Gamebook store

Friday, 15 May 2026

Up above the world so high

The Ghosts of the Magi, known colloquially as Pyid (= "the Five") are five small luminous bodies that hurtle through the night sky above Krarth. With a good eye they can be variously seen in other northern regions also, but it is above Krarth that they are brightest.

The peasants of Krarth believe them to be the spirits of the five greatest original magi, cast into the upper heavens by the Blasting of Spyte. The Five have specific astrological significance and are known by these names: Red Death, Blue Moon, Plague Star, Gift Star and White Light. The Krarthian peasants believe they will come into conjunction above Spyte in the year 1000 AS, whereupon the gates of that deathly city will be hurled open.

Astronomers of Khitai or the Ta'ashim lands, where the world is known to be round, could possibly map these moons' orbits and calculate any conjunction – though if such a thing has ever been attempted the results are not known.

The above is what any Dragon Warriors player would have learned from "The Lore of Legend" chapter in DW Book Six, way back in 1986. But as I worked on Jewelspider, my return-to-Legend RPG, I got to wondering: what is official Church teaching regarding the Ghosts of the Magi? 

It struck me that it’s not in the nature of religious thinking to say, “OK, there are these spirits of ancient sorcerers that are hurtling around under the vault of heaven soaking up ineffable secrets for their eventual return to Earth,” because that’s a scientist’s interpretation, like saying, “We accept the origin of these objects and will now try to work out what they are.”

But in fact the Church is likely to take a very different approach: “These things are evidently real. Therefore they must be part of God’s plan, and we can ignore what those heathens in Krarth believe.”

So then I got to thinking that if you put White Light to one side, that gives us four baleful entities – the Four Horsemen, obviously and handily. So then, with a little Wiki-level research, I found that official Church teaching until very recently is not that the Four Horsemen are agents of the Antichrist. Quite the reverse: they are God’s agents who will scour the world to usher in the Last Judgement. And the fifth one? White is associated with the Holy Spirit, so that’s rather a gift.

Hence we have the True Faith’s doctrine as to what those five cometary objects are. The Five (known as the Pentaphan) are regarded as angels who have been appointed to scour the earth at the End of Days, specifically as the Four Horsemen who presage the Apocalypse, and are commonly identified as Apsinthos (ie Wormwood, harbinger of War, replacing Red Death), Qaphsiel (Confusion and Sorrow, standing in for Blue Moon), Abaddon (Destruction, taking the place of Plague Star), Kushiel (Punishment, whom the Krarthians call Gift Star), and the last is thought because of its pure white light to stand for the Holy Spirit through the agency of the archangel Jophiel (Understanding and Judgement).

11 comments:

  1. Oh hey. I remember fighting against those 5 Magi and their minions in the Blood Sword Series. Ofc I ignored the combat just to enjoy the story but they were epic. Also, wasn't the world of Legend flat? I remember one time I was cast off by a bird to the ends of the world in one of my plays of the Blood Sword Series.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ah, you're thinking of a scene in book 3: "The Roc flies on and on across the ocean, eventually alighting on a cold rocky isle at the southern rim of the world. You can hear a distant roar, which you take to be the unimaginable waterfall where the sea pours off the edge of the earth into nothingness." But you never actually get to see whether there's an edge or not ;-)

      Delete
  2. "Pyid" was not in French version of the book. It sounds like Russian "pjat'. Where does it come from ?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pyid wasn't in the English version either. It's the Cabbandari word for five, based on the notion that Krarth is roughly equivalent to Russia.

      Delete
  3. Is this canon??
    Just kidding. :)

    So Red Death would correspond to the Red Horse (War).
    White Light would be White Horse I suppose.

    Does Plague Star correspond to the White Horse (Pestilence) or the Pale Horse (Death)?

    That leaves Blue Moon and Gift Star. Which one would be the Black Horse?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My wife, being a keen horsewoman, will tell me off for this, but I only thought about the riders, not the horses. I won't mention it to her because she'll only tell me that a white horse ought to be called a bay or something.

      Anyway, in this model only four of the five are on horseback. I had thought of White Light as the odd-angel-out, though I agree that as the Saviour's alter ego he really ought to be riding the white horse.

      As for the others... The harbinger of War certainly rides the red horse. Would Punishment be riding the black horse? Except if that's Gift Star you'd expect a dun or palomino. Wiki says of the pale horse, "In some modern artistic depictions, the horse is distinctly green," which would suggest Abaddon/Plague Star.

      Whichever way we cut it, one of the five is going to be without a horse. Hmm... this could turn into a whole chapter of Jewelspider.

      Delete
    2. Roz tells me that a "red horse" actually means one with a chestnut coat, so maybe not quite what we envisage for Red Death.

      Delete
  4. As a complete by the by, Dave, the title of your post reminded me that it's worth finding on Facebook 'Legends of Kids TV' the 'Rainbow' 1979 Christmas Video Tape. I think I'll have that played at my funeral instead of a dreary durge.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a new one on me, Andy, but after reading the Google summary I'll see if it's on YouTube.

      Delete
    2. I couldn't find it on YouTube, Dave. Although whilst you're there, check out 'Noseybonk' from the early 80s kids TV show Jigsaw. Now that's how you do disturbing horror! (However unintendedly!) As a useless bit of trivia, Sylvester McCoy was one of the voice actors on the programme.

      Delete
    3. I found some images of Noseybonk, Andy, and they're disturbing enough. Not that I'm going to let that put me off looking for some videos.

      Delete