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Oct. 5th, 2011 11:17 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So yesterday I was fruitlessly trying to register for ILLiad (the inter-library loan system) as a new user, and it kept erroring me out and/or telling me my username was taken, so I gave up and resolved to just go to Howie-T today and ask how to ILL a book, except then I got back from class today and right there IN MY E-MAIL was my ILL account. I just. What the fuck. I'm glad one of the easy usernames actually stuck, though, not one of the whacky ones I was trying. (I don't know if it's automated or not, but I suspect that ILL might be really made at me now.)
Anyway. I have put in an ILL request for Virgil's Schoolboys: The Poetics of Pedagogy in Renaissance England, which sadly neither Tilton nor Monroe has. My first ILL request! I feel all grown up or something.
Meanwhile, yesterday I was having a Sad, so I went to Maple Street meaning to just go to the bookshop and get a book I'd been eyeing for awhile, but I just kept meandering and ended up in Swap, which is a consignment shop I really like. I ended up with a skirt and a shirt. I wish I was better at being aggressive; the embroidery pattern on the skirt is slightly marred by a loose thread where the stitching's come undone, and while it has eyelet hooks, there aren't any clasps, just loops of thread, which doesn't seem quite right for a high-quality garment. The clasps I brought up, the loose thread I didn't, but eh. I mean, it's still a good price for a nice skirt -- it's a lot harder to find heavy cotton skirts than you'd think it would be, everything's rayon or polyester or, at best, a light cotton these days. The shirt is your standard cowboy-ish style button-up -- I know I could get a similar shirt at Goodwill for ten dollars less, but I can't get to Goodwill and it still wasn't a bad price. (My roommate just spent $130 on a shirt from the Alexa Chung collection, which even she admits is ridiculous for a shirt, so I'm keeping it in perspective.)
I did end up going back to the bookshop and getting the book I wanted, which is Jennifer Roberson's Lady of the Forest. I read it a long, long time ago, probably in middle school, and my public library now longer has it and it's been haunting me for a while. I can't remember if it's actually any good, but now I can find out! ...eventually. When I have time to read it. (There are one or two scenes that I'm pretty sure are from this book that really stand out for me, but since I've never reread it, I don't know for sure if they (a) are from this book or (b) actually exist.)
I'm now wondering if it's Lady of the Glen, which I read around the same time (but which had a different cover, DEAR GOD), that had the massacre; for some reason I thought it was that Little House book that was set in the Highlands, but...that doesn't seem like a very Little House thing to do.
Also, I think I have figured out the frame concept for the next Rilian story, because I want to worldbuild laaaaaaaawcoooooodes. I think I switched to writing more Telmarine Narnia than Golden Age because the worldbuilding is more full of lulz, let's be honest. I was thinking of doing ballads, but I think lawcodes will be lulzier. I know. My writing process is so refined. Elegant, one might say. Distinguished, even.
If a Mole or a Rabbit or any other Person shall build their burrows or homes in the track of a road or path or any other place known to be frequented by Men, Horses, or any other Persons and an injury should result, then the Builder is liable to be sued for damages resulting...
(Yep. Reading Las Siete Partidas, which is way more full of LOLZ than I'm pretty sure Alfonso X of Castile meant it to be. But that's just me.)
Anyway. I have put in an ILL request for Virgil's Schoolboys: The Poetics of Pedagogy in Renaissance England, which sadly neither Tilton nor Monroe has. My first ILL request! I feel all grown up or something.
Meanwhile, yesterday I was having a Sad, so I went to Maple Street meaning to just go to the bookshop and get a book I'd been eyeing for awhile, but I just kept meandering and ended up in Swap, which is a consignment shop I really like. I ended up with a skirt and a shirt. I wish I was better at being aggressive; the embroidery pattern on the skirt is slightly marred by a loose thread where the stitching's come undone, and while it has eyelet hooks, there aren't any clasps, just loops of thread, which doesn't seem quite right for a high-quality garment. The clasps I brought up, the loose thread I didn't, but eh. I mean, it's still a good price for a nice skirt -- it's a lot harder to find heavy cotton skirts than you'd think it would be, everything's rayon or polyester or, at best, a light cotton these days. The shirt is your standard cowboy-ish style button-up -- I know I could get a similar shirt at Goodwill for ten dollars less, but I can't get to Goodwill and it still wasn't a bad price. (My roommate just spent $130 on a shirt from the Alexa Chung collection, which even she admits is ridiculous for a shirt, so I'm keeping it in perspective.)
I did end up going back to the bookshop and getting the book I wanted, which is Jennifer Roberson's Lady of the Forest. I read it a long, long time ago, probably in middle school, and my public library now longer has it and it's been haunting me for a while. I can't remember if it's actually any good, but now I can find out! ...eventually. When I have time to read it. (There are one or two scenes that I'm pretty sure are from this book that really stand out for me, but since I've never reread it, I don't know for sure if they (a) are from this book or (b) actually exist.)
I'm now wondering if it's Lady of the Glen, which I read around the same time (but which had a different cover, DEAR GOD), that had the massacre; for some reason I thought it was that Little House book that was set in the Highlands, but...that doesn't seem like a very Little House thing to do.
Also, I think I have figured out the frame concept for the next Rilian story, because I want to worldbuild laaaaaaaawcoooooodes. I think I switched to writing more Telmarine Narnia than Golden Age because the worldbuilding is more full of lulz, let's be honest. I was thinking of doing ballads, but I think lawcodes will be lulzier. I know. My writing process is so refined. Elegant, one might say. Distinguished, even.
If a Mole or a Rabbit or any other Person shall build their burrows or homes in the track of a road or path or any other place known to be frequented by Men, Horses, or any other Persons and an injury should result, then the Builder is liable to be sued for damages resulting...
(Yep. Reading Las Siete Partidas, which is way more full of LOLZ than I'm pretty sure Alfonso X of Castile meant it to be. But that's just me.)
(no subject)
Date: 2011-10-05 05:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-10-05 06:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2011-10-05 11:10 pm (UTC)I loooove your Narnian legal codes. I am a total sucker for amusing medieval-esque laws, I did an entire paper on laws concerning the king's cat. Also there's a bit in the laws of medieval Wales that says the jester gets a horse as a gift from the king but he has to lead it out of the court with the reins tied around the horse's balls. Yes really. You would not believe the trouble I had to go to in order to find a definition of the word for testicles in Middle Welsh, for some reason *whistles innocently* it's not in the dictionaries.
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