Ursula K. Le Guin’s A Wizard of Earthsea is a Bildungsroman, a novel focusing on the journey of its protagonist from youth toward maturity. As the young boy Duny becomes the wizard-in-training Ged—and as Ged begins to taste the power he will one day embody as the wizard Sparrowhawk—Le Guin charts Ged’s growth. Coming of age for Ged is not easy: he wrestles with pride, self-doubt, and a thirst for power that threatens his life. Over the course of the novel, Le Guin argues that though coming of age is a laborious process, it is the only way for an individual to truly comprehend themselves, the world, and the larger purpose of their existence.
When Ged first begins his journey, he’s full of ambition but also plagued with embarrassment and fear. Ged comes to the conclusion that he must pursue knowledge of his craft in order to grow and discover who he is and what he’s capable of. Ged is embarrassed when a young girl in the village of Re Albi (where Ged has traveled with his mentor Ogion to study the magical arts) accuses him of being too afraid to cast a dangerous changing spell. Ged fears that in failing to cast the spell, he is weak or immature—he doesn’t yet understand that there are certain dark breeds of magic that are not meant to be explored. His bullheaded thirst for knowledge leads him to make a reckless decision that will change the course of his life forever. After the encounter with the girl, Ged hurries home to the cabin he and Ogion share and opens one of Ogion’s ancient tomes. A terrifying darkness fills the room—but Ogion enters just in time, dispersing the darkness with his staff. While speaking with Ogion about what has just happened, Ged realizes that while he loves Ogion, he craves more knowledge and power than he feels Ogion can give him. Ged makes the difficult decision to travel to the isle of Roke to attend a school for wizards and, hopefully, to amass more knowledge, power, and potential. This episode is important to Ged’s coming-of-age journey because it represents a moment in which Ged knows what he wants. Even though he knows that to pursue what he believes is his destiny will be difficult, Ged is determined to uncover the purpose of his existence and the depths of his power.
Despite Ged’s recognition of the value of learning and challenging himself, his coming-of-age journey is initially more trying than it is rewarding. Ged’s coming-of-age process is kickstarted when he arrives at the school for wizards on the island of Roke. When Ged enters a rivalry with a fellow student named Jasper, he’s still inexperienced, impetuous, and impatient. Ged rises to Jasper’s bait, and in an attempt to best his fellow wizard, he unintentionally casts a much-too-powerful spell that unleashes a horrible, frightening, and violent shadow into the world. The shadow attacks Ged, leaving him near death. Ged recovers slowly over the course of a year, and he is forever changed by the terrifying encounter. This incident is an important part of Ged’s coming-of-age journey as it represents a painful experience that nonetheless allows Ged to understand himself better. He thought he wanted power, glory, and fame—yet having pursued those things recklessly, he now sees his own foolishness. As Ged is forced to interrogate all he thought he knew about himself in the aftermath of this incident, Le Guin suggests that becoming oneself is a difficult, laborious journey full of missteps and uncertainties. Ultimately, Ged understands that he must undergo the difficult process of confronting his own flaws and shortcomings in order to truly mature and to fully understand himself and the world around him.
Toward the end of the novel, Ged has a final showdown against the shadow. Ged has spent years running from it and trying to escape the darkness it has brought into his life. The shadow has pursued him across Earthsea—and with each encounter, Ged’s realization that he cannot spend his life running from his fear and sense of failure has deepened. Ged realizes that even after all he’s accomplished, he still hasn’t confronted his main adversary: the shadow. As the novel nears its end, Ged knows that he cannot run from the shadow any longer. With the help of his old friend Vetch, Ged tracks the shadow to the ends of the earth, where he confronts it and accepts that the shadow has been a part of him all along. Finally, in calling the shadow by its name—his own name—Ged is able to reabsorb it into the place from which he loosed it: his soul. Ged’s final encounter with the shadow is the final trial in his coming-of-age process. Ged’s ability to conquer the shadow represents the fact that he has come to understand himself. He knows that there is darkness as well as light within him, and that the power he possesses has the potential to bring him a sense of humility and grace—or an all-consuming lust for greatness. In besting the shadow, Ged shows that he has come to accept not just himself, but the world in which he lives and the destiny it holds for him.
The trials Ged faces as he grows over the course of the novel test and even threaten him. Ultimately, however, Ged is left with a better understanding of his life’s purpose and duties. Le Guin uses Ged’s story to suggest that even in the reader’s world, the lessons one learns as one comes of age are of tremendous importance to one’s development as both an individual and a member of society. style.
Coming of Age ThemeTracker
Coming of Age Quotes in A Wizard of Earthsea
Many a Gontishman has gone forth to serve the Lords of the Archipelago in their cities as wizard or mage, or, looking for adventure, to wander working magic from isle to isle of all Earthsea. Of these some say the greatest, and surely the greatest voyager, was the man called Sparrowhawk, who in his day became both dragonlord and Archmage. His life is told of in the Deed of Ged and in many songs, but this is a tale of the time before his fame, before the songs were made.
He crossed to the far bank, shuddering with cold but walking slow and erect as he should through that icy, living water. As he came to the bank Ogion, waiting, reached out his hand and clasping the boy's arm whispered to him his true name: Ged.
No one knows a man's true name but himself and his namer. […] If plain men hide their true name from all but a few they love and trust utterly, so much more must wizardly men, being more dangerous, and more endangered. Who knows a man’s name, holds that man's life in his keeping. Thus to Ged, who had lost faith in himself, Vetch had given that gift only a friend can give, the proof of unshaken, unshakable trust.
"You thought, as a boy, that a mage is one who can do anything. So I thought, once. So did we all. And the truth is that as a man’s real power grows and his knowledge widens, ever the way he can follow grows narrower: until at last he chooses nothing, but does only and wholly what he must do..."
"There is no comfort in this place," the Archmage had said to Ged on the day he made him wizard, "no fame, no wealth, maybe no risk. Will you go?"
"I will go," Ged had replied; not from obedience only. Since the night on Roke Knoll his desire had turned as much against fame and display as once it had been set on them. Always now he doubted his strength and dreaded the trial of his power. Yet also the talk of dragons drew him with a great curiosity.
Either he must go down the hill into the desert lands and lightless cities of the dead, or he must step across the wall back into life, where the formless evil thing waited for him.
“It will speak of things that were, and are, and will be. It told of your coming, long before you came to this land. Will you ask a question of it now?"
“No."
"It will answer you."
"There is no question I would ask it."
"It might tell you," Serret said in her soft voice, "how you will defeat your enemy."
Ged stood mute.
"Do you fear the stone?" she asked as if unbelieving; and he answered, "Yes."
“But I know this: the Old Powers of earth are not for men to use. They were never given into our hands, and in our hands they work only ruin. Ill means, ill end. I was not drawn here, but driven here, and the force that drove me works to my undoing. I cannot help you."
"I have no strength against the thing," Ged answered.
Ogion shook his head… […] "Strange," he said: "You had strength enough to outspell a sorcerer in his own domain, there in Osskil. You had strength enough to withstand the lures and fend off the attack of the servants of an Old Power of Earth. And at Pendor you had strength enough to stand up to a dragon."
"It was luck I had in Osskil, not strength," Ged replied, and he shivered again as he thought of the dreamlike deathly cold of the Court of the Terrenon. “As for the dragon, I knew his name. The evil thing, the shadow that hunts me, has no name."
“All things have a name," said Ogion.
There was a great wish in him to stay here on Gont, and forgoing all wizardry and venture, forgetting all power and horror, to live in peace like any man on the known, dear ground of his home land. That was his wish; but his will was other.
The shadow had tricked him out onto the moors in Osskil, and tricked him in the mist onto the rocks, and now would there be a third trick? Had he driven the thing here, or had it drawn him here, into a trap? He did not know. He knew only the torment of dread, and the certainty that he must go ahead and do what he had set out to do: hunt down the evil, follow his terror to its source.
He knew now, and the knowledge was hard, that his task had never been to undo what he had done, but to finish what he had begun.
"Pride was ever your mind's master," his friend said smiling, as if they talked of a matter of small concern to either. "Now think: it is your quest, assuredly, but if the quest fails, should there not be another there who might bear warning to the Archipelago? For the shadow would be a fearful power then. And if you defeat the thing, should there not be another there who will tell of it in the Archipelago, that the Deed may be known and sung? I know I can be of no use to you; yet I think I should go with you."
Aloud and clearly, breaking that old silence, Ged spoke the shadow's name and in the same moment the shadow spoke without lips or tongue, saying the same word: "Ged." And the two voices were one voice.
Ged reached out his hands, dropping his staff and took hold of his shadow, of the black self that reached out to him. Light and darkness met, and joined, and were one.
“The wound is healed,” [Ged] said, “I am whole, I am free.” […]
And [Vetch] began to see the truth, that Ged had neither lost nor won but, naming the shadow of his death with his own name, had made himself whole: a man: who, knowing his whole true self, cannot be used or possessed by any power other than himself and whose life therefore is lived for life's sake and never in the service of ruin, or pain, or hatred, or the dark.