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LETTER–To Alexandre Dumas
Letter to Alexandre Dumas opens with recognition of a literary legacy as rich and enduring as the great legends passed down through generations. Your pages, filled with vitality and courage, have not aged but only deepened in resonance. Though you once feared your creations might vanish like castles in the sand, their strength now appears more elemental—etched into culture, unshaken by time or fashion. Like the stories of Scheherazade or Boccaccio, yours continue to charm, stir, and thrill. Your voice,…-
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LETTER–To M. Chapelain
Letter to M. Chapelain begins with a spirited defense of truth against the fanciful exaggerations that often slip into tales of exploration and knightly valor. The writer warns against false accounts, cloaked in noble language, which describe mythical lands with more imagination than honesty. These narratives, filled with dragons, gold-paved cities, and miraculous relics, serve more to entertain than to inform, reflecting a long tradition of exaggeration in both medieval chronicles and modern colonial…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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LETTER–To Master Isaak Walton
Letter to Master Isaak Walton opens with a warm tribute to the legacy of quiet joy that Walton bestowed through his writings, particularly The Compleat Angler. The author remembers a gentler time, when streams flowed clear and freely through green countryside just outside London. These waters once offered solace to weary minds and provided an equal pleasure to the seasoned sportsman and curious novice alike. Now, with cities creeping outward and smoke blackening the skies, such calm spaces grow fewer. The…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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LETTER–To Jane Austen
Letter to Jane Austen begins with a quiet yet sincere admiration for a literary voice that once echoed in drawing rooms, now faint amid the louder tones of modern fiction. The author opens by noting how Austen’s art—subtle, moral, and finely tuned—has drifted from favor in an era that hungers for urgent passions, bold causes, and dramatic upheaval. Austen's heroines, though modest in scope and setting, are painted with an intelligence and clarity unmatched in the broader romantic tradition. Their…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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LETTER–To Lucian of Samosata
Letter to Lucian of Samosata opens with an image of that fabled land where souls of laughter dwell undisturbed, where you, Lucian, might now be delighting in an endless banquet of irony, jest, and philosophical banter. One imagines Heine tossing witty remarks like grapes across the table, while Plato, no longer forced to defend his forms, smiles indulgently at your mockery of solemn pretenders. In that imagined island of light, you sit beside Voltaire and Rabelais, not as rivals, but as fellow craftsmen of…-
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Letter Epistle to Mr. Alexander Pope sets the tone for a reflection that is at once admiring and interrogative, as the writer examines the complicated aura that surrounds Pope’s poetic legacy. Rather than offer blind praise, the letter moves carefully between Pope’s enduring influence and the thorny criticisms that have shadowed his name. Those who study Pope often do so with divided minds—some celebrate his wit and linguistic precision, while others accuse him of vanity and self-interest. His garden…
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LETTER–To Herodotus
Letter to Herodotus opens not with reverence but with a lightly sardonic tone, as the author sets out on a pilgrimage of sorts to trace the truth behind your renowned tales. This journey leads to the island known as Britain, where ancient rivers such as the Thames still flow, though now flanked by a sprawling metropolis more consumed with modern machinery than memories of antiquity. There is little curiosity among its people about the classical past; Herodotus, if known at all, is regarded more as a…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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Letter to Pierre de Ronsard begins with an image not of glory, but of solitude and loss—a poet once crowned by laurels now lying beneath disturbed soil, his tomb dishonored by storms of fanaticism and revolution. The admiration poured into this letter is tempered by the irony that while Ronsard sought a humble resting place by the Loire, shaded by trees and remembered only by his verse, his grave instead bore the brunt of turmoil. Yet, that broken tomb does not mark the end of his legacy. His poetry,…
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LETTER–To Charles Dickens
Letter to Charles Dickens begins not with division, but with a call for balance—between voices, between readers, between the living force of your imagination and the measured realism of your great peer, Thackeray. Though their methods differed, both you and he worked toward understanding the heart of humanity, seen not only in drawing rooms but also in workhouses and alleys. The letter dismisses petty rivalry, instead urging appreciation of how both authors shaped the English novel. Your pages, Charles,…-
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LETTER–To W. M. Thackeray
Letter to W. M. Thackeray opens with a tone free of rivalry or self-interest, allowing full appreciation of a writer whose literary grace has outlived the age that birthed it. Your work is remembered not as a product of duty, but of inspiration that struck with the urgency of truth. Unlike those who approach writing as mere occupation, you shaped your stories with the spirit of a wanderer who observed life from within and without. Critics who dismissed your vision as cold or cynical misunderstood the…-
82.9 K • Ongoing
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