- For the novel written by David Gaider, see Dragon Age: The Calling.
“All Grey Wardens who do not fall in battle eventually fall to something known as the Calling, a magic that preys upon our own connection to the Blight and the darkspawn. Rather than such foul magic eventually leading to my death, I have determined to find a way to negate this Calling and save all Wardens from its effects.” ―Hero of Ferelden
Just as Grey Wardens keep secrets from outsiders, such as the Joining, the Wardens also keep secrets from their own.[1] It is heavily implied that the Calling—also known as the Long Walk[2]—was a ritual created by the first Grey Wardens to prevent future members from watching themselves ultimately succumb to the darkspawn taint.
There was a stir within his blood
And the dreams lay thick upon him.
A call did beat within his heart.
One road was left before him.
The Calling begins with nightmares and bad omens.[3] The warden then begins to hear eerie music and whispers, the same call the darkspawn hear to search for the Old Gods. Although Alistair claims that it takes a person about thirty years after the Joining to hear the Calling, this should be considered the upper limit. The gap varies depending on the willpower of an individual Warden and the level of their interaction with the darkspawn. As such, Grey Wardens during a Blight are likely to have shorter lifespans. Some Wardens go on their Calling after only five to ten years.[4]
According to ritual, a Grey Warden who hears the Calling celebrates as they see fit before descending underground and entering the Deep Roads to slay as many darkspawn as they can before being overwhelmed and killed. Many within the Order believe that this ritual is done for practical reasons, to take down as many enemies as a Grey Warden can before dying.
It is also implied that even if a Grey Warden would run away, given time all Wardens would find themselves in the Deep Roads, Blight-Lands or pursued by darkspawn, for they all are connected by the taint that draws them to each other. "You'd seek them out... or they'd seek you out."[5]
Some corrupted entities such as Corypheus can use Blight magic to imitate the call of an Old God, similar to what Grey Wardens hear during a Blight and their Calling. This can even allow Wardens to be mind-controlled.
Anything bearing the taint is connected and Corypheus has displayed the ability to speak through the corruption and use it to influence other tainted creatures: he used his call to plant thoughts in Janeka's head and make her believe his will was hers. Since Grey Wardens have some resistance to the taint, they had to be tricked into following Corypheus' influence or managed to rebuff it altogether. Corypheus' voice in the Grey Wardens' minds can covertly brainwash them into following his will or compel them not to attack him. Tainted mages appear to be more susceptible to Corypheus' control but even Grey Warden warriors can fall to his influence. Other tainted creatures, such as the Carta dwarves who drank darkspawn blood and became ghouls, were indoctrinated into being utterly devoted to Corypheus.[7]
Only when the Grey Wardens are removed to a safe distance is Corypheus' hold over them broken. Those freed remember little and the voice in their minds that controlled their thoughts wanes when they are outside of Corypheus' presence.[8]
Codex entries[]
- Codex entry: A Change of Course
- Codex entry: Fears of the Dreamers
- Codex entry: Hero of Ferelden
- Codex entry: The History of Soldier's Peak: Chapter 2
- Codex entry: The History of Soldier's Peak: Chapter 4
- Codex entry: Larius's Final Missive
- Codex entry: A Letter from the Hero of Ferelden
- Codex entry: Praise Corypheus!
- Codex entry: Regarding the Calling
- Codex entry: Shred of Blue
- Codex entry: A Strange Sighting
- Codex entry: To Be Corrupted
- Codex entry: Warden Ailsa's Diary
See also[]
References[]
- ↑ Codex entry: Regarding the Calling
- ↑ Mentioned by Janeka during Legacy.
- ↑ According to dialogue with the Warden Ally in Dragon Age: Inquisition.
- ↑ Thedas UK (January 14, 2012). "David Gaider Interview". Retrieved January 29, 2012.
- ↑ According to dialogue with Riordan in Dragon Age: Origins.
- ↑ According to dialogue with Fiona in Skyhold.
- ↑ Codex entry: Praise Corypheus!
- ↑ Codex entry: A Change of Course
- ↑ Dragon Age: Last Flight, p. 140