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#we also have Les Miserables too or am I seeing letters
psalm22-6 · 6 months
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An interesting letter from Paul Meurice and the rabbit holes it led me down
If you're bored and want something fun/french to read, consider reading the correspondence of Victor Hugo and Paul Meurice. You will find lots of interesting tidbits and really quite touching phrases. Here's a look at just one letter that caught my eye (the above portraits become semi-relevant later). So the letter is undated but contextually, it's from early June 1862. Hugo, in Guernsey, was in close communication with Meurice, in Paris, over the final corrections for Les Miserables and the publication of its last volume. Meurice writes:
Javert Derailed, The Death of Gavroche, The Grandfather, The Passion in the Sewer, the whole drama, the whole volume, the whole poem is splendid. My word! I must straightforwardly decline to express my enthusiasm to you. I would need to have your prodigious execution and your incredible form in order to explain the depths of my feelings. My emotions and my admiration are inexpressable. I can’t understand Barbey d’Aurevilly.* I’ll tell you simply: it is sublime! I cried! You are greater than anyone, greater than yourself!
*The phrase is "Je jette ma langue aux Barbets d Aurevilly." This gave me some trouble to translate. I figured that he is using the expression jeter sa langue au chien (which I gather means something like "I can't guess at",) but replacing chien with barbet, a type of dog that sounds like Barbey, and also possibly making some sort of pun about d'Aurevilly's distinctive barbe (aka beard)? I really thought he might be making a pun about Barbey's 'barbs' (as in cruel remarks, since his reviews were very negative) but it doesn't seem like 'barb' has that meaning at all in French.] Now bear in mind that in this next part, by "volume ten" he means the latter half of Jean Valjean, and by "these last four volumes," he means what we would call the last two, L'idylle rue Plumet, et l'epopee rue Saint-Denis and Jean Valjean
I have only read the first page of volume ten. We are very behind on the assembly, printing, and everything. Yet we will do everything so that it appears on the 30th.
And it was published the 30th! I don't remember rn what was causing the delays but it is surely mentioned in Bellos's book or in Leulliot's.
The effect and the success of these last four volumes will be immense. More irresistible and more unanimous than that of the other parts. Too irresistible and too unanimous from a certain point of view. It offends many people; some critics are cold, though they were well dispositioned before the book’s appearance. Don’t read into it, don’t hear things in these particular silences and particular reluctances: it can be felt, seen, and touched.
Fun to speculate about if Meurice was concerned about a particular person's silence (in which case, whose?) or if it was just in general. Hugo had expressed his frustration over the reception to both Vacquerie and even Jules Janin. I'd have to look over their correspondence again to see what Hugo said in particular to Meurice but he was surely aware of how Hugo felt. OKAY now on to the subject of the portraits, Meurice tacks on this aside at the end of the letter:
I am writing this to you in haste, having let myself run late. Do you remember a portrait of you, full-length, but young, made some time ago by Deveria? The painting is excellent but why! I never knew you like this…This portrait would have belonged to a M. le marquis de Valori! If it is truly your portrait, it’s very strange. You should remember it then. You are seated on a red damas couch. White pants, a small redingote. You are blond, thin, elegant. The person who has it wishes to sell it. She’s asking for 250 francs. Would it amuse you to have it? They’ll want your response at the end of the week.
Of course when I read this I want to know what image he is talking about. I first thought of the image on the left (scroll back up)...the image on the left is a black and white photo of what is presumed to be a portrait of Victor Hugo at age 16 (I say presumed because that is literally how it is described on Wikipedia) (sometimes it is just described as Hugo as an adolescent) by Achille Devéria (although apparently it has been disputed which Devéria painted it?). The original was, supposedly, at some time in the collection of Prime Minister of France Louis Barthou. Where is it now? Perhaps it is in the private collection of Ms Taylor. Can we get a color photo of it? No. Swift. So my mind went to this image because the subject is young, blond, possibly Victor Hugo, and possibly created by Devéria. However, it doesn't fit the rest of the description. Then @pilferingapples kindly made me aware of the portrait on the right. From what I have found online, this one is attribution to Paul Gavarni, although the websites making that attribution are pretty sketch. The portrait was supposedly at one time in the possession of M. le D. F. Jousseaume, a bookstore owner. Where is it now? Also unknown. (The provenance of both of these is kind of sketchy tbh. I checked three books about Hugo that I have which include images (Victor Hugo: A Tumultous Life by Samuel Edwards, Victor Hugo: A Biography by Graham Robb, and Victor Hugo: S'il n'en reste qu'un by Sophie Grossiord, a curator at the Maison Victor Hugo) and none of them include either of these images.) Whatever the case, the image on the right fits the description in almost every way: it is full length (en pied), the subject is young, thin, there's the red seat, white pants, wearing a coat, and he's "blond" by french standards apparently (and consider that this photo may be a bad representation of the portrait). I haven't seen that image attributed to Deveria but it's possible (or possible that Meurice would believe it's possible.) Then there's the question of provenance. Why did M. le marquis de Valori have it and who was the woman selling it? My guess is that the man in question was Henri-Zozime de Valori, a writer who knew Nodier and who died in 1859. He had published a collection called Odes choisies: précédées d'un discours sur la poésie et les poetes lyriques anciens et modernes which was reviewed (by "S.") in Le Conservateur littéraire so he may have been aquianted with Hugo some way?
Anyways, evidently, Hugo didn't want the portrait because he never responded to that part of Meurice's letter and it eventually came into the hands of the bookseller D. F. Jousseaume. And where is it now? No idea! Okay, the end.
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lecarreverse · 3 years
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The great author recalls Smiley’s origins in one of his last pieces of writing, a new introduction to Call for the Dead.
I wrote Call for the Dead, my first novel, because I had been boiling to write for 20 years but had never quite had the prompt. I had done book illustrations, I had written bad poetry and one or two stories, and produced a couple of amateur plays, and become a reasonable hand at caricatures. In a bookless household, I had managed to acquire some sort of taste for books, largely because of a master at one of my early schools who read aloud to us beautifully from Conan Doyle and GK Chesterton. At 16, having fled my English public school, I took a huge sidestep into German language and literature and ended up teaching them at Eton, with the result that English letters always played second fiddle. It took a lurch from Eton into the intelligence community to get me writing Call for the Dead, and the prompt came from John Bingham, novelist, spy and colleague.
In MI5 the standard of report writing was very high indeed. Registry and senior officers were all pedants and descended on you like eagles if they spotted a sloppy sentence or an unsubstantiated claim: “Too fluffy. Can you actually demonstrate this? If this is hearsay, kindly say so clearly,” ran the marginal comments in different handwritings as your report came whistling back to you from the top floor. It was my first experience of having to battle for every sentence I wrote as if it had to stand up in court.
The agent-running section to which I was eventually attached was dominated by two figures, both men: Maxwell Knight, naturalist, broadcaster and the subject of at least two published biographies, and Bingham. Knight, allegedly of the far right, though I never heard him on politics, was by the time I knew him tolerated only on account of the agents he had recruited long ago and that were still beholden to him. He was a big, unwashed, silvery, boy scout of a man, of great charm and idiosyncratic habits that included bringing ailing small animals such as gerbils into the office in his jacket pocket. Bingham could scarcely have been more different.
Everything about Knight suggested that he be enjoyed with caution, but John was approachable, unassuming, quietly spoken and a kindly shepherd and confessor to his agents, mostly women. He was also a needle-sharp intelligence officer of great experience, as I had good reason to learn when one of my agents was blown and I needed his urgent advice on how to limit the damage. And John of necessity did much of his work in the evenings, when his agents returned home from their high-wire acts needing his consolation and wisdom and a large gin.
So by day, when he wasn’t writing a report, John was writing a novel. He had written quite a few by then, thrillers, all published by Gollancz and well received. I don’t remember that we ever talked about the process of writing. John, once a journalist, didn’t see himself as a literary man, just a thorough writer doing a job. The one piece of advice I remember him giving me was to stick a postcard with £100 written on it above my desk and look at it every time I thought of giving up. But far more inspiring than anything he could have said was the simple act of him sitting five yards from me day after day at his desk with his head down and a hangover, writing himself a novel on lined paper. And I suppose, at the most primitive level, I decided that if he could do that, I could.
I lived in Great Missenden in those days and commuted to Marylebone station, then walked or took the bus to Curzon Street. The train journey was an hour plus, so I wrote in small notebooks supplied, I am ashamed to say, by Her Majesty’s Stationery Office. I just wrote. And the first person who came to mind was the man who got me going: John Bingham, one of the meek who do not inherit the earth.
But no real character in my experience is drawn directly from life, and for George Smiley I needed a lot of things that John simply hadn’t got and didn’t wish to have: an obsession with German literature (although he spoke decent German), a miserable private life, a sense of being strapped to the secret treadmill and not knowing how to get off it, and most importantly serious moral questions about the work I was doing. John was, to say the least, a nationalist, and doubts of that sort were simply not his thing, particularly when his every evening was spent buoying up women agents who were, in their estimation and his, sacrificing their private lives for England. So where to turn?
Well, my own life had been pretty well supplied with moral doubt, not least by my father, a conman on the run from the law. But I needed more stately concerns for George Smiley, bred in me in part by the unsparing plays of Schiller, Lessing and Büchner and the anguished cries of 17th-century Germany.
But Smiley is not at heart an academic. In the beginning was not the word but the deed, Goethe tells us through the agency of his Faust, and Smiley refuses to shirk from action where he believes in the rightness of his cause. And so it seems to me now, with the luxury of hindsight, that for Smiley’s conflicted inner life I resorted to my beloved mentor, Dr Vivian Green, by then rector of Lincoln College, Oxford: scholar, administrator, closet iconoclast and Anglican priest whose institutional faith over time gave way to a universal humanism. I don’t know any more whether you will find the seeds of all this theorising in my first stab at George Smiley, but I do. We have grown up together, changed and matured together, and seen his likeness exquisitely portrayed by two great actors, Alec Guinness and Gary Oldman. But for me he’s still the same soul-searching secret sharer that I wrote about in little notebooks on the rattly commuter train from Great Missenden to Marylebone.
Extracted from Call for the Dead by John le Carré; the 60th anniversary edition is published by Penguin Classics on Thursday.
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travelcenter-uk · 3 years
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Top 5 Cities to Visit in 2021 for Bookworms
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There are no places in the world that bookworms have not travelled to. Starting from the streets of London to the villages of India, we have been everywhere. The descriptions of places in every book that we read have been our little bubbles of peace. And, we have all enjoyed the solo tours through the pages that take us to places. Sometimes, some places become a part of us. Some places, although imaginary, become so real to us. Some places, we add to our bucket list because they are worth a real visit.
It is the third type that I am going to talk about in this article. A list of best cities around the world for all the bookworms to visit in 2021!
Sit back and read till the end to know more about the literary destinations in your bucket list. Look out for the quizzes that come in between!
First off, we’ll start with the centre of Literature;
London!
London is the heart of many best-selling novels of all time. An inspiration for many of our favourite authors, like William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, JK Rowling, Jane Austen, and many others.
I know most of you already know this, so let’s talk about what more London has for you as one of the best cities to visit in Europe. Of course, for the bookworms!
Get on the Hogwarts Express & Head to the WB Studio Tour!
We grew up in the streets of London as children every time we read Harry Potter. Besides wanting to visit Hogwarts, we have all wanted to visit the Platform 9¾ at least once in a lifetime.
This opportunity for you is open at the King’s Cross Station, London! Although the platform is not as J.K. Rowling describes it as in the book, you can still take a picture to treasure.
Photo tips include: A picture with the cart, wearing a scarf and holding a magic wand in your hand. Or, get someone to shoot a video of you trying to run through the secret wall.
In addition to all this literary fun, you will also find the official Harry Potter Platform 9 ¾ Shop!
London does not have only one place to visit for the Harry Potter fans. I know how much this makes you happy! So, the next best thing for you to do in London is to,
Take a ride on the Hogwarts Express and Go shopping in the Diagon Alley
These are the two best things to do in London that’ll make you feel like a real wizard/witch. The train heads to Scotland (pretend like its Hogwarts), cutting through the lush countryside. This two-hour ride to Scotland would be enough for you to fill your gallery with many iconic images to recreate.
If that isn’t enough, then you still have an option to select a two-day train journey around the highlands.
Won’t say ‘to wind up’, but maybe if you haven’t seen enough, then the Diagon Alley is the best place for you to go next.
It is a cobblestoned wizarding alley allocated for shopping in London. The alley, just like the one described in the book, is an assortment of shops and restaurants. Besides London’s Leadenhall Market and Borough Market, this is the ideal place for you to do your muggle shopping!
As much as these places in London excites the Potterheads, the next literary spot is going to satisfy the wannabe Sherlock Holmes! Because, next, you are going to,
Embed your footprints in 221B Baker Street!
Being London’s iconic places to visit in 2021, 221B Baker Street is the Home to the famous (fictional) consulting detective, Sherlock Holmes! What is so special about Baker Street is that it covers Sherlock Holmes art and memorabilia.
For those who want to get a full-on detective experience, the Sherlock Holmes Museum at 221B located between 237 and 241 is fantastic! Why? Because it recreates the rooms from the series, including Holmes’ laboratory (I know you wouldn’t want to miss this).
Besides this, you can also check out the Sherlock Holmes Public House and Restaurant located nearby.
Apart from the signature drink, thrills at the Platform 9 ¾ and Baker Street, you can also, visit the famous museum of Charles Dickens, to find a lock of his hair (a little weird, I know) and his lemon squeezer! The die-hard fans can also encounter personal letters and manuscripts of Dickens.
Next,
Try out Jame's Bond's signature drink!
“Three measures of Gordon’s, one of vodka, half a measure of Kina Lillet. Shake it very well until it’s ice-cold, then add a large thin slice of lemon peel. Got it?”
If you remember this, then you sure know what signature drink we are recommending you try.
The Duke’s Hotel in London serves this signature drink of 007 in its most original form. Inspired by James Bond’s way of ordering, the golden rule to this martini is for it to be “shaken, not stirred”!
Once you had tried the Vesper Martini, here’s
A list of other things to do in London;
Visit the garden squares of Bloomsbury, where lots of great writers, artists and intellectuals have met in the 1920s and 30s.
Explore the British Library, famous for Jane Austen’s writing desk!
Enjoy drama at the Shakespeare’s Globe
Take a look at the Keats House
Encounter the famous Elephant House
Pay a visit to the Eagle and Child
Check out the Greenway House
Be a part of the Poet’s Corner
Experience the wild Ashdown Forest
Take a look at the Hilltop House
Visit the Brontë Parsonage
Walk into the George Inn
It’s just mind-blowing how London counts as one of the best cities to visit in 2021 for the bookworms. The city constitutes innumerable literary things-to-do that I could write a whole other article on! (You can let me know down in the comment if you want one!)
I know I have told you way too much about London here. But, this is not the end. We have more best cities around the world for you to visit!
In that list, let’s see what the city of Love has for the bookworms;
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Paris
While for the rest of the world, Paris means love, for the bookworms, Paris means Les Misérables! The city was the heart of Victor Hugo, who based his novel ‘Les Misérables’ in the 19th-century Paris. Paris has always been in the romantic bucket lists but here’s why it could now be in your literary bucket list;
You can take a literary tour in Paris by foot or a metro
It’s as simple as that! Just save more Euros to visit Disneyland Paris and take the literary tour on foot. Metro sounds excellent too. But walking around the streets would give you an experience that’s more than just a literary tour.
However, you get to choose your convenient mode of transport. Meanwhile, here are some of the best literary spots in Paris that we don’t want you missing out!
First, visit the park that Hugo highlights in Les Misérables,
Jardin du Luxembourg!
It is where the first meeting between Marius Pontmercy and Cosette happened!
Besides Les Misérables, Henry James also had featured Luxembourg park in The Ambassadors.
It also has been a favourite spot for American writer Gertrude Stein and her partner, Alice B. Toklas.
Fun fact: Many famous writers are said to have spent time wandering in the park for inspiration.
Next,
A trip to the Home of famed French writer Victor Hugo
I know we talk a lot about Hugo as we stroll through the literary streets of Paris. It is because there was perhaps no other significant writer who wrote about the enchantment of Paris the way Victor Hugo did. His Home has now become a museum dedicated to his life and his works.
So, if you are a fan of his writing, you should not miss this out. Not a fan? Then this visit is still worth it! Because you are sure to become a fan overnight!
After a visit to two of the memorable Les Miserable spots, you should,
Experience the authentic literature spot, La Closerie des Lilas
Fun fact: Legend has it that F. Scott Fitzgerald showed Ernest Hemingway the manuscript to The Great Gatsby at this place!
It has been a significant meeting point for literary geniuses, where they had recited and shared their work during the days. At night, the spot had been a place for debate and literary discussion for many American novelists as they enjoyed the chilly nights of Paris.
Paris, like London, is one of the best cities to visit in 2021 to quench your thirst for literary destinations. Besides these literary activities, you also have a whole range of places to visit, like; the American Library in Paris, Maison de Balzac, Harry’s New York Bar, Musée de la Vie Romantique, Café de Flore, Shakespeare & Company and much more!
Next in the list of best cities to visit in 2021 for bookworms is,
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Cairo
One of the best cities around the world for bookworms to visit! Why? Because it is the birthplace for many famous novels like Fates’ Mockery by Naguib Mahfouz, Death Comes as the End by Agatha Christie and The Spy Who Loved Me by Ian Fleming!
You can start your literary tour in Cairo from the Egyptian Museum. Here you can discover more about the origins of the hieroglyphics and ancient papyrus.
You can also check out the Cairo Marriott palace where Agatha Christie, the English writer, stayed for three months.
Noisy neighbourhoods can be a little daunting. If you can cope with that, then the Miami Metro Hostel in the Garden City area is a great place to stay. It lets you spend the night in the apartment block that inspired Alaa Al-Aswany’s international bestselling The Yacoubian Building.
For, James Bond fans, you can head to Darb al-Ahmar where Ian Fleming set the ground for Bond to walk around the 2,000-year-old Mosque of Ibn Tulun.
In addition to these, the Great Pyramids are also a must-visit. Not just because that is what Egypt is famous for, but also became it evokes memories from the opening of Christie’s famous mystery novel, Death on the Nile.
The next city is vibrant out of the best cities around the world to visit for bookworms;
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Tokyo
There’s no best novel than Murakami’s Norweigan Wood that can describe Tokyo in its most extraordinary form. So, for those who have read Norweigan Wood, Tokyo is one of the best cities to visit in 2021!
Some of you avid readers may already have noted the highlighted places in the book. But, for those who haven’t, these are what you must do in Tokyo to get the full experience of Murakami’s novel.
Walk the roads where Watanabe followed Naoka for most of the afternoon.
Start from JR train, where the duo had their first encounter. Get off at the Yotuya station. Walk to Ichigaya, the ultimate one-stop-shop for a hardcore Murakami fan, where you’ll feel every bit of the book come alive. After the long walk, you can dine at “Komatsuan”, the place the two of them dined at.
Next,
Multiple train ride from Kichijoji and Shinjuku
The first trip you should take is to Shinjuku, where Watanabe used to work part-time. Then, the jazz bar Dug where he goes to with Midori. These multiple train rides from his residence to his workplace and the chilling spot will give you a complete experience of the book.
Once you have encountered the second half of the book, next,
Wakeijuku-Watanabe's dorm!
Wasade Daigaku is the real place in Tokyo that inspired Murakami to create Watanabe’s dorm. It is a university campus, gorgeously covered in green. You can walk from the university to Watanabe’s dorm in the book- Wakeijuku. The place is no different from what Murakami has described it as in the book.
Besides Norweigan Wood, other famous novels are also in Tokyo. Some of them are; Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima, Who Is Mr Satoshi by Jonathan Le, Flesh and the Mirror from Fireworks.
After Tokyo, in our top 5 cities in 2021 for bookworms, we have the city of Russian writers!
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St. Petersburg
The residents consider this city as “a stone book whose pages were created by great Russian poets and writers.”
St. Petersburg is one of the best cities to visit in 2021 for bookworms, considering the reflection of Roman Literature in the city. Not just that, the city also has many shrines dedicated to writers and literary characters. These buildings also have plaques marked to commemorate writers and poets.
It’s always a cultural visit if you loved Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment because you get to explore the literary past and present of St. Petersburg. There is no insufficiency in Literature in this city. It widely includes a collection of the best museums, workplaces and memorials to Russian writers!
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These top 5 cities to visit in 2021 for bookworms do not limit the countless other places available for literary visits. So, if you want to read more and add more such best cities around the world to your bucket list, let us know in comments.
Oh, and don’t forget that you can always make Travel Center’s exclusive deals into unforgettable literary tours. All you need to do is to talk to one of our friends at Travel Center. They are always online to give you all the information you require.
Don’t wait too long; we have already got the deals for the best cities to visit in 2021 & 2022 ready for you!
Read More:- Top 5 Cities to Visit in 2021 for Bookworms
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sav-grey · 3 years
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who: sav & jene ( @jenevievemccoy​ ) when: after jene’s assembly
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Jenevieve had received the secret she was to reveal in front of the whole student body. It wasn’t hard gathering them around. She was on student council so holding a assembly saying there was important news for both the high school and college students. She hated this, it was still better than the alternative, she just hated how both options hurt Axel. She only hoped he didn’t hate her after all of this. Once everyone was gathered in the auditorium, she walked up to the podium, staring back at the student body. “Attention students of Luxor. I have some unfortunate news to share. While this girl walks the halls and terrorizes everyone inside, her acts of aggressions towards the luxor students is not her first. I feel it only important for everyone to know so you can watch your back so you also don’t fall victim to this bitches psychotic actions.” Jenevieve paused as she took a deep breath. Maybe Axel would believe she was blackmailed into it. But she doubted he would ever speak to her after this. “Madeline Benoit was expelled from Institut Le Rosey in Switzerland for pushing her frenemy down the stairs and killing her. Her school covered it up and forced her out and dumped her on our doorstep.” She took a deep breath, forcing her voice not to crack. “While it is claimed as a prank gone wrong, we will never know for sure, the way maddie terrorizes those who do not like her is proof enough that she is not afraid to use violence to solve her problems as she almost killed me as well. So next time you see her in the halls, turn and run. You may be next” Jenevieve placed the mic down before leaving the auditorium and going into a classroom nearby. She tried to calm herself down, counting things she saw and taking deep breaths, hearing footsteps approaching, she spun around. “Stay away from me”
Sav had been mostly avoiding school-wide events. Especially ones where she had to be sober. Ever since the secret santa party, she had been trying to avoid everyone for the most part, and then when she snapped at Zander during the blind date party, essentially confirming everything, well….that had caused her to retreat into hiding again. So for this important assembly, she came in at the last second, hovering by the doors so she could bolt as soon as it was over. She wasn’t the first to bolt though. Jene was. Sav wasn’t surprised, because if she learned anything about her former roommate, it was that she pretended to talk big and then backed off as soon as it came down to it. She…didn’t hesitate in assuming it was true, if she was being honest. She knew Maddie, and also knew (from personal experience) that the secrets coming out now were…somehow true. So she followed Jene. It was easy enough for her to slip out of the doors after all that. “What the fuck was that?” Sav asked, her head tipping to one side as she ignored Jene’s words. “Should I assume you were behind telling the school bullshit about me, too? Some sort of sick vendetta against Maddie and I because the entire school fucking hates you and we’re the obvious ones to take it out on? Pathetic. Even for you.”
Jenevieve snapped around to face Savannah. "I don't have you Savannah, and It wasn't me that leaked your secret, to be quite frank, I wasn't even there when your secret was revealed. I haven't heard what it even was besides whispers." She spoke honestly. "It wasn't me. I didn't want to do this. I didn't have a choice. You think I wanted to stand up there and call the girl that threatens me a murderer in front of the whole school? I don't have a death wish, but I got a bounty on my head now."
“God, get your head out of your own ass and learn to listen, Jenevieve,” Sav snapped in return, her eyes narrowing. “I didn’t say you hated me. I said the whole school hates you,” she corrected as she stepped forward, narrowing the distance between them. “Sure, Jene. Sure. I definitely believe that,” she continued, the sarcasm practically visible in how it was dripping from her words. “You’ve had it out for Maddie since she started fucking Axel, despite the fact that if you had any self respect, you would’ve confronted him about it instead of being the type of low class trash who blames the other girl,” she continued, really getting into it now. Honestly, maybe it was unfair to take this all out on Jene, but…Sav had been bottling up too much for too long now. “As for the bounty? Well, you got that right. Because you’re exactly the type of person to work the Crusade, or hell, even start it. So excuse me if I don’t believe your little innocent act.”
"I know what you said. I heard you, You also said I had a sick vendetta against you and Maddie. I just wanted to emphasize that I do not hate you nor have any issues with you." Jenevieve pointed out. "Actually, me and Axel talked it out. So your theory is wrong there." She said referring back to the letters. "Axel was the one three timing everyone, although he wasn't dating any of us. I've moved on from that. And to correct you, I've had it out for Maddie the day she harassed me in the hall and I poured my latte on her head." She informed the other. "It had nothing to do with Axel. She was a thorn in my side for a while, but if you can tell, I don't really talk to Axel much anymore." They haven't really spoken since the letters. "Come on Savannah, you lived with me for a whole year. I don't know shit about anyone. I will confirm the crusade is behind this, but I am not behind the crusade. If I was, you really think I would stand in front of everyone and reveal a secret, because now everyone thinks I am behind it, You would be thick to think I could pull something so harsh off."
“If anything, it seems to me like you’re the one who bullied Maddie, Jene. Pouring a coffee on someone? Pretty fucked up. People have been sued over less. And yet you still hold a grudge against Maddie but were willing to ‘talk it out’ with Axel?” Sav asked, complete with air quotes as she raised her eyebrows at the redhead. “That’s pathetic, Jene. I know I’ve said that a million times already, but truly, there isn’t another word to describe you. Here you are, calling Maddie a murderer in front of the whole school? Do you even register how fucked that is? God, you really deserved it when she tried to strangle you, didn’t you?” she said, disbelief crossing her face as she spoke. Sav paused, rolling her eyes at the other girl. “You’re right. You aren’t smart enough to pull it off. But whoever did start it wasn’t an idiot when they got you to do their dirty work. Because you have nothing to lose, right? No friends, no boyfriend, hell, pretty sure even your sister hates you. You’re so obviously the type of person who would be manipulated into this just to make everyone around you as miserable as you are. It’s disgusting. Can’t wait for this all to blow up in your face. You’ll be even more alone than you already are. Which even I didn’t think was possible. Good luck!” she added, a twisted smirk coming to her face as she turned on her heel, tossing her hair over her shoulder as she started to walk away, other students starting to stream out of the auditorium at this point.
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purplesurveys · 3 years
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1023
survey by ohsh1t2wksl8
Why might you get rid of an old family heirloom? I have the tendency to be a bad hoarder tbh, but I can imagine having no problem with throwing an heirloom out if I find out something particularly disgusting about the original owner, like if they were extremely racist when they were alive or were serial killers or something.
What is something that kids spend most of their time doing? Ooh, I haven’t been a kid nor have I hung out with kids in a while. I do know a lot of them like asking a series of questions, which I mostly find adorable. All my cousins did this with me when they were younger.
What is something that you might only do once a week? My family and I watch Sunday mass weekly. I’m not into it, but I don’t have a choice.
Why might a person wake up at 2:00 AM? Nightmares. I know this happens to me, at least.
What is something you might eat with a hamburger? I usually eat mine with French fries. But some restaurants serve burgers with onion rings, which is even better.
Name something that you haven’t done since high school gym class. Ran in an oval. That’s how we were made to warm up then, but in my college PEs we were never required to do so and stationary exercises usually sufficed.
How much would you tip a waiter or waitress for good service? Tipping isn’t required where I live and the whole calculating for the 20% bit is a completely foreign concept here. That said, I usually give a P20 tip as thanks in every restaurant I dine at; but if the service was exceptionally good, I’d give either a P50 or P100, depending on how much money I have left.
Who is your favorite character from the television sitcom, “Friends”? I think I’ve answered this recently but my answer will never change - it’s Chandler, for damn sure. Monica’s a really close second, and she was originally my first favorite until I realized Chandler is way too hilarious of a character that it would be almost an insult not to rank him 1st. The rest of my rankings go Rachel, Ross, Joey, then Phoebe.
What is something you can buy for only $1 or less? For P50, I can get myself a couple of ballpens.
Name a native Spanish-speaking country. Mexico.
What is a liquid in your kitchen that you hope no one ever drinks? Canola oil.
What is something that breaks down frequently? Me...hahahahahahahahahahaha but another answer would be the public trains that we have. Those have never been reliable and in pre-Covid days it was common to hear news of the LRT/MRT breaking down and passengers being forced to walk all the way to the next station. Of course, unsurprisingly, the government never really did anything about it, and with public transport being indefinitely halted due to Covid it’s now mostly a buried issue.
What is another name for “book”? The first guess that came to mind is publication, but now that I think about it it’s a bit of a broader term compared to book.
Name a famous wizard. I’m gonna go with the obvious because I’m not too familiar with this genre anyway: Harry Potter.
Name a piece of furniture that might be handmade. Tables! My grandpa hand-made our present living room table. :) It’s made out of wood but my mom spray-painted it black to fit more with the atmosphere she wanted for the house.
Whose name might you have tattooed on your body? I would have initials tattooed on me, but never names. That said...can’t really imagine anyone’s initials deserving a permanent spot on my skin. Maybe my kid’s/kids’, should I have my own in the future.
How long is an unbearable commute for you? I don’t commute. But as a driver, I will start getting pissed if I find myself on the road for 2 hours straight especially if my destination isn’t even too far away.
What is something that you always need to leave plugged in? The electric fan is turned on 24/7, unless I’m not in my room.
What is a sport that you’ve always wanted to play, but never got a chance to. Ooh, this is honestly hard to answer because back in high school we were given the chance to try out a bunch of sports - futsal, baseball, soccer, basketball, volleyball, badminton, table tennis, and even gymnastics and cheerleading. Name it and we were probably briefly taught it. And some sports I tried out on my own time, like beach volleyball and ultimate. Hmm...OH wait we never covered tennis!!! and I’ve always wanted to try that.
What is a fruit that you might eat in the morning? Hard pass.
What beverage do you most commonly drink with breakfast? I either have food accompanied with water, or just coffee with no food. I never have coffee if I’m having food for breakfast as I don’t like how that could affect the taste of my food.
Name a type of gun that doesn’t shoot bullets. Do water guns count? Haha.
Where is a place that you might not get cell phone reception? Underground parking lots. I’ve definitely gotten in trouble before for missing out on my mom’s texts and calls because I had been hanging out at a mall’s underground parking area.
Who might you send a selfie to? Angela, but I never really do that anymore. I used to, though, back when we still regularly sent each other Snapchats.
What is a plant that someone might grow themselves? My grandma keeps a lot of horsetail plants at my childhood home.
Name an item in or on your bed every night. I sleep beside my phone as I need the background noise from YouTube to lull me to sleep.
What type of vehicle would you not want to hit while driving? I’ve driven beside Porsches and Ferraris before, which has always made me quietly panic lmfao
What part of your body typically has an ache? I’m starting to get regular headaches after my shift. My shoulders and lower back also hurt more often now. Definitely time to invest in a comfy work chair.
Out of your work shift, how much time do you spend doing “actual work”? Hmm, not sure what actual work means butttttt on weekends, I’ll check in on work stuff for a total of maybe around 30 minutes just because I hate being far away from work for a long time haha.
Why might a person be running? They forgot something in their car and need the thing immediately.
Name an older actor who has been in lots of movies. Bette Davis.
Where is somewhere that you might need to use coins? Riding the jeepney. Or any public transport, really.
What material might be used in building a house? Concrete.
What is a metal that a coin might be made out of. No idea. I’ve long thrown my chemistry/physics lessons out of my head, lol.
Can you name a country that starts with the letter A? Azerbaijan.
What is something that comes out of clouds? Rain.
Name a food that would roll if you accidentally dropped it on the floor. Lumpia. And it is also a type of food I would have no problem picking back up regardless of where it lands. Lumpia is life hahaha.
What is something that comes in a glass bottle? Wine.
How long do your New Years resolutions typically last? I don’t make those, exactly because they never last with me.
What is something that you would hate to see floating around in your bathtub? I’d hate to be sitting in a tub filled with water that was already dirty before I could even settle in it.
About how many pages is the longest book you’ve ever read? I never finished either, but it’s either Les Miserables or Gone with the Wind.
Name something that Kentucky is famous for. Outside of KFC, which I’m pretty sure I heard somewhere that its first franchise actually opened in a different state, I have no idea.
Who would you call first after getting engaged to tell them the news? I can imagine it would be Angela.
Can you name a country with a lot of ice? I dunno. Finland maybe?
What color underwear might you wear for a special occasion? Black.
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