We are in the 70es on Unicorn Island, an island off the coast of southern Zealand. A handful of teachers have gathered the broken threads of magic once again, trying to revive the magic in Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, the Faroes and partially Greenland.
Our main protagonist is Susan (me) from Elsinore and her three co-apprentices and friends Heidi, Tage and Lis living at Unicorn Island.
I grasped the chance to write a little bit about some of the lesser known apprentices in this A-Z challenge.
Q is for QUESTIONS
Q: From River: Why would Olav's father try to keep his magic secret and not tell his wife who surely would understand?
A: In one of the first chapters Thora tells us why the Unicorn Farm is situated in Denmark. Talking about magical animals, giants and such she says:
But now? Forests are tamed, fields are ploughed right up to the rivers and forests. Radar, radios and GPS systems have taken the mystery out of seafaring life.
If you said you'd met a troll or an elf in the forests here, people would laugh at you and say you had a vivid imagination. They would never believe you.
The school is located here for exactly the same reason. People here in Denmark don't believe in anything supernatural any more. That's why it's easy to hide here. At most they half-believe in ghosts like the white lady in the manor house. Otherwise, everything has a rational explanation. And people very much see what they think they see or want to see."
But to really understand why I'll have to tell a bit about Denmark, this goes for Norway as well, and to a lesser degree for Sweden.
Olav's father, and with him many other fathers and mothers who knows about, or even suspect the magic in the family, tries to suppress it. They have read all about the persecutions and the witch-burnings under Christian IV (King of Denmark and Norway from 1588 to 1648). They remember lynchings and mobs when people deviated too far from the norm, and even in the 70es in little happy, frivolous Denmark, it was easy to cross the line. People fear what they do not understand. People - especially in Denmark, because of the law of Jante - kills anything bigger and better than themselves. Actually I think the law of Jante, is the best explanation to this question.
Q: I have one myself. Always at the Unicorn Farm we see the apprentices have trouble remembering the Icelandic words for things and to pronounce their spells the right way. Why is this when Gylfi every morning cast the Mál sameinast - the language spell, allowing the apprentices to understand one another?
A: Because the Mál sameinast only allows the professors and apprentices to understand the spoken word. They cannot for instance read Japanese or Arabic if they do not know the letters. And they still speak their own languages. Also the casting of spells is so to say immune to the language spell, they still hear the word said in Icelandic whenever anyone is casting a spell.
Q: From Mesymimi: it would be nice to have a list of which apprentices survive to join Birch Manor.
A: I fully understand that you do not feel like reading through the chapters Finding out I & II and compile one yourself 😉. I actually do have such a list.
In Finding out II, Knud has this comment to the list: "Actually an incredible number of apprentices have died. I let my former colleague do the maths. Out of 39, far more than 19 should be alive today. 33 would be the expected number. I have not counted in the teachers, as they were older."
An even more extensive spreadsheet over only the living and their spouses, children and grandchildren can be found at my Unicorn Farm/Birch Manor Blog.
Susan Olsen |
Main person - storyteller |
Fiona Andersen |
Painter and healer in Hundested |
|
Dead in a traffic accident |
Heidi Bach |
Now Tanja |
Tage Bach |
Now Svend. Stage magician like his dad |
Lis Bach |
Now Ida |
|
Joined the squatters and suffered a cannabis psychosis. He jumped out the window one day the police stormed the building |
Knud Thorsen |
Married to Susan |
Sarah Poulsen |
Drunkard, consprationist 2 children with magic. |
|
Shot in bande rivalries (not magic related accident) |
Kirstin Jonsdottir |
Almost drowned, severely handicapped. |
Rósa Sigurdsdottir |
Museum of Icelandic Sorcery and Witchcraft |
|
Married Grani, died on honeymoon |
|
Flew hanggliders, crashed |
|
|
Finnbogi Yngvason |
Museum of Icelandic Sorcery and Witchcraft |
|
Married Selma, died on honeymoon |
Helge Nyström |
Alive |
|
Died of carbon monoxide poisoning in a summerhouse |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Died much later from a disease (not magic related) |
Anna Berggren |
Alive in Helsingborg |
|
Died in a traffic accident |
My Birkeland |
Alive |
Marit Ravndal |
Married to Jan-Wine and party |
|
Travelled to India with Nata - found dead in Goa |
Olav Ravndal |
Wine and party Married to Monica |
Hilde Westvold |
Head nursie in Nordnorge, last name Haugen. |
Monica Bakke |
Married to Olav-Wine and party |
|
Dead from drugs |
|
Dead from drugs |
Jan Espedal |
Wine and party married to Marit |
|
Dead from drugs |
|
Travelled to India with Astrid - found dead in Goa |
|
Dead with parent, aunt and her children wen a summerhouse burned. |
|
|
Aamu Raita |
Now Clara Married to Uwe Weber in Shiltach. |
Niklas Joensen |
Unknown |
Sanne Joensen |
Unknown |
I did not know about the Law and Jante and had to look it up. Interesting. Like most social systems it has some positives and some negatives.
SvarSletMaybe because I have grow up with the law of Jante, I have a hard time seeing the positives here, It's a bit like crayfish in a bucket all keeping one another from climbing out of the bucket.
SletI looked it up, too. Fascinating. Also, if you'd simply pointed me to those chapters, I would have gone back and read them when I have time. Thank you for making the list anyway!
SvarSletThose chapters are long and talkative, and I had the list hanging around, so no problems ;)
SletI hadn't thought about persecutions and witch hunts and so on. But it is still sad to marry and have to keep such a thing from your spouse, more so if the children inherit the magic.
SvarSletIt is, and I think this is one reason why so many of the people bestowed with magic married one anoter. Maybe, somehow, they could feel it.
SletHow did I miss this post? I put it down to blogger playing its tricks. Again. I am v glad to have found it - and horrified at how many died.
SvarSletThe loss of magic was hard to the apprentices indeed. I'm happyu that Blogger finally has let you see it.
SletIt makes sense to hide what can cause problems for you. It is terrible how people destroy what they don't understand.
SvarSletThe list - not sure I like to know. I just read some these characters and they are gone. But is the normal way of life.
Have a lovely day.
It makes great sense, exactly because people destroy what they do not understand.
Slet