Editing User talk:Rose

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[[User:Rose|Rose]] 15:18, 4 October 2008 (PDT)
 
[[User:Rose|Rose]] 15:18, 4 October 2008 (PDT)
  
 
Okay, I've got an idea.  In "real history", the Prime Minister of the UK from March 1807 to October 1809 was the Duke of Portland.  He was followed by Spencer Perceval, October 1809 to May 1812 (when he was assassinated).  Mulgrave was First Lord of the Admiralty until 1810.  George III's son (also named George) became regent for his father in 1811.  He was expected to put the Whigs under Lord Grenville into power, ousting Perceval, but he didn't.  Instead, he asked the Whigs to join with Perceval.
 
 
In "Temeraire history", the regency begins earlier, after the Battle of Shoeburyness, while the Duke of Portland is still PM.  Let's say that the Prince Regent and Portland don't get along, so the Prince Regent goes ahead and puts Lord Grenville into power.  Since the position of First Lord of the Admiralty is something of a political plum, Mulgrave is also booted out.
 
 
Now Confucianism has a virtue called Ren - humanity or humaneness.  It's expressed in the rule, "What you do not wish for yourself, do not do to others."  (Kind of the Golden Rule approached from the opposite direction - you're not enjoined to do good things, but rather to avoid doing bad ones.)  Confucianism is also strong on Zhong, loyalty.
 
 
So what if the Chinese were presented with the following facts:
 
*1) The King of England was ill and mad at the time his ministers made the decision to spread the Dragon Plague to the Continent.  He was not aware of this action being taken.
 
*2) Laurence and Temeraire effectively thwarted this action, thus preventing a violation of "Ren" from happening in the King's name.  This can in fact be seen as an act of loyalty.
 
*3) The ministers, again without the King's knowledge, had Laurence placed under sentence of death and Temeraire imprisoned in the breeding grounds.
 
*4) Laurence and Temeraire's role in expelling Napoleon's armies from Britain is another act of loyalty.
 
*5) The King's son has taken over the government during his father's illness to avoid any more wrongful acts from being committed his father's name.  (Filial piety, Xiao)  The evil ministers have been removed from government.
 
*6) Out of loyalty, Laurence and Temeraire have agreed to leave Britain at the government's request.  (Hammond can drop vague hints that this is to avoid them becoming a centre for rebellious elements, not mentioning that Temeraire himself is the most rebellious of the elements.  He's a diplomat, lying skillfully is his job.)
 
 
If the Chinese just sort of try to ignore the actions of the British, they'll lose face.  I'm guessing that this is the main problem rather than any real desire for revenge.  The line of reasoning I've outlined satisfies the demands of face, much as Laurence's distant relationship to the Plantagenets and his adoption by the Emperor makes it possible for him and Temeraire to be sworn as companions.  There was a problem (evil ministers), it was thwarted by Laurence and Temeraire, the King's son has taken steps to ensure that the problem does not recur.
 
 
Laurence comes off looking pretty good, especially for a guy who's never read the Analects.  (Maybe it's a chance remark by Temeraire that gives Hammond the idea to pursue this line of reasoning?  Temeraire would certainly be quick to agree that Laurence is both humane and loyal.)
 
 
Quite aside from the issue of diplomatic relations with the Chinese, this might give Laurence a new way to think about what he's done, not as treason but as a sort of deeper loyalty that would act to prevent genocide from being perpetrated in his country's name?
 
 
[[User:Rose|Rose]] 17:45, 20 October 2008 (PDT)
 
  
 
==Will Ferris go to Australia?==
 
==Will Ferris go to Australia?==
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They do :D
 
They do :D
 
At the end of BPW Arkady and his ferals start something like a march song, and the words are 'We are all flying home'. [[User:Natli|Natli]] 01:46, 18 October 2008 (PDT)
 
At the end of BPW Arkady and his ferals start something like a march song, and the words are 'We are all flying home'. [[User:Natli|Natli]] 01:46, 18 October 2008 (PDT)
 +
  
 
Oh, you're right!  :-)  I'd forgotten that. [[User:Rose|Rose]] 06:17, 18 October 2008 (PDT)
 
Oh, you're right!  :-)  I'd forgotten that. [[User:Rose|Rose]] 06:17, 18 October 2008 (PDT)
 
 
==Women's hours at the Loch Laggan baths?==
 
25) In "Empire of Ivory", Harcourt asks the men she's imprisoned with to turn their backs when she wants to bath.  This suggests that mixed bathing by adults is NOT the norm, not even among aviators. 
 
 
Emily goes bathing quite happily with the male crew in the ferals' cave in the Pamirs.  When corralled by a highly embarrassed Laurence, she is baffled that he thinks there's a problem, noting she hasn't begun to menstruate yet and anyway, she doesn't want to go to bed with any of the other crew members.  This sounds as if she would not bath with the men if she were already adult.
 
 
So there should be special women's hours at the baths for Longwing captains and adult women in training to become Longwing captains.  After all, would YOU like to be the one to tell an acid-spitter's captain that she's not allowed to use the baths?
 
 
== Will's other brother ==
 
 
Somewhere in HMD or ToJ Will mentions that his father would have been happier if he had chosen to be part of the clergy like his brother.
 
 
 
==Iskierka the Pirate Queen==
 
26) I'm still having trouble imagining Iskierka settling down sufficiently to ever give Granby any peace of mind.  And as we saw in HMD with Levitas and in VoE with Majestatis and Perscitia, dragon/captain relations don't always work out.  So my best guess for Iskierka's future career is as... a Pirate Queen!
 
 
The Allegiance has to cross the Indian Ocean to get to Australia.  Say a large storm kicks up, as one did the last time she made this crossing.  Granby, who's been drinking more and more heavily, is passed out below decks - no one can rouse him.  Temeraire, remembering his last voyage, grudgingly submits to having storm chains put on him, but neither he nor Laurence can persuade Iskierka to do the same.  Instead, she declares she will ride out the storm aloft and takes off.  By the time the storm subsides three days later, she is not to be seen anywhere.
 
 
Granby is initially heart-broken and has to be kept an eye on.  However, he eventually starts to recover.  Since there's no chance that the Corps is going to give a captain who's lost their only fire-breather another hatchling, Granby goes back to being Temeraire's first officer.  Temeraire is unabashedly delighted, Laurence a bit more sensitive but glad to welcome Granby back.
 
 
The next time we meet Iskierka, she's become the leader of a band of pirates.  They discovered her half-drowned and nursed her back to health, planning to "return" her to the Turks for a reward - she's a Kazilik, so they assume she's Turkish.  Recovered, Iskierka has no interest in this idea at all, but discovers a shared interest in winning prizes with the other pirates and ends up taking over the band.
 
 
She's still attached to Granby, so when she meets him again, she wants him to join the pirates - she herself is unwilling to give up the freebooting life.  Granby, sadder but wiser, refuses.
 

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