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/lit/ - Literature

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>> No.20710285 [View]
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20710285

What do you guys think of my intro?

"One cannot raise walls against what has been forgotten.
The citadel of Ishuäl succumbed during the height of the Apocalypse. But no army of inhuman Sranc had scaled its ramparts. No furnace-hearted dragon had pulled down its mighty gates. Ishuäl was the secret refuge of the Kûniüric High Kings, and no one, not even the No-God, could besiege a secret.
Months earlier, Anasûrimbor Ganrelka II, High King of Kûniüri, had fled to Ishuäl with the remnants of his household. From the walls, his sentries stared pensively across the dark forests below, their thoughts stricken by memories of burning cities and wailing multitudes. When the wind moaned, they gripped Ishuäl’s uncaring stone, reminded of Sranc horns. They traded breathless reassurances. Had they not eluded their pursuers? Were not the walls of Ishuäl strong? Where else might a man survive the end of the world?
The plague claimed the High King first, as was perhaps fitting: Ganrelka had only wept at Ishuäl, raged the way only an Emperor of nothing could rage. The following night the members of his household carried his bier down into the forests. They glimpsed the eyes of wolves reflected in the light of his pyre. They sang no dirges, intoned only a few numb prayers.
Before the morning winds could sweep his ashes skyward, the plague had struck two others: Ganrelka’s concubine and her daughter. As though pursuing his bloodline to its thinnest tincture, it assailed more and more members of his household. The sentries upon the walls became fewer, and though they still watched the mountainous horizon, they saw little. The cries of the dying crowded their thoughts with too much horror.
Soon even the sentries were no more. The five Knights of Trysë who’d rescued Ganrelka after the catastrophe on the Fields of Eleneöt lay motionless in their beds. The Grand Vizier, his golden robes stained bloody by his bowel, lay sprawled across his sorcerous texts. Ganrelka’s uncle, who’d led the heartbreaking assault on Golgotterath’s gates in the early days of the Apocalypse, hung from a rope in his chambers, slowly twisting in a draft. The Queen stared endlessly across festering sheets."

>> No.19417722 [View]
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19417722

>>19417684
Weather or not philosophy is obsolete is a philosophical discussion. Thus by making this post, you have proven philosophy is not obsolete.

>> No.19118156 [View]
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19118156

>>19112600

bro literally just read what you want, it's that easy

>> No.18848186 [View]
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[ERROR]

>>18848169
All you need to know is that if you like it, you're a bakker chad. One of us. If you don't like it, you've been massively filtered. I hope it's the former future bakker bro.

>> No.18836926 [View]
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[ERROR]

Bakker.

>> No.18723720 [View]
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18723720

>>18723690
>.. a plague whose primary symptom was certainty. How the God could be equated with the absence of hesitation was something [he] had never understood. After all, what was the God but the mystery that burdened them all? What was hesitation but a dwelling-within this mystery?

>> No.18702601 [View]
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18702601

>There is no such thing as "non fiction." Everything is fiction.
>There is no such thing as a "hard" book, only stupid or inexperienced readers.

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