closed.
WHO: Caspar, Kostos, Lakshmi, Lexie, Marisol, Nell, Nikos, Petrana
WHAT: Coming into a Merchant Prince's house, on the day his daughter is to be married, and asking him and all his friends to quit with their stupid neutrality. Plus Truth or Dare.
WHEN: Mid-Harvestmere
WHERE: Antiva City
NOTES: Will update with CWs if needed.
WHAT: Coming into a Merchant Prince's house, on the day his daughter is to be married, and asking him and all his friends to quit with their stupid neutrality. Plus Truth or Dare.
WHEN: Mid-Harvestmere
WHERE: Antiva City
NOTES: Will update with CWs if needed.


no subject
"As to this dance it so happens that as an accident of birth," she replies wryly, "I do."
Even well past tipsy, Alexandrie is a excellent partner and follows Nikos with the ease and grace of a thousand evenings spent in just such a way. The body remembers even if the mind has a veil of drink over it. She won't try to take over their steps just yet but she's certainly coiled like a serpent, ready for him to be focused enough on words that she might, subtly, begin to backlead him.
"Tell me, are some not born cleverer than others? Some stronger? Some better at figures? Those too are an accident of birth, no? Do you say that because it is mere chance it should have no bearing on who is a smith, who a scholar?"
no subject
Which is good. Because Nikos has a lot to say.
"Innate skill is an accident of birth. It is also a product of upbringing. A man born a slave will be a slave, no matter if he carries buried in him the seed of skill. If that skill is never encouraged or recognized, what becomes of him? Nothing. He dies a slave. And," if she was thinking of rebutting, too bad; there's more-- "And at least in a trade, a son of a smith might work alongside someone who studied, to be a smith. Someone who learned. And yes, there might be an edge of innate skill, but even a mediocre smith might open a shop. How would you advise a poor man go about gaining access to your social circles? When he trips over his feet at a ball, will you think kindly of him? Will he be allowed to enter the ball at all? If he can buy his way in: perhaps. If he is rich enough, titled enough, if he gets a parcel of land in the right region of the country--"
He's gripping her hand quite hard now, as passion picks up. Gracefulness compromised by anger.
no subject
"I might advise a poor man with useful skill to find a patron or patroness to encourage its growth and take charge of his entrance into society. Perhaps you shall scoff at such, but how is such a suggestion different than telling any youth to seek out a master to apprentice to? Unless you mean to say that all, regardless of talent, deserve such education simply by virtue of their existence? How many apprentices do you mean a master to have? How many ways can the attention of one instructor be pulled before the quality of their instruction is throttled to nothing?"