Master K
Member
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Trayph's Log --Day One, Year One-- Today I began my experiments. After extensive years of practice and research, I have earned the title of Arch Mage. I feel proud. Arch Magi are known to be some of the most powerful wizards on Lore. At this moment, I am only an inexperienced Arch Mage. Compared to some of the greater Arch Magi, like Beleqwaya or Kalanyr, I don't look like very much. That's to be expected, as they are much more experienced in the field of magic than I am. I have not contributed anything to the understanding of magic or anything of the such...yet. This log is to record my various experiments with mixing substances. I might, in the future, experiment with how various items react to different forms of magic. I don't know what else I shall do, but for now that is my plan. I don't know what these experiments shall yield, but I hope that it will benefit all magi, and that someday i'll be looked up to, just like other great Arch Magi. My first experiment was with the rare Larsham Flower and the Triffid Root. The Larsham Flower is a fragrant species of flora located in the Grogh Swamplands. It is quite rare, and is valuable. It took me a nice while to locate one of them. The Triffid Root is a plant that is generally made into tea. It is said to steel your body and mind. I decided crush up both plants and mix them together with the clear water from the Fairwind Spring. I used two different vials filled with the water. As soon as I placed both powders into both vials, the water began to turn a deep green color. I left one vial alone, but I heated up the second mixture. I didn't trust to drink either one of them yet, so I got a block of steel. I poured a couple of drops of the unheated mixture on one side of the block. Nothing happened. I poured a couple of drops of the heated mixture onto the steel block. In a matter of moments, the drops burned a hole through the steel. I moved the block, and I saw that the drops had not burned through the table. I'm assuming that the mixture corrodes metals. I shall have to experiment more on this...
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