820 Results with the "Fiction" genre
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Chapter
LETTER–To Percy Bysshe Shelley
Letter to Percy Bysshe Shelley begins with a nod to your lifelong disregard for public approval, a stance rare among poets of your time. You were not driven by fame, nor did you tailor your words for comfort. Yet the irony lies in how the same public you ignored has elevated you after death. You feared your voice might vanish in scorn, but the echo of your verses still vibrates across generations. What once stirred scandal now inspires reverence, and even those who dismissed you grudgingly acknowledge your…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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Letter to Monsieur de Molière, Valet de Chambre du Roi opens with a gracious nod to the dual magnificence of French theatre and monarchy, suggesting that your elevation of comedy runs parallel to Louis XIV's refinement of the state. While kings may command armies and build empires, you, through satire and sharp human insight, built a mirror—one that society still cannot ignore. What you did for laughter was not to make it cheap, but to shape it as a tool for reflection, even reform. In your plays,…
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82.9 K • Ongoing
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LETTER–To Robert Burns
Letter to Robert Burns begins not with solemn tribute but with the familiar cadence of fondness, both for the man and the myth he became. You were not just Scotland’s poet—you were its pulse, its raw nerve, its laughter after loss. Your name, once printed in Kilmarnock, echoed far beyond the fields of Ayr, finding kinship in places where hearts break and songs rise to meet the pain. When Scots raise a glass in your name, it is not just nostalgia. It is recognition of something unshaped by…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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LETTER–To Lord Byron
Letter to Lord Byron begins with a spirited nod to your reputation—grand, scandalous, and still undecided in the hands of modern critics. The pen that writes to you carries both admiration and a grin, acknowledging that no figure in English letters has divided taste with such drama. Where Leigh Hunt once addressed you as “noble,” this letter does so with a blend of respect and irreverence, much like your own poetry—bold in tone, layered in intent. In the drawing rooms of your time, and now in…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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LETTER–To Omar Khayyam
Letter to Omar Khayyam opens not with formality, but with a breeze—the kind that stirs rose petals over your resting place, reminding us how you taught the world to notice what fades. These petals, caught mid-fall, echo the very verses that made you unforgettable. You did not plead with eternity or argue for paradise. Instead, you toasted the present with a full cup, choosing laughter over longing. Your words, carved in the wine-drenched air of Persia, still carry the scent of warmed earth and distant…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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Chapter 1
The chapter opens with the protagonist, a young woman, braving a harsh winter forest in search of game to feed her starving family. Perched in a tree, she struggles against the blinding snow and bitter cold, her hunger driving her farther from safety than usual. The landscape is desolate, with animals scarce and the threat of wolves and faeries looming. Her desperation is palpable as she reflects on the dwindling food supplies at home and the grim reality of her family’s survival. As she moves through…-
96.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter 2
The chapter opens with Feyre returning exhausted from a hunt, carrying a deer carcass through the chilling dusk to her family’s impoverished cottage. The vivid descriptions of the fading light and the worn cottage highlight the harshness of her life. Inside, her sisters’ frivolous chatter contrasts sharply with Feyre’s weariness, emphasizing her role as the family’s sole provider. The faded ward-markings around the door, a futile attempt at protection against faeries, underscore the family’s…-
96.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter 3
The chapter opens with the protagonist and her sisters, Elain and Nesta, navigating a muddy winter road to their village's market day. The sisters maintain a tense silence following an unresolved conflict from the previous night. Despite their strained relationship, Nesta and Elain accompany the protagonist, likely motivated by the prospect of financial gain from the hides she plans to sell. The bleak winter landscape and ramshackle village contrast with the tantalizing aromas of rare spices from the…-
96.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter 4
The chapter opens with a sudden, violent intrusion as a monstrous faerie beast bursts into the protagonist's home, accusing her family of murder. The creature, a terrifying hybrid of feline, wolf, and elk features, threatens the household with its claws and fangs. Despite her fear, the protagonist positions herself defensively in front of her cowering sisters and injured father, armed only with a hunting knife and makeshift weapons. The family's feeble wards and iron trinkets prove useless against the…-
96.6 K • Ongoing
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Chapter 5
The chapter opens with the protagonist being led by a beastly faerie into the dark forest, filled with dread about her uncertain fate. A white mare awaits them, displaying an eerie calm despite the beast's presence. As they journey north toward Prythian—the faerie realm—the protagonist grapples with her fear of entering a land from which no human returns. She reflects on her forced bargain to live with the faerie, uncertain whether this means servitude or death, and worries about her family's survival…-
96.6 K • Ongoing
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