting too strong a spell again. In autumn he returns to the Isolate Tower, but this time, he is thrilled rather than full of dread at the prospect.
Ged’s encounter with the shadow fundamentally changes him. He is no longer showy or confident, and he longs for simplicity, isolation, and modesty.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
The night before Ged leaves for the tower, Vetch, who has been studying at the secretive Immanent Grove, arrives at Ged’s room to wish him good luck—and to return the otak, whom he’s kept watch over while Ged recovered. Vetch urges Ged to come to his homeland, the East Reach, once Ged completes his studies and becomes free, but Ged states he might never be free. Ged asks what is in store for Vetch, and Vetch speaks excitedly of a return to his hometown followed by the search for a job of magery in the “little isles.” If Ged ever needs him, Vetch says, Ged should summon him by his true name: Estarriol. Ged, too, tells Vetch his true name. Ged knows what a meaningful thing it is to have shared his true name and to have heard Vetch’s.
Though Vetch has proven himself to be a worth, powerful, and levelheaded sorcerer—and thus superior to both Ged and Jasper—he does not have a shred of pride within him. Vetch wants to improve the lives of the people in his hometown and in smaller, more vulnerable isles. He accepts that wizardry is a duty to one’s community rather than the chance to pursue glory, fame, and renown. In entrusting his true name to Ged, Vetch proves that he is ever the loyal, thoughtful, true friend. To share one’s true name is a vulnerable thing, and Ged does not take the gesture lightly. He is in awe of Vetch’s goodness, kindness, and righteousness.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Duty and Destiny Theme Icon
Quotes
The next day—Ged’s 17th birthday—he sets out for the tower. The journey takes him longer than it once did. He studies at the tower until the end of winter, at which point he returns to the Great House to be made sorcerer. Archmage Gensher accepts Ged’s pledge of loyalty and allows him to study higher magic. Ged finds his old skills returning to him. Even while studying the dangerous arts of making and shaping, Ged feels himself learning with ease.
Receiving a kind of blessing from Vetch, studying at the Isolate Tower, and making amends with Gensher allows Ged to accept that in spite of the mistakes he’s made in the past, there are still ways in which he can repair his relationships and begin thinking of a future. He begins to feel less alone and less hopeless.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Ged searches lore books and asks his Masters about creatures such as the shadow—but there is little record of such creatures in all of history, only a few stories of spirits from the realm of the dead devouring those who summon them. In a conversation with the Master Summoner, the Summoner tells Ged that a mage is not one who can do anything—a mage must follow the increasingly narrow path he can follow, even as he amasses power, until he realizes what the one thing he must do is.
Ged is learning more and more about what his future will look like, and it is very different from the one he imagined for himself. It is clear that Ged’s coming-of-age journey is leading him down a specific path. He is beginning to accept that he may not achieve the glory, fame, and renown he once dreamed of; instead, he may need to undertake a much more personal, arduous journey, one in which there is little glory but much fulfillment.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Duty and Destiny Theme Icon
Quotes
When Ged turns 18, the Archmage Gensher sends him to study with the Master Patterner in the hidden Immanent Grove. Little is known of this secretive place where people make and learn complicated magic. At the end of spring, Ged returns to the Great House. At the door, he finds the doormaster he met many years ago when he arrived. He realizes that this man is the ninth master: the Master Doorkeeper. The Master tells Ged he can win his freedom if he discovers and says the Master’s name. Though Ged has learned much during his time on Roke, a mage’s name is nearly impossible to divine. 
As Ged begins studying the advanced magic he longed to study, he finds that honing his skills is not about glory or excitement but rather about personal fulfillment and the furthering of one’s knowledge. Ged has become a much more patient person. How he reacts to the Master Doorkeeper’s test is evidence of how much he’s changed and how seriously he’s dedicated himself to setting aside his pride.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Ged sits down and thinks for a while about how to do what the Master Doorkeeper has demanded. He falls asleep, unable to think of an answer. At last, Ged returns to the Master and tells him that he cannot force or trick the man’s name from him. He is content, he says, to stay and learn from him unless the man will consent to answer a question. The Master urges Ged to ask it. Ged asks the man’s name, and the Master, smiling, says it. Ged repeats it, and the Master lets him in. Ged gathers his things—including his newly earned staff of yew—and leaves the Great House for the last time, heading down to the ship awaiting him in the harbor.
In this scene, Ged again demonstrates that he’s become a much more patient, introspective, and levelheaded person. He is willing to accept that his Masters hold wisdom that he cannot imagine. This makes Ged’s achievements feel more hard-won and fulfilling: when he sits back and listens rather than scheming as to how he can make himself look powerful, smart, or special, he finds his capacity for growth and success much improved.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Duty and Destiny Theme Icon