Difference between revisions of "Promise Fair - Magical Attraction - RPLOG"

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11/5/480
 
11/5/480
 
=Log=
 
=Log=
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<div></div><br> <br>It&#39;s early in the afternoon, and the lecture room is slowly filling up with beings of all walks of life. Some Strongheart and Underhill on the front row, with several craftsbeings and students on the next two or three rows. There also appear to be some beings whom are mostly just wandering around, completely in awe at the scale of the building. Regardless, all beings are slowly meandering into their seat, while a older, pure-white furred mink seated on the chair furthest from the entrance.
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And of course, there&#39;s Flora, standing by the seat closest to the entrance, a smile on her lips as she gestures for people to pick a seat.<br> <br>    The proprietor of Silver Lining Shipwrights is here, which would seem odd for those who don&#39;t know her. She likes learning about magic, and having an opportunity to improve her craft is always welcome. She takes a seat as close to the front as she can, mostly in case she needs to ask questions.<br> <br>Fenris is present for the lecture. This is not strange. What IS a bit unusual, is that he is here as himself, rather than any official capacity in one of his varied disguises or aliases. The big tiger is in his Creator inspired armored jumpsuit and apparently attached to the Underhill party. An ear flicks and his tail sways lazily as he watches beings come and go from the lecture hall.<br> <br>Doffing his hat once he&#39;d entered into the lecture assembly, the elderly rodent adjsuts his spectacles and moves with care adn a cane to a closer sitting spot. The Blackback knight settles down, placing his hat across his lap while his old bones settle into place, craning just a bit to better hear when it starts in earnest.<br> <br>As the various beings entering the room make their way to the seats, eventually, the flow of beings dies down, and the doors are slowly closed behind them. Soon enough, Flora moves to the small lectern at the front of the hall, smiling out to the gathered crowd. &quot;Flora is not much for speeches, so Flora&#39;ll keep it short. As part of the fair, Mister Lightfur, who has a stand on the floor for the coming week and a half, has elected to give a small lecture about his work on earth magic and its applications in categorizing minerals and metals, yes. Please, do give him a warm welcome,&quot; she offers, as she steps aside, allowing the white-furred mink to take center-stage.
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Lightfur waits a moment for things to calm down, before offering a nod and a small thank-you to Flora.
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&quot;Lets start things off by saying I expect you all to challenge me and to ask me questions. These are complicated equations I&#39;ve been working on, and if anything is interesting or unclear, just raise your hand,&quot; the older mink offers with a smile. &quot;Today, I&#39;m considering you all my students. Don&#39;t forget to hand in your homework next week,&quot; he offers with a big grin.<br> <br>    Cirra nods, scribbling on her slate, since she doesn&#39;t know if Lightfur has the ability to understand sign. so once she sees a break, she holds up her slate, which now reads: [How is earth magic different from others, since no developed elemental?]<br> <br>Fenris joins in with the polite applause and settles in for the lecture. If his experience with Cliffside professors held true, this was going to be a long afternoon. His eyes are drawn to Cirra and her slate. &quot;That was fast,&quot; he murmers to Dmitri Underhill, seated beside him, &quot;I sort of expected a lecture before questions.&quot;<br> <br>Mordecai nudges his spectacles up higher on the bridge of his nose and listens keenly, ears flitting to try and listen better to the questions that pop up at first. An interactive lecture would be an interesting first for him.<br> <br>&quot;Ah! Hold on, miss. Can&#39;t quite read that from over here. Anyone else here have some troubple speaking?&quot; Lightfur offers with a small smile, as one being in the back of the room meekly raises their hand. Soon enough, Lightfur procures two wooden slates, runes on the backside, and a set of chalks, handing off to the LongTech employee by the door, delivered to the mouse in the back.
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The other, he hands off to Cirra himself, with a small smile. &quot;A small touch of earth-magic. Saves me from having to use my legs to move around the entire lecture-hall whenever someone has a question,&quot; he offers. Same with the speech-stick,&quot; he adds, gesturing to the small, air-enchanted stick in his hand, amplifying his voice.
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&quot;Now, the miss asks if there&#39;s anything fundamentally different about earth-magic, versus the other elemental magics. I could go into -excessive- details here, but I think it&#39;s best I stick to the basics here, although if you want a more detailed answer later, seek me out after the lecture, alright?&quot; he offers after a short moment, before drawing a few simple spells on the paper along the wall. &quot;Fire, water, and air-magic are all about change. About things constantly in motion. Earth magic is largely static. Which might very well contribute to, as you concluded, the lack of an proper, easy-to-conjure earth-elemental. Although there are a few beings who&#39;ve managed to make quite a bit of decent progress in that field, too. Of course, there are significant differences between the other three elements, too, and Dark magic is a whole other subject. Does that satisfy your curiousity, for now? Any other questions, anyone?&quot;<br> <br>    Cirra blinks, studying the enchantment. She&#39;s going to want to replicate that later, since that would be useful for her communicating with her staff while she&#39;s in the forge. She writes her question again, though differently: [Why no earth elementals yet? Wisps exist, but not elementals?]<br> <br>While the answer to Cirra&#39;s question does not much matter to Fenris, the writing slates are interesting. &quot;That is a good trick,&quot; he says quietly, sitting up a little straighter. He frowns a little toward Cirra. The tiger had hoped to hear what Lightfur came to share, rather than sitting in on a question and answer session about elementals.<br> <br>Lifting a hand with one gnarled finger poised, Mordecai asks in a reedy, but audible tenor, &quot;Does this mean that an elemental, theoretically, comprised with Earth magic would take far longer to create, but its effective existence would last longer at the same time?&quot;<br> <br>&quot;Ah! On the elementals, specifically. Like I said, earth magic is, largely, the magic of statics. As such, an earth elemental is something of an oxymoron. You are wanting to create something that is mobile from something that is, largely, inherrently static. It&#39;s not impossible, of course. Take ice, for example. It is something static made from something mobile. Or, alteratively, water is something mobile made from static ice. But it does mean the difficulty in finding the right equations is harder,&quot; Lightfur offers with a smile, as he offers a gesture towards the paper once again. &quot;Not quite. It simply means that finding the right set of equations towards making a proper, functioning earth elemental is a more difficult process. Once someone publishes a breakthrough, however, it shouldn&#39;t be much harder to conjure one than it is to conjure a fire-elemental. Assuming, of course, you have the required affinity for earth-magic.&quot;
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&quot;Now... How many of you are familiar with three-dimensional magic? Show of hands will do fine. And how many of you have even the faintest how it works?&quot;

Revision as of 22:21, 11 May 2017

Participants

Date

11/5/480

Log



It's early in the afternoon, and the lecture room is slowly filling up with beings of all walks of life. Some Strongheart and Underhill on the front row, with several craftsbeings and students on the next two or three rows. There also appear to be some beings whom are mostly just wandering around, completely in awe at the scale of the building. Regardless, all beings are slowly meandering into their seat, while a older, pure-white furred mink seated on the chair furthest from the entrance.

And of course, there's Flora, standing by the seat closest to the entrance, a smile on her lips as she gestures for people to pick a seat.

The proprietor of Silver Lining Shipwrights is here, which would seem odd for those who don't know her. She likes learning about magic, and having an opportunity to improve her craft is always welcome. She takes a seat as close to the front as she can, mostly in case she needs to ask questions.

Fenris is present for the lecture. This is not strange. What IS a bit unusual, is that he is here as himself, rather than any official capacity in one of his varied disguises or aliases. The big tiger is in his Creator inspired armored jumpsuit and apparently attached to the Underhill party. An ear flicks and his tail sways lazily as he watches beings come and go from the lecture hall.

Doffing his hat once he'd entered into the lecture assembly, the elderly rodent adjsuts his spectacles and moves with care adn a cane to a closer sitting spot. The Blackback knight settles down, placing his hat across his lap while his old bones settle into place, craning just a bit to better hear when it starts in earnest.

As the various beings entering the room make their way to the seats, eventually, the flow of beings dies down, and the doors are slowly closed behind them. Soon enough, Flora moves to the small lectern at the front of the hall, smiling out to the gathered crowd. "Flora is not much for speeches, so Flora'll keep it short. As part of the fair, Mister Lightfur, who has a stand on the floor for the coming week and a half, has elected to give a small lecture about his work on earth magic and its applications in categorizing minerals and metals, yes. Please, do give him a warm welcome," she offers, as she steps aside, allowing the white-furred mink to take center-stage.

Lightfur waits a moment for things to calm down, before offering a nod and a small thank-you to Flora.

"Lets start things off by saying I expect you all to challenge me and to ask me questions. These are complicated equations I've been working on, and if anything is interesting or unclear, just raise your hand," the older mink offers with a smile. "Today, I'm considering you all my students. Don't forget to hand in your homework next week," he offers with a big grin.

Cirra nods, scribbling on her slate, since she doesn't know if Lightfur has the ability to understand sign. so once she sees a break, she holds up her slate, which now reads: [How is earth magic different from others, since no developed elemental?]

Fenris joins in with the polite applause and settles in for the lecture. If his experience with Cliffside professors held true, this was going to be a long afternoon. His eyes are drawn to Cirra and her slate. "That was fast," he murmers to Dmitri Underhill, seated beside him, "I sort of expected a lecture before questions."

Mordecai nudges his spectacles up higher on the bridge of his nose and listens keenly, ears flitting to try and listen better to the questions that pop up at first. An interactive lecture would be an interesting first for him.

"Ah! Hold on, miss. Can't quite read that from over here. Anyone else here have some troubple speaking?" Lightfur offers with a small smile, as one being in the back of the room meekly raises their hand. Soon enough, Lightfur procures two wooden slates, runes on the backside, and a set of chalks, handing off to the LongTech employee by the door, delivered to the mouse in the back.

The other, he hands off to Cirra himself, with a small smile. "A small touch of earth-magic. Saves me from having to use my legs to move around the entire lecture-hall whenever someone has a question," he offers. Same with the speech-stick," he adds, gesturing to the small, air-enchanted stick in his hand, amplifying his voice.

"Now, the miss asks if there's anything fundamentally different about earth-magic, versus the other elemental magics. I could go into -excessive- details here, but I think it's best I stick to the basics here, although if you want a more detailed answer later, seek me out after the lecture, alright?" he offers after a short moment, before drawing a few simple spells on the paper along the wall. "Fire, water, and air-magic are all about change. About things constantly in motion. Earth magic is largely static. Which might very well contribute to, as you concluded, the lack of an proper, easy-to-conjure earth-elemental. Although there are a few beings who've managed to make quite a bit of decent progress in that field, too. Of course, there are significant differences between the other three elements, too, and Dark magic is a whole other subject. Does that satisfy your curiousity, for now? Any other questions, anyone?"

Cirra blinks, studying the enchantment. She's going to want to replicate that later, since that would be useful for her communicating with her staff while she's in the forge. She writes her question again, though differently: [Why no earth elementals yet? Wisps exist, but not elementals?]

While the answer to Cirra's question does not much matter to Fenris, the writing slates are interesting. "That is a good trick," he says quietly, sitting up a little straighter. He frowns a little toward Cirra. The tiger had hoped to hear what Lightfur came to share, rather than sitting in on a question and answer session about elementals.

Lifting a hand with one gnarled finger poised, Mordecai asks in a reedy, but audible tenor, "Does this mean that an elemental, theoretically, comprised with Earth magic would take far longer to create, but its effective existence would last longer at the same time?"

"Ah! On the elementals, specifically. Like I said, earth magic is, largely, the magic of statics. As such, an earth elemental is something of an oxymoron. You are wanting to create something that is mobile from something that is, largely, inherrently static. It's not impossible, of course. Take ice, for example. It is something static made from something mobile. Or, alteratively, water is something mobile made from static ice. But it does mean the difficulty in finding the right equations is harder," Lightfur offers with a smile, as he offers a gesture towards the paper once again. "Not quite. It simply means that finding the right set of equations towards making a proper, functioning earth elemental is a more difficult process. Once someone publishes a breakthrough, however, it shouldn't be much harder to conjure one than it is to conjure a fire-elemental. Assuming, of course, you have the required affinity for earth-magic."

"Now... How many of you are familiar with three-dimensional magic? Show of hands will do fine. And how many of you have even the faintest how it works?"