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Claire Zechiel
I think the spell is supposed to transform her into a mortal. However, because the book ended without truly knowing if the spell succeeded or not, it is up to the reader to decide whether the visions that Circe saw are really going to happen or if the spell isn't going to work (or maybe even backfire). I choose to believe that the spell will work and she will live out the rest of her life with Telemachus. :)
Desirae Murray
Not at all, death is something that even the Olympian's dread more than immortality. All throughout Circe's eternal life she was treated with scorn, her magic stuck fear to: Titians, Gods and mortals alike. Now, the tables have turned, she came to the realization that: "they are more dead than anything." Their "absolute power" is fueled by terror, whereas Circe magic revealed the reality of human nature. The spells she wove depends upon her true feelings, Glaucos became a god out of love; Scylla became a monster out of cruelty. That power lit rebellion to Zeus's rule; despite all these things, she refused to submit. We will never know what's in store for the Titianess of witchcraft; only that Circe is the only divinity with a happy ending.
Lee Anne Christensen
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