Concerning this Blog

The posts here involve the world of the E.I.D.O.L.O.N. organization and those who inhabit it. For generic information regarding various topics, please refer to the "Concerning" posts. Hopefully I will not be idiotic and contradict myself too much.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Concerning Bardic Magic

Bardic magic is unique in that its applications are very specific, but highly effective in that category. Unlike most magics, which have easy applications to the physical world, Bardic magic is entirely mentally oriented. (Only in heavily magic-laden locales, such as Underhill, can music magic affect the apparently physical.) Furthering the already considerable effect music can have on emotions and the mind, Bardic magic affects the mental processes of those to whom it is directed. Due to this, it is extremely useful for illusion magic, but also for levels of thought manipulation many have insisted is mind control. Therefore, Bardic practitioners have been very closely monitored for abuse of magic.

Famous Bards of lore seem to hold far more abilities than the study of Bardic magic actually allows. Taliesin, of the Druidic tradition, for example, was a known shapeshifter, as were many shaman druids of his era. These abilities are likely the result of other studies of the time and perhaps, in the case of Taliesin most specifically, the result of the then-more common mixing of human and elven genetics. (More on this rare breed combination shall come in Concerning Elves.)

Where it is limited in scope, music magic makes up for with power. A fully-trained Bard is, through music, capable of affecting hundreds, possibly thousands of individuals with a blanket tune. For the beginning mage, however, the audibility of his/her music is vital, and if the target cannot physically hear the spell, it may have no effect. Advanced practitioners, however, are said to be able to perform such feats without even the aid of audible music; simply by imagining the sound in both their and their targets' minds they can achieve the same effects. A more individualized spell can, in theory, bring the subject to any number of levels of manipulation, even complete control via the musician. It is these cases that have caused Bardic magic to be marked as particularily dangerous by the governing entities of the magical community. There are, of course, numerous helpful applications, including exorcism and therapy.

In the advent of audio/visual broadcasts, the Bardic tradition has greatly diminished in industrialized countries. With the removal of playing/ listening to live music as a pastime for all ranges of individuals, those with talents are rarely recognized, and their abilities therefore are rarely honed to a useable level. Due to the highly controversial nature of Bardic magic, E.I.D.O.L.O.N. seems to be content to let the tradition die out.

Still, a fair number of Bardic mages still practice in less developed countries, and those in industrialized locales have made it a goal to seek out those to continue the study. The elves, as well, have traditionally offered training and succor for those of the Bardic tradition. Like many non-human members of the magical community, the elves generally hold different standards regarding the morality of mind control, and have rarely found wrong in Bardic abilities.

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