The Witch And Her Two Disciples Page
"The Witch and Her Two Disciples" (also known as "The Witch and Her Two Apprentices") is a significant lore element in Honkai: Star Rail, appearing as a painting that represents the backstory of the character Madam Herta, a member of the Genius Society.
One disciple typically embodies Obedience and Tradition. This character absorbs the Witch’s teachings verbatim, valuing structure, hierarchy, and the preservation of the status quo. They represent the "good" child in the archetypal sense, seeking to please the mother figure.
Triple Goddess Tropes: Many myths feature a central magical figure with two others, often representing stages of life (maiden, mother, crone) or a coven of three, such as the Weird Sisters in Macbeth. Gaming and Modern Media Disciple of the Witch - Two - Kingdom Death the witch and her two disciples
The Narrative Arc: From Tutelage to Tyranny
The story of this trio almost always follows a tragic, three-act structure.
The witch watched his missteps as a gardener watches a vine that wants to climb the roof. She tightened instruction and set rules—no magic to harm without remedy, always name the coin you intend to move, always return a borrowed breath. Lenn obeyed outwardly but kept a private ledger of justifications. Where the witch taught repair, he kept an account of advantage. "The Witch and Her Two Disciples" (also known
The night turned into a catastrophe. Malakai was caught by the society's guards, and in a desperate bid to save him, Elara was forced to use her most powerful illusion yet. The plan backfired, and in the chaos that ensued, Arachne found herself face to face with the leader of the secret society. A battle of magic ensued, one that Arachne, despite her strength, found herself on the brink of losing.
Tension crested when a rich widow arrived at the hedgerow, eyes like flint. Her manor had been looted in the night; she demanded the witch find the thief and compel confession. Lenn's fingers itched. He imagined the confession like easy fruit. Sela, however, proposed a different path: the widow should ask herself what she had done to invite secrecy—had she kept doors barred and meals mean? Had she pushed a hand too far? Social alchemy, Sela insisted, must precede coercion. They represent the "good" child in the archetypal
are classic examples. While they often worked alone, their stories frequently involve them guiding or manipulating others (like Medea helping Jason) to achieve their ends. Hansel and Gretel
The Psychological Interpretation From a psychological perspective, specifically a Jungian one, the trio can be viewed as a single psyche. The Witch represents the Shadow or the Wise Old Woman archetype—unconscious, deep, and dangerous knowledge. The two disciples represent the conscious mind in conflict. They are the Ego attempting to integrate the Shadow.