A.Z. Fell ✦ The Principality Aziraphale (
salutosinedelectat) wrote in
voidtreckernet2021-10-09 12:08 am
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[Voice; Nebula 19th, evening]
Good evening, fellow passengers,
I hope this message finds you well.
Foremost, you must forgive me in any mistakes I may make in sending this address to you all, as I'm certainly not used to sharing my thoughts in such a way. I'm most definitely more of a fan of the classic handwritten letter.
I was going over the upstairs library collection, so generously donated by other passengers - and you're welcome add to it yourself), when I found myself wondering about the extensive possibilities of literary works to be found in the countless worlds we not only come from, but the ones we visit.
Since there's scarcely a chance to explore such things in the worlds we stop at, wrought with conflict as they tend to be, I figured the easier option would be to simply ask:
What are your favorite literary works from your world? What are they about? Which are considered timeless classics?
I eagerly await your response.
Your curious fellow passenger,
Aziraphale
Oh, also, if anyone's interested in submitting anything to the library, I have provided clean notebooks and writing material in the far right nook in the upper floor of the library. I'm also available to provide custom book binding services.
--
[Edit: Edited into a voice post, forgot there aren't text post options.]
I hope this message finds you well.
Foremost, you must forgive me in any mistakes I may make in sending this address to you all, as I'm certainly not used to sharing my thoughts in such a way. I'm most definitely more of a fan of the classic handwritten letter.
I was going over the upstairs library collection, so generously donated by other passengers - and you're welcome add to it yourself), when I found myself wondering about the extensive possibilities of literary works to be found in the countless worlds we not only come from, but the ones we visit.
Since there's scarcely a chance to explore such things in the worlds we stop at, wrought with conflict as they tend to be, I figured the easier option would be to simply ask:
What are your favorite literary works from your world? What are they about? Which are considered timeless classics?
I eagerly await your response.
Your curious fellow passenger,
Aziraphale
Oh, also, if anyone's interested in submitting anything to the library, I have provided clean notebooks and writing material in the far right nook in the upper floor of the library. I'm also available to provide custom book binding services.
--
[Edit: Edited into a voice post, forgot there aren't text post options.]
no subject
Regardless of whether they're written down or passed on by bards, they're still important. It's nice that everyone can share the same story, though, as it was first told. Makes for a lot less mistakes in the storytelling, I'd wager.
Oh, so he's a God himself? Or is he a demigod, like Heracles? [Sorry for the blasphemy, Aziraphale buddy, he legitimately doesn't know.] And 1582 is... after BC? [It's honestly hard to wrap his mind around, two millennia of human development, how much they've changed, how far things must have come.] So the humans were using the wrong calendar for... [Quick math] nearly 1,630 years? How did this Father Gregory bloke figure out Lord Caesar's calendar was wrong?
no subject
Right. And, yes, I do suppose it makes it all the easier to have accurate versions for different peoples, but there's still some discussion to be had about older texts. It's an industry that's been improving over the centuries, but it's quite difficult to verify those that were made before all of it was properly available.
[ Aziraphale has never really been picky about blasphemy, not of this level, anyway. He mostly found himself concerned when he heard something that might be against Heaven's rules, when he was employed, but finding offense in interpretation or lack of somehow apparently predisposed knowledge was more of a thing humans did. ]
It's a bit more complicated than that. But the point is that his importance was immense, and therefore used as a reference by some peoples that followed His teachings.
And as far as the calendar, Julius Ceasar was mistaken about the length of the year, and the Christian churches do quite like their holidays, so they made sure to nudge the math into the right place.