thestraggletag:

awed-frog:

Hey, do you know that feeling of hitching up a long skirt so you don’t fall on your face when walking upstairs, and then you immediately become a wretched yet resolute Jane Austen character? It’s a universal thing, right?

It’s like resting a laundry basket against your hip and suddenly you’re a long-suffering peasant woman, wondering if you’ll survive the winter.

I usually wear just-below-the-knee skirts and am therefore a hardworking stenographer wondering what I can buy on the way home that’s cookable on the hot plate I’ve rigged up in my bedsitter.

copperbadge:

quasi-normalcy:

Yet another reason I’m sad Terry Pratchett is dead is because I just know that the Discworld novel he would have written in response to recent developments in Britain and the world would be fucking scathing.

“A small but growing number of people believe we should magically summon a new world turtle and place Ankh-Morpork on its back in order to leave the Disc entirely, sir.”

“Intriguing.”

“It can’t be done, sir. Especially not the…” Drumknott consulted his paperwork. “…bit where, and I quote, Obviously we’ll leave all the foreigners behind. They seem divided on the precise definition of foreigner but it seems to include anyone who doesn’t look like them, and most people who do look like them but speak funny.”

“Ah, we’ve reached that part, where we define foreigner so we know who to give the boot to,” Vetinari sighed. 

“It’s obviously not really plausible, sir, we’d lose a lot of good trade routes if there were no longer any external portions of the Disc attached to us, and having consulted with the alchemists there’s a strong sense among them that we would shortly run out of air to breathe should we leave the Disc’s protective weather systems.”

“Ah, but they can vote on it, you see,” Vetinari said. “They can campaign for it. And just knowing we ought to do it…”

He pulled a report across his desk, one in the crabbed, unmistakable schoolboy handwriting of Sir Samuel. “Crime is up, Drumknott.”

“I wasn’t aware we’d increased the Thieves’ Guild allotments this month, sir.”

“We haven’t. Nor the Assassins’ Guild. Unfortunately the crimes on the rise are of the go-back-where-you-came-from variety and there is, as of yet, no Bigots’ guild.”

“Do you think creating one would stop them, sir?”

“Not in this case, no,” Vetinari murmured. “I suspect we shall have to leave it up to human decency and the efforts of the Watch.”

Drumknott gave him the most horrified look he’d seen since the first time he suggested promoting Sir Samuel. 

“Not really, sir?”

“Of course not. Good lord, Drumknott. I shall have some errands for you today, however, and you’d best fetch the Commander. And Mr. De Worde. Get De Worde here first, then bring in Sir Samuel when he’s had just enough time to get nervous in the waiting room. If Sir Samuel is at home, do bring her Ladyship along, otherwise I’ll see her at the dinner tomorrow night. Ah yes, and I believe I shall pay a visit to Mr. Von Lipwig tomorrow afternoon; please notify him of the impending surprise inspection of the mint.”

“But sir, what will you – “

“That will be all, Drumknott,” Vetinari said.

In the crevices of Vetinari’s mind, gears began to turn. Disorder, of course, was a natural aspect of any city, but unpleasantness of this sort led to much too much and the wrong kind of disorder. After all, at one time Ankh-Morpork had simply been a swampy plain; trace a family back far enough and everyone was an immigrant. The kind of thinking that led to one saying they were taking their city and leaving sooner or later led to metaphorical shoving matches over who looked a little too igneous to be allowed, or whose mother sent funny food with them to school, or who exactly was allowed to wear what kind of cloth on their head. 

And the whole thing, as he knew from personal experience, could very well lead to unpleasantly large dragons. 

Perhaps it was time to set some spinning tops in motion. 

Which Member of the York County Association Are You?

shelomit:

howtophd:

shelomit:

So I hear we’re supposed to do fun stuff on Fridays, right? Welp, yesterday I spent most of my day transcribing spiritual experiences associated with the York County Association, General Conference of Maine (a Congregationalist body), but due to ~technical issues~ wasn’t able to finish the task in the evening. Naturally, I instead spent my evening transforming the biographical and spiritual data in the seven most extensive narratives into a ridiculous online quiz. Enjoy?

image

I’m sitting here, wheezing. Some of those questions were entirely too accurate (”there’s always the teaching profession” “the WOODS”), and so is this result. 

I mean, I can spell my (sur)name, but apparently noone else can. Also, as someone who’s somewhat confused about their spiritual leanings because the mom’s side of the family is Catholic, the dad’s side of the family is Württembergian Pietist, and my (school) religious education was mostly Lutheran, this is all too real. 😀 😀 😀 

Glad that my geekery was of service C : 

By the way, I think the main reason that two results on the quiz are so much popular than the others is because you-all are reluctant to pick sides when it comes to the Bangor Seminary/Andover Seminary rivalry. You-all are clearly good-hearted, but I must point out that Bangor is the correct answer! 

Which Member of the York County Association Are You?

Hello, friend! Fellow Shakespearean and academic here. Congratulations on your book! Hope the academic press is as jazzed about it as you are. :) I’m always down for Shakespearean fanfic, so if you have any OTPs from the canon, I would love to read it. The prompt: “This bar closed an hour ago, but you’re cute and you tip well, so I’ll keep it open for you. Why are you drinking so much after midnight??”

oldshrewsburyian:

Thanks, friend! I hasten to disclaim any credentials as a Shakespearean, but I suspect that your prompt may be the set-up for the first meeting of Sir Andrew Aguecheek (the most hapless person!) and whoever it is whose existence allows him to say “I was adored once too.” I like imagining Sir Andrew as a good tipper. I like to think things work out for him, in the long run. He is, obviously, pretty oblivious, but unless I’m forgetting something, he seems far kindlier than Sir Toby.

To more properly answer your question: unlike many of the Shakespeeps around here, I don’t do modern AUs, but, if I were to try to make that prompt work for Henry and Cate, he’d be the bartender, while she’d be fed up with parental expectations and also Men Generally. If for Beatrice and Benedick, she’d be the bartender (obviously) and kind of annoyed by how attractive she actually finds him, even when he’s sloshed.

robbyiswriting:

I think all writers need a friend who will encourage their desire to write absolute garbage. Not necessarily something that is badly written, but like, stupid self indulgent bullshit. “Cringey” aus or crossover fanfics. Aus or crossover fics of your own ocs. 

Writing that stuff is fun and is great practice, but sometimes I feel like “wow, this is hardly productive, why am I even writing this, who else would ever want to read this?” The answer is your friend who encourages your trash writing, that’s who. Write it for yourself and for them.