A Wizard of Earthsea

by

Ursula K. Le Guin

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A Wizard of Earthsea: Chapter 6 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
As Ged sails eastward back to the Archipelago, he feels a renewed fear of the shadow. He has no idea what to do or where to go in order to escape it, and so he decides to return to Low Torning and report on his encounter with Yevaud. As Ged returns to the island and tells the Isle-Men of what’s transpired, the people of Low Torning rejoice. They turn Ged’s deeds into a chant, the Song of the Sparrowhawk, and the whole island celebrates late into the night. The evening is joyful, but in the morning, Ged’s old fear returns. He knows he must leave the island. As he says farewell to Pechvarry, he feels guilty over having been unable to save the man’s son—even though he was able to conquer an island of dragons.
As the people of Low Torning toast and feast Ged and sing of his power and accomplishments, Ged refuses to let himself be sucked in. He doesn’t feel proud or especially glorified about what he’s done—saving the isle from the dragons was his duty, and he has completed it humbly. Ged knows that he cannot rest on his laurels—there is still danger, conflict, and a serious trial ahead of him.
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
Ged and several boatmen from Low Torning set out on the journey back to Roke. The trip takes several days, and though Ged is anxious, his sailing-mates are still proud and triumphant, rejoicing in the victory over the dragons. As the boat approaches Roke, a strong wind batters the vessel. Ged casts a spell to push the boat through the storm, but it is of no use. Ged realizes that the wind blows against him only. He urges his crew to turn back to the nearby isle of Serd and leave him there—he tells his men the conflict is between him and his shadow.
Ged wanted to sail to Roke in order to secure safety for himself—but when he realizes that his presence on Roke would threaten the people of the island, he turns back without a second thought. The Roke-wind blows against threats to the isle, and Ged realizes that the enchantment must sense that the shadow, bound to him, is near.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Duty and Destiny Theme Icon
Quotes
Ged passes an anxious night at an inn on Serd, considering where he might run next. He knows that though the shadow has no physical substance, once it catches up with him, it will pull strength and life from him. He can sense nothing but doom ahead of him and feels he cannot drop his guard even for a second lest the shadow try to trick him by inhabiting the body of another. At dawn, Ged resolves to turn to chance. He goes down to the harbor and boards a galley bound for the Great Port at Havnor. From there, he thinks, he might return to Gont and seek out Ogion.
Ged doesn’t feel equipped to fight the shadow—he doesn’t even know where to begin when it comes to figuring out how the creature operates. Rather than move ahead blindly and bullishly, Ged decides to consult those wiser than him. This demonstrates that he’s grown in terms of humility, patience, and the desire for knowledge and informed decisions rather than thoughtless action.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
While making port in the town of Orrimy, Ged finds himself being followed by a cloaked man as he makes his way through the streets. The stranger tells Ged he senses his fear—though the stranger doesn’t know Ged, he says, he thinks their meeting must not be a chance thing. He has heard stories of a scarred man who must fight his way through darkness. He urges Ged to go to the Court of the Terrenon in Osskil—there, he will find a sword with which to fight the shadows. Ged is afraid to trust the man, yet after the stranger departs, Ged hurries to the harbor and begs passage on a thin longship bound for the north. He offers himself as an oarsman, since the ship already has a weatherworker on board.
Ged’s encounter with this mysterious stranger is suspect, but Ged is so desperate for answers that he takes the unknown man at his word. This shows that Ged, in his fight against pride and the desire for power and action, has perhaps swung too far in the other direction. Ged is still coming of age and still learning how to do what’s best.
Themes
Coming of Age Theme Icon
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
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The journey is long and taxing, yet Ged grows accustomed to the work within a few days. Osskil, the land he is bound for, is a faraway place whose wizardry is different than that practiced on Roke. Gold is prized there highly, and the people of Osskil are often divided in pursuit of it. The pale-skinned northernmen shun Ged for his “red” skin, and even his status as a wizard wins him no goodwill or high regard. Ged keeps to himself for most of the journey, but one day, a man called Skiorh taunts Ged’s pet otak. When another oarsmen stands up for Ged, Skiorh scowls and turns toward the man—Ged sees Skiorh’s features blur and shift for a moment, and he becomes suspicious of the man. For the rest of the journey he avoids Skiorh when he can.
Again, Ged finds himself feeling slightly perturbed and uncomfortable on the journey to Osskil—a part of him senses, on some level, that something nefarious is afoot. Ged, however, is so desperate to get to Osskil and find the answers he seeks that he pushes aside his intuition.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
At last, the longboat arrives in the harbor of Osskil. Ged begins asking directions to the Court of the Terrenon—Skiorh, overhearing him, says he is on his way there and offers to lead Ged the rest of the way. Ged is not excited by the prospect of traveling with the shady Skiorh, but not knowing the language of this land, he feels he has no other choice. He draws up the hood of his cloak and begins following the man through the moors beyond the harbor.
Ged feels alone and trapped on Osskil rather than closer to answers and enlightenment. He’s all but forced to follow Skiorh deep into the lands ahead, even though there is a part of him that deeply distrusts the man.
Themes
Knowledge and Patience vs. Power and Pride Theme Icon
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
After a day of walking, Ged is exhausted, yet Skiorh insists they are not far. The weakened Ged follows Skiorh through darkness and snow, asking him periodically how much longer they have to go. One time, when Skiorh turns around to tell Ged they are near, his voice sounds like the voice of a beast. Ged stops and calls Skiorh’s name. When Skiorh turns around, Ged sees that there is no face beneath Skiorh’s hood. Ged realizes Skiorh has been turned into a gebbeth—a puppet—by the shadow, but it is too late. Skiorh calls out Ged’s true name and Ged is prevented from casting any transformation or summoning. Ged realizes that his shadow has come for him.
The horrific realization that Ged’s shadow has lured him to Osskil and entrapped him all alone fills Ged with terror and fear. Ged suppressed his intuition and now must face off against his shadow alone, defenseless, and in a strange land. The shadow has been able to manipulate a stranger into carrying out its bidding, and in so doing has completely corrupted that individual. This demonstrates the delicate nature of the cosmic balance in the world of Earthsea and suggests that anyone can be transformed into a shred of their former self by the world’s dark forces.
Themes
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon
The gebbeth advances on Ged, and Ged strikes out with his staff. He hits the form of the cloak to the ground, but it rises once again and tries to get hold of him as it did on Roke Knoll the first night it came into the world. Ged seizes an opportunity to run from the shadow, but it follows him at a quick pace. The shadow calls Ged’s name again and again, but Ged continues forward in spite of his fear and exhaustion.
Ged knows he can’t defeat the shadow in combat—his only choice is to run. Ged has been running from his shadow for a long time now, and though he knows this pattern must stop, he’s left with no other options in this moment.
Themes
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
As Ged reaches a slope, he struggles his way up and soon senses a light before him and a voice urging him to come toward it. The light grows and soon Ged sees a gateway. He stops running and the gebbeth catches him by his cloak. Ged struggles from the shadow’s grasp and goes through the lighted door—yet he cannot shut the door on the gebbeth. As Ged struggles with the last of his strength, he feels himself fade out of consciousness.
Darkness and light are opposing forces, and though others have hinted to Ged about the need for balance between the two, this scene shows the practical ways in which oppositional forces leveraged against one another can shift the balance of the universe. 
Themes
Identity and the Shadow Self Theme Icon
Cosmic Balance Theme Icon