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Dragonchoice
- Necessity or Destiny?
It would be too much to expect every canon Impression to
follow the same pattern. Impression from the stands, while
ostensibly a once in a lifetime occurrence, happens with some
frequency in the first thirty Turns of the Ninth Pass. Jaxom,
Keevan, Mirrim, T'lion and Tai all Impress from off the sands.
Yet at least two of these five share a common experience:
both Jaxom and Keevan handled the eggs prior to Impressing.
Jaxom definitely touched the egg that later Hatched out his
dragon, and it is implied that Heth Hatches from the egg "marked
by a large yellowish splotch in the shape of a dragon backwinging
to land" (The Smallest Dragonboy, p 235) that
Keevan dared to touch in secret after each visit. It is also
implied that Mirrim sneaked into the Hatching cavern to touch
the eggs before her Impression of Path, though she stringently
denies this.
Add to this Pridith's instant choice of Kylara, who had spent
hours with the egg, under Lessa's tutelage, and there is solid
evidence to suggest that in some cases handling of the eggs
can influence the unborn dragonets. Ruth and Pridith bonded
with their riders instantly, without deliberating over the
other candidates, while Path and Heth specifically sought
out Mirrim and Keevan. In all cases it seems that the dragonets
did not choose their riders so much as find them, yet this
is the exception rather than the rule: we typically see uncertainty
as the dragonet searches for the best possible match.
The belief that a bronze Hatching first is a good omen has
solid origins. The first dragonet to Hatch has the luxury
of choosing from all the available boys: the candidate he
selects will be truly well suited to him. Contrast this with
the dragon who Hatches last - obliged to choose from what
is left over. There is no guarantee that any given group of
candidates will contain the correct mixture of leader-types,
lieutenant-types and follower-types to match the distribution
of colours in a clutch, and when candidate numbers are limited
- as with Pridith's first clutch, or Orlith's last - late-Hatching
dragonets must make the best of what is available, or else
die unImpressed. As we never see this happen, it must be concluded
that dragons are willing to compromise.
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decides, the rider complies | On
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