Why this word is great
PSYCHAGOGUE — [Noun] A necromancer or conductor of souls to the underworld. From the Ancient Greek ψυχή (psychē, "soul") and ἀγωγός (agōgos, "leading, guiding"). Unlike "necromancer" (which conjures specters for knowledge or power) or "theurgist" (which seeks divine ascent), the psychagogue is the ferryman of the forgotten, the shadowed guide who walks the liminal path between worlds. It is the whisper in the tomb at midnight, the hand that parts the veil of mist over the river Styx, the figure who stands at the crossroads with a lantern that casts no light—a reminder that some borders are crossed, but never erased.