The Worldsmith [Chapter Three] [Axis Powers Hetalia, England, America, others]

Jun 04, 2010 20:16

HEY GUYS HEY GUYS

IT'S BACK

DID YOU MISS IT

I SURE DID

Title: The Worldsmith [Chapter Three: Rehearse Most Obscenely and Courageously]
Author: puella_nerdii
Fandom: Axis Powers Hetalia
Characters: England, America; William Shakespeare, Elizabeth I, Robert Devereaux, and assorted other actors, playmakers, peers, gentry, scoundrels, spies, and thieves.
Rating ( Read more... )

genre: gen, fandom: axis powers hetalia, rating: pg-13, length: 5000-10000, multichapter: the worldsmith, fic, genre: m/m

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ellenel13 June 5 2010, 02:48:36 UTC
This is so cool. Every time America tries to talk Elizabethan, I start laughing. I bet that company is having so much fun with him. I loved every single part of this chapter. And I'm feeling pretty bad for poor Spenser too. I'm such a sap, it happened hundreds of years ago.

I cannot tell you how funny it is to imagine America being Bottom. Though I could've sworn he's supposed to be ugly.

(Also, when england gets all dizzy, shouldn't America be able to carry him by himself because of super strength and all?)

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puella_nerdii June 5 2010, 02:54:09 UTC
America's Failzabethan is slowly improving! But he'll be malapropping for a while to come, because it's so much more fun that way. And yeah, I think the company really does have a blast with him. (And hey, I feel pretty bad for Spenser, since what I am putting him through is technically more than what he had to endure in history, poor guy.)

Well, he's certainly ugly when he's an ass, but I don't think he's exceptionally ugly before then. Just clownish.

(Were England not nearly as tall as America and were America not going up a flight of stairs, yes. It's a lot harder to lift something that's almost as big as you are, especially going up stairs.)

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ellenel13 June 5 2010, 03:04:14 UTC
I know it can't happen because of history and stuff, but I'm totally imagining Shakespeare basing a character on America's weird speech pattern. It's been forever since I studied some basic Shakespeare in high school English, but I think a huge part of his art was a play on words.

(That makes sense, but I was thinking since he could throw around a bison as a baby then a he would have no trouble as with just a grown man)

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puella_nerdii June 5 2010, 03:07:25 UTC
You're right, it was -- hell, he invented a nice chunk of words and sayings that have since entered the vernacular. And I like to think that his experience with America and England in this might've laid some of the seeds for The Tempest, but who knows?

(He's also not as concerned with where the bison lands, while I think he cares more about what happens to England...)

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ellenel13 June 5 2010, 03:14:53 UTC
I wonder how it's going to be like if England or America fill him in about the time travel stuff. I think he would realize that if America knows he's work, that he has manage to transcend time which is a big deal for a lot of artists. And America would probably be like "dude, you're so fucking huge that people are still speculating about your life in the 2000s!" and I think he'd be happy.

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puella_nerdii June 5 2010, 03:17:03 UTC
...oh man I seriously can't talk about this because of spoilers, but. Well. You'll see. *grins*

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