Z (
werepuppyblack) wrote in
thegreatlibrary2018-05-07 11:02 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Welcome to the Library
Who: Open Post
What: Opening Post
Where: All over the library and its grounds
Warnings: [to be edited if necessary]

Today the Great Library opens its doors to all Patrons, who have come from many of the stories and books all available on the shelves.
For this first visit, Patrons will be restricted to the Library and its grounds.
Fortunate, then, that these are impressive indeed - large gardens set up for all sorts of activities, woods surrounding the area and in the Library itself? Cafes, internet access, and the best weapons in the universe: books.
Do enjoy your first visit to the Library, Patron, and always remember the rules.
The Rules of the Library
1. Patrons cannot read further ahead in their own stories than the time they have arrived from. Any attempt to do so will result in being met with blank pages.This lack of information will also occur if trying to find out spoilers online.
2. Patrons cannot tell other Patrons how their story ends. Any attempt to do so will find the Patron unable to find the words to explain it.
3. All books must be shelved correctly.
4. Do Not Harm the Books
5. Do not interfere with the nature of Narrative Causality
What: Opening Post
Where: All over the library and its grounds
Warnings: [to be edited if necessary]

Today the Great Library opens its doors to all Patrons, who have come from many of the stories and books all available on the shelves.
For this first visit, Patrons will be restricted to the Library and its grounds.
Fortunate, then, that these are impressive indeed - large gardens set up for all sorts of activities, woods surrounding the area and in the Library itself? Cafes, internet access, and the best weapons in the universe: books.
Do enjoy your first visit to the Library, Patron, and always remember the rules.
The Rules of the Library
1. Patrons cannot read further ahead in their own stories than the time they have arrived from. Any attempt to do so will result in being met with blank pages.This lack of information will also occur if trying to find out spoilers online.
2. Patrons cannot tell other Patrons how their story ends. Any attempt to do so will find the Patron unable to find the words to explain it.
3. All books must be shelved correctly.
4. Do Not Harm the Books
5. Do not interfere with the nature of Narrative Causality
just https://tinyurl.com/y7a6oxlf into the night
Of Denmark?
[The shift is unconscious. Ophelia might not have the bearing of one of the great ladies of court, but Polonius's children had been raised to be diplomats, if only by the guidance of an invisible hand.]
She is-- a small kingdom, my lord, with more islands than I've ever been able to hold count of. Elsinore sits in her east, that the king and his guard may better guard the straits from Sweden's advance on our people.
No kidding. An anticlimatic "...hang on, *I* was supposed to kill you all..."
A nation at war, then, or at great risk of it?
[He can imagine it clearly, from her words; such a place would be difficult to defend.]
poor sweet boy, just trying to live his best life
A nation in constant consideration of it. The death of my dread lord the late King Hamlet death has put the whole of the kingdom in fear of it.
[And mourning, but surely that went without saying, clear enough in the careful shifting of her fingers around the cup.]
But his line is well-loved and much respected. I should think the risk no greater now than it always is.
Conquering a country that's just imploded is no fun.
Perhaps such fear is the destiny of all nations, much as I would hope otherwise. I have never known a time when my own country was not at war.
is it even a country if it's just Horatio sitting in a fire saying "this is fine"
[At any rate, it must be the destiny of soldier and of kings. Both thoughts seemed to fit as a comfortable mantle around the shoulders of the man sitting before her.]
Does Gondor fight at home or far afield, my lord?
Horatio is an island unto himself, though not really by choice.
Our enemy has gradually brought the war to our own doorstep. Though we have fought him off a little, and our captains left but a few days ago to return to battle to his front door.
[He sighs and rubs his forehead, suddenly looking older than his years.]
So it is both, to answer your question, for we have traded land and lives back and forth for generations, accomplishing nothing save our own survival. Which is no small prize, it is true--but I would be grateful to see an end to it at last. I have no love for war.
and tragic mind islands are such a pain to conquer
Ducking her head into a sip of her drink is instinctive. Men like Hamlet didn't particularly enjoy being observed in their long moments of quiet.]
Wise men never do. And I am certain, my lord, that it is-- no small prize for men to be wise before their hair has turned grey.
Poor Horatio. He deserves so much better.
You are gracious, my lady, and I thank you for it. Will you tell me more of yourself, Ophelia of Elsinore? Have you been here long?
quick, to the fanfic mobile!
Not long. [Although long enough, apparently, not to be so terribly off-put by oddities in the world of the Library--particularly not delicious ones like this chai.] Although I must say I-- should not mind terribly lingering here for some time. The grounds alone seem worthy of a week's study, before one even reached the books.
Amazing how many stories there are where he marries Ophelia, who's pregnant with Hamlet's son...
[He looks around with an emotion somewhere between wonder and wistfulness.]
I too would be happy to stay, were it not for my duties and my worries about those left behind. I had rather be a scholar than a soldier, given my choice. This--this seems a wondrous dream of a place, beyond my imagining.
LET THEM BE HAPPY, OKAY
[It was extraordinary, really, the amount of times soldiers always seemed to find they had once the battle lines had fallen properly quiet.]
It seems a peaceful enough place, at any rate.
DO YOU SEE ME ARGUING NO YOU DO NOT ;)
APPRECIATED :')
I suppose I am-- wishful to be a dutiful daughter, more than that. And-- should that endeavor require some scholarly pursuits, I should not mind it.
Pffft like I'd disagree on that point.
An impulse I certainly understand, though one not always easily accomplished. What behaviour do your parents consider necessary of a dutiful daughter?
<333
Her lips purse thoughtfully as her attention drops to her cup. Laertes hadn't quite managed to pick up the edges of tactfulness from their father, but it's become easier to fall back on the older she gets.]
Respectful of my father, supportive of my brother, and well-equipped to manage the man I marry at least as well as my mother before me.
no subject
So you have a father you wish to treat with respect, and yet he also requires management. What is he like? And your brother, your mother.
[She says so little of herself, even when asked direct questions. Perhaps he can learn more of her indirectly, from how she speaks of her loved ones.]
no subject
[Some men more than others, to be sure, and some days more than others as well. Still, this topic is clearly the sort of thing that perks the corners of her lips back up slightly.]
My father is chief counselor of the King of Denmark. Even in times of peace and prosperity, it begs much of him.
no subject
I think you are probably right, my lady, and we are fortunate when we are so deftly handled! I think too that you have learned much of tact and diplomacy from your father. Or, perhaps, from your mother?
[She imply her mother managed her father well, after all.]
no subject
My father would certainly prefer to be given the credit, and I will confess I have had far more years under his tutelage than my lady mother's.
no subject
no subject
[Polonius would, she expects, have preferred a slightly more docile daughter. Still, even his complaints were always affectionate.]
My brother has been finishing his studies abroad. When he returns, he's expected to join the king's guard.
no subject
no subject
[The feeling is not unfamiliar, although Ophelia suspects that she bears a heavier burden from their father than Laertes does. The thought is easily banished by the light wave of her own hand.]
Have you siblings, my lord?
no subject
[He looks around the library with some amusement.]
He would find this place very dull and quiet.
no subject
Quiet I suppose, but dull?
(no subject)
(no subject)
I love this so.
I love Beowulf. I mean this.
I love both. Let's give him Gilgamesh too.
crosscanon book club?
We probably want to have them wander off to get books and draw this to a close.