I don't think anyone here has it in them to do...that, not even if they had been provoked. Now, I may only understand three things very well - machines, the arts, and fabulous clothing - but something here is quite awry
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Ah, my dear, had you asked me who the likely third party in Iorello's War of the Rose of Fools was, I could have stated that given the political climate they have established in Act I, Scene II, it's obvious that Dordinus is the villain from the way he phrased his lamentations in the following scene.
Alas, my grasp of real-world politics is much more tenuous. Though - a lot of the plots in plays and novels boil down to the pursuit of money or power. Who would gain either, or both, from the two countries being at war?
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Alas, my grasp of real-world politics is much more tenuous. Though - a lot of the plots in plays and novels boil down to the pursuit of money or power. Who would gain either, or both, from the two countries being at war?
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I can think of plenty who would gain, in obvious and some not so obvious ways.
[ooc: This is her way of saying 'you're smarter than you let on and I know it']
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