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Dragonchoice
- Necessity or Destiny?
"'The dragon always knows'" (All the Weyrs
of Pern, p 270)
These words, spoken in wry perplexity at the choice of the
hatchling queen Amaranth, epitomise the last major piece of
the puzzle that is dragon choice. With all prior criteria
satisfied, the dragonet looks for the candidate whose personality
is best suited to his - and the requirements of each individual
don't always meet expectations.
Conventional wisdom suggests that dragonets choose strictly
on colour-based traits. A queen will look for a strong-minded
woman with maternal instincts and leadership qualities. A
bronze seeks a charismatic wartime leader, confident and commanding.
Browns prefer grounded, doughty characters, able to give and
receive commands as necessary. The blue dragon requires a
follower, content to take orders without ambition. And greens
desire riders to match their flirty, flighty tendencies.
The cultural mystique surrounding dragonriders imbues dragon
choice with a further layer of meaning. Impression becomes
a measure of worthiness, and those who Impress the higher
colours are considered more worthy than those who Impress
mere greens and blues. This colour discrimination is so ingrained
in the social consciousness of Pern that even the fourteen
Turn old Menolly condescends to think that one boy "had
done rather well, Impressing a brown". Felessan, on the
other hand, is considered "deserving" of a bronze,
although on what grounds - other than being the only son of
F'lar and Lessa - remains a mystery. And in Dragonquest
Felessan himself gloats that "Pellomar only Impressed
a green. Dragons don't like bullies, and Pellomar's been the
biggest bully in the Weyr!" (Dragonquest, p 258)
But there is little evidence to back up this belief that
dragons, even the supposedly more discerning queens and bronzes,
choose on the basis of moral fibre. Bronzes chose the petty
likes of T'ron and T'kul and the embittered, selfish M'tani
of Telgar. Kylara is no paragon of virtue, and even Lessa,
for all her strong will, was a scheming murderess when she
Impressed Ramoth. It is difficult, then, to lend any credence
to the superstitious notion that dragonets distinguish between
"good" people and "bad" people - much
less that Impressing a bronze infers greater worthiness on
a man than Impressing a green.
The significance of colour-specific traits seems of more
relevance. Despite their insufferable personal qualities,
T'ron and T'kul are certainly leaders of men, forceful in
their dealings with both their own Weyrs and others. Kylara
and Lessa both exhibit the strength of will associated with
queen riders. F'nor, as befits a brown rider, is a classic
right hand man to his brother.
Yet this system, too, is inconsistent. Brekke demonstrates
the maternal instincts supposedly desired by queen dragons
while Lessa and Kylara do not, but she lacks the forcefulness
that they possess in quantity. Jora, by all accounts, had
very little to offer a queen. Diona (of Moreta's time) and
Bedella (in the Ninth Pass), both of Telgar, are described
as ineffectual and stupid respectively. Bronze choice is just
as questionable, with the inadequate T'bor totally incapable
of exerting any control over his difficult Weyrwoman and R'gul
passively allowing Benden to crumble around him.
It is intriguing that in the very early days, before the
reverence of centuries had built up around dragonkind, the
perception of who would make a good leader was significantly
less polarised. In The Second Weyr, Sorka muses that
any of the bronze and brown Wingleaders would make competent
Weyrleaders, and, "Even the wingseconds would make good
leaders," (The Second Weyr, p 137). While she
later qualifies that the two blue wingseconds were probably
better suited to being subordinates, the fact remains that
at this early stage in the development of the Weyr, brown
riders were considered able leaders in their own right, and
blue riders, if not quite suited for outright leadership,
could serve as admirable lieutenants.
As the generations passed and the size difference between
the colours began to increase dramatically, it is likely that
the Wingsecond blues and Wingleader browns began to drop off,
to be replaced by the more rigid system of Wingleaders always
riding bronzes and brown riders' ambition limited to the Wingsecond
positions. Yet the First Pass evidence clearly indicates that
blue and brown riders are capable of greater leadership responsibilities
than later Pass wisdom suggests; by extension, it can be concluded
that a brown dragonet would not necessarily pass over a candidate
with strong leadership skills; nor would a blue be completely
uninterested in a boy who, traditionally, might be considered
better suited to a brown.
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