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Victoria is on page 431 of 557
And Oxford at night was still so serene, still seemed like a place where they were safe, where arrest was impossible. It still looked like a city carved out of the past; of ancient spires, pinnacles, and turrets; of soft moonlight on old stones and worn, cobbled roads. Its buildings were still so reassuringly heavy, solid, ancient and eternal.
Nov 26, 2023 05:16PM
Babel, or The Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution

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Victoria
Victoria is on page 494 of 557
She turned back towards him. Her eyes were wet. ‘Only it builds up, doesn’t it? It doesn’t just disappear. And one day you start prodding at what you’ve suppressed. And it’s a mass of black rot, and it’s endless, horrifying, and you can’t look away.’
Dec 03, 2023 06:00PM
Babel, or The Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution


Victoria
Victoria is on page 399 of 557
Nov 24, 2023 06:30AM
Babel, or The Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution


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Victoria is on page 358 of 557
Nov 23, 2023 06:10PM
Babel, or The Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution


Victoria
Victoria is on page 291 of 557
His thoughts threatened to spiral to places he feared he could not control unless he brought them down to the familiar distraction of language. ‘Dàn. It looks like this.’ He drew the character in the air: 旦. ‘Up top is the radical for the sun – rì.’ He drew 日. ‘And under that, a line. And I’m just thinking about how it’s beautiful because it’s so simple.
Nov 21, 2023 05:07PM
Babel, or The Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution


Victoria
Victoria is on page 236 of 557
If only one could engrave entire memories in silver, thought Robin, to be manifested again and again for years to come – not the cruel distortion of the daguerreotype, but a pure and impossible distillation of emotions and sensations. […]
Nov 21, 2023 07:09AM
Babel, or The Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution


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Victoria

“The lights that shone through arched windows still promised warmth, old books, and hot tea within; still suggested an idyllic scholar’s life, where ideas were abstract entertainments that could be bandied about without consequences.


But the dream was shattered. That dream had always been founded on a lie. None of them had ever stood a chance of truly belonging here, for Oxford wanted only one kind of scholar, the kind born and bred to cycle through posts of power it had created for itself. Everyone else it chewed up and discarded. These towering edifices were built with coin from the sale of slaves, and the silver that kept them running came blood-stained from the mines of Potosí. It was smelted in choking forges where native labourers were paid a pittance, before making its way on ships across the Atlantic to where it was shaped by translators ripped from their countries, stolen to this faraway land and never truly allowed to go home. 


He’d been so foolish ever to think he could build a life here. There was no straddling the line; he knew that now. No stepping back and forth between two worlds, no seeing and not seeing, no holding a hand over one eye or the other like a child playing a game. You were either a part of this institution, one of the bricks that held it up, or you weren’t.”




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