In the beginning of Chapter Four of King Solomon's Mines we are given the distance travelled:
Now I do not propose to narrate at full length all the incidents of our long travel up to Sitanda's Kraal, near the junction of the Lukanga and Kalukwe Rivers, a journey of more than a thousand miles fr...
@Bookworm this needs a title & first line edit to make it clearer that it's now been scoped just to the example poem given, instead of "all of poetry". However I can't because there's a pending suggested edit which I Approved before wanting to edit, so I can't pull the Improve trick.
And wow I've been talking to myself in here for a while. Let's see if any of these backlogged messages get pinged while I'm a-sleeping.
Wow, woke up to +200 in my rep inbox. Been a while since that happened.
(My latest Q here and A on SFF, both story-ID, went HNQ.)
@bobble Same if I answer one from you, based on a sample size of 1.
Actually I guess story-ID questions have a good chance of HNQing. If someone who sees it in the first few hours either recognises the description or is good at searching, an answer can be posted fast which is clearly correct.
@bobble I felt like it's an interesting question - I'm interested in this kind of thing, classification of different story types within a given genre - but it's closed now.
@bobble Yes.
@bobble Dunno why we need a movies tag at all on this site. We have a general adaptations tag which can cover it.
Hmm, now I wonder how many of our adapatations or adaptation-comparison questions could be changed to textual-history (cc @verbose). I just changed one, since presumably the musical is just as on-topic as the play, but it gets a little dicier when we're talking about film or video-game adaptations.
@Alex Apparently you excel in having a keen enough attention to detail to notice small apparent discrepancies (especially numerical) in various stories.
1984 is off the first page of tags. Now we just have 7 authors and 3 specific works on the front page, among more generic tags.
(The 3 specific works are The Lord of the Rings, Atlas Shrugged, and Swimming in the Dark.)
In Chapter 24 of Little Dorrit, in one of the last scenes, Mr Merdle asks for a penknife. When Mrs Sparkler hands him the knife he asks if he could have one with a "darker" handle.
‘So I am off,’ added Mr Merdle, getting up. ‘Could you lend me a penknife?’
It was an odd thing, Fanny smilingly ob...
There are five proposals tied on 4 votes for the next topic to be chosen, from five different languages/cultures: Maltese, Hindi, Bengali, Hungarian, Korean.
Historically there haven't been that many active reviewers here. I'm still pleasantly surprised each time I see a question quickly closed or reopened by five people without mod intervention.
Today's been a busy day though: five different reviewers in Close Votes, one of them doing 4 reviews and two moe doing 3.
Before you head off on an adventure with him you may want to make sure that if the regular food supply runs out he doesn't feast on moderators as well.
Or you can do nothing now and just cross that bridge when you get there.
In Chapter Five of King Solomon's Mines the narrator, Allan Quatermain, acts as a translator during a conversation between Sir Henry and Umbopa:
Sir Henry nodded. "I was sure of it," he said. "If George set his mind upon a thing he generally did it. It was always so from his boyhood. If he meant...
So you'll now get [h-rider-haggard] if you start typing "henryrider".
And I feel sure I've created that tag before. Maybe nobody put a tag wiki and it got removed ... which makes me think it should be on another question somewhere ...
@Alex Actually, I retract that. I mixed up the questions because the tag page had them in reverse order. It actually shows the one I typed second first, so that refutes that hypothesis.
@Randal'Thor Thank you.
@Randal'Thor I was somewhat surprised that it did not exist yet. The back cover describes it as Praised as "the most amazing story ever written", the book went on to become one of the bestselling novels of the nineteenth century.
@Alex I imagine (without ever having read it in full, or even seen the abridged version for decades) that it might not have aged well, in its portrayal of African peoples?
British imperialism, "civilisation" and "noble savages" and all that stuff?
@Tsundoku said he'd have another look, and didn't give any further feedback, so that means either he doesn't have any further suggestions, or he didn't get around to checking :-P