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====Bethsaida: Purity==== | |||
…I have been thinking a great deal about the catechism as I continue my tour. Every night, I open the book written by our ancestors and I always find something of wondrous value. Some might call our beliefs and ways outmoded, but how can they be, when there’s so much truth in them? | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
Revision as of 15:46, 9 July 2020
I want to copy all the bits printed in the broadsheet (not just Beth's letters but the funny headlines about Liolesa's nerves of steel post-assassination-attempt) into one place for later reference, so here this is!
History
"Newspapers were a new invention; they hadn’t existed when he’d been introduced at court, and he’d left before they gained any acceptance. He thought they’d begun seeing some use shortly after his betrothed’s presentation to Liolesa as Nuera’s heir… and even now, they remained newfangled. Printing presses had not yet turned their equipment to the manufacture of books, which remained the province of artisans, and it was unlikely they ever would now that the Alliance had arrived en force."[1]
The broadsheet is run out of Argent with equipment supplied by Liolesa and purchased in the Alliance. The business is owned by one of the members of the city's middle class, Darvel Bet Jesa, who employs two copywriters, his sister, Tanyth, and a cousin of one of the palace servants, Eroan Fin Jesa. The news for the broadsheet is provided by a variety of sources:
- "press releases" from the secretaries of noble Houses at the capital
- gossip from various palace servants, solicited or submitted (personally or anonymously via a slot into the broadsheet's place of business)
- investigative journalism and interviews, conducted by Tanyth or Eroan, either prior to or after events
- occasional tips from anonymous sources (invariably a noble wanting to get someone else into the paper)
- letters from readers
Liolesa personally saw to the broadsheet's set-up, but after arranging for the equipment she has never--to Darvel's knowledge--contacted the broadsheet, or asked them to publish anything on her behalf. Any official items she wants published she sends through her secretary or chancellor. She does, however, have unofficial channels she uses to feed the broadsheet, but no one's aware that she's doing it, except Maia.
Maia later becomes a correspondent for the broadsheet, in the form of one of its "anonymous sources."
Mechanics
This is where we talk about circulation.
The broadsheet is written in Universal, and later is digitized for dissemination throughout the world, via Sediryl's wiring of the various villages.
Content
Articles
- EMPRESS DISPATCHES ASSASSIN BY HER OWN HAND DURING NOCTURNAL ASSAULT: "A source close to the Empress" may or may not have reported that the assassin, after climbing through the window into the Empress's bedchamber, met his end writhing on her bed as she stabbed him repeatedly, and then set her wolves on him, who proceeded to "eat him, possibly before expiry." [2]
Photos/Drawings
- Liolesa at her desk, sipping tea while studying her correspondence with typical sangfroid, captioned: "NOTHING DISTURBS THE APPETITE OF THE STEELY EMPRESS OF THE ELDRITCH PEOPLE." [2]
Letters
Bethsaida: So Many Saints
Have you ever wondered why our people have produced so many saints? Particularly female saints? Today I am on my way to the convent devoted to Saint Marien. It is a beautiful place, nestled in the foot of the western mountains. I have never been to this part of the kingdom, and the people are generous despite their poverty. They give me bread, though their cheeks are pinched. I am so far from home, and yet in my exile…. I feel loved.
We are a strong people. Even in destitution, there is pride. We have a great deal to learn from our own people, particularly those far from our cities.
Most of all, what I have learned is that we are strongest when we rely on our own strength. We have barely begun to tap the depths of our people! Our culture, preserved here in the wilderness from those who would change or shape it, for ‘our own good.’ We don’t need to be taught what is good. It’s right here, in the mother who shared her soup with me when she had so little to give.
We have nothing to be ashamed of. I had wondered why we had so many saints, and I am beginning to understand. It’s because we breed amazing people on this world.
Tomorrow I shall arrive at the convent. No doubt I will find it beautiful. I can’t wait to tell you all about it. —Bethsaida Emil Galare[1]
Bethsaida: Purity
…I have been thinking a great deal about the catechism as I continue my tour. Every night, I open the book written by our ancestors and I always find something of wondrous value. Some might call our beliefs and ways outmoded, but how can they be, when there’s so much truth in them?
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Healer's Wedding, Chapter 2
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Farmer's Crown, Chapter 20