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Can you reword this but keep a sophisticated tone plzzzz

Master Corvan demonstrates the Mentor archetype. He fulfills the mentor role by offering wisdom, challenging Elara’s self-definition, and guiding her into the unknown. The text describes his appearance and experience—“He carried no weapon, only a gnarled staff polished by years of travel”—which signals his worldly knowledge rather than brute strength, and he explicitly confronts Elara’s fear with instructive counsel: “You’ve been turning back your whole life … Every hero begins as someone who says they are not ready.” Furthermore, his encouraging provocation—“If you die out there, child, you’ll die more alive than you’ve ever lived”—pushes Elara to accept growth through risk, a classic mentor function that catalyzes the hero’s journey. In these ways Corvan embodies the Mentor archetype by providing guidance, perspective, and the nudge Elara needs to step into her destiny.

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Master Corvan exemplifies the Mentor archetype. He fulfills this role by imparting wisdom, challenging Elara’s self-definition, and guiding her into the unknown. The narrative’s description of his person—“He carried no weapon, only a gnarled staff polished by years of travel”—signals accrued worldly knowledge rather than brute force, and he directly confronts Elara’s fear with instructive counsel: “You’ve been turning back your whole life … Every hero begins as someone who says they are not ready.” His provocative encouragement—“If you die out there, child, you’ll die more alive than you’ve ever lived”—compels her to accept growth through risk, a quintessential mentor function that catalyzes the hero’s journey. In these respects Corvan provides guidance, reframes perspective, and gives the decisive nudge Elara needs to step into her destiny.