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This excerpt, from a book Sergei Didier has threatened to write about the ‘care and feeding of a Talent,’ first appeared on the Luna website in 2004, and is presented here for your entertainment and edification....
From a future work by Sergei Didier —
In history class we learn about Ben Franklin. Bon
vivant, man of letters and science, inquiring mind.
They don’t tell you that he was also one of the most
influential Talents of his time. Or that he is credited — blamed, by some — for
the formation of the first Mage Council in America.1 Knowing this, one looks at the
experiments he performed with weather, including the creation of a lightning
rod to draw down electricity in order to experiment on it, and the now legendary
kite-and-key story, with a slightly different eye.2
Before his work (and similar experiments being done in France
and elsewhere during the same time period), any understanding of what lightning
was — and any possible connection to electricity — was minimal, at best. The
long-held religious interpretations were that lightning was the wrath of (a)
god coming down upon the sinning or unworthy. In fact, science, that rational
study, was uncertain about the origins and structure of electricity itself: although
a fascination with it dates back to the ancient Greeks, any kind of detailed
observation had of necessity been confined to the results rather than a
quantifiable, scientific breakdown of its origin or cause.
In 1746, that changes drastically, when an object known as
a Leyden Jar (so named for the University
of Leyden, where its creator,
Pieter van Musschenbroek, studied) became all the craze in Europe,
for its ability to collect static electricity in a glass jar, and use it to
create shocks in those who touched it. The connection between this lightning in
a bottle and the lightning which appeared in the sky with similar but much more
impressive results was obvious. But how to test any theories on such a powerful
force of nature?
One of the popular scientific theories at the time was
that electricity formed out of two opposing forces — that those forces
“fought,” and out of that fighting created energy. Franklin’s
experiment proved — to the public world — that electricity instead was
comprised of a “common element.” However, in private notes taken by
his son and student, who was also present during the experiments, Franklin
comments on the “second electricised element” encountered during
correct atmospheric conditions, and which could be felt only within his body,
and not register in any of the apparatus he had set up for measurement.
That element, the son’s notes continued, sent such a surge
of Power through his body “as was to make him feel rejoiced with the Power
as was our gift and our joy, and Empowered to do as he might wish, without
thought of the cost.” His work thus confirmed what some magic-users had
long-suspected: that the ability within them was woken not by spells or
sacrifices, but through the infusion of a positive charge into receptive cells
within their body that transform current into power. More, his work confirmed the nature of that charge, and how one might
intentionally channel it.
However, because of the secretive and close-mouthed nature
of Talents, arising from the waves of persecution they had endured over the
generations, this information was at first not widely disseminated. Instead, it
was passed, as was much of their knowledge, from mentor to student, one
transference at a time.
Fortunately, Franklin’s indoctrination as a Talent was not
enough to hold back his admiration for the democratic ideal, and — after a
rather strident argument with his son and several other Talents in the
community — he decided to offer his knowledge to the Talented community as a
whole, leading to a radical change in how magic — now called current — was
viewed and used.
(from “Benjamin Franklin: Genius, Talent and
Troublemaker” from A Handbook for Working with Talents, 1st
edition, by Sergei Didier. dymk press, 2012)
1
(The work-journal
of John Ebeneezer, from the private collection of Wren Valere. Note in margin
of bell lightning lecture from March 1994. Seconded in discussion with Council
members, unverified.)
2 (The Papers of
Benjamin Franklin. Edited by Leonard W. Labaree. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1962. Letter from
Benjamin Franklin to Peter Collinson dated September 1753.)
Copyright © 2004 Laura Anne Gilman
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