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<center><h1><!--title-->Verdurian life
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<p>Posted by <b><!--poster-->Irgend Jemand</b>
on <!--date-->14:00 6/23/02
<p>In reply to: (none)


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How save is life in Verduria? I ask this because historical novels tend to show the past as a time when it was quiet common that your youngest son died of the plague, your daughter was raped by the local noble, you were whipped for keeping a bit more of your flour for yourself than you were allowed to because you would have starved else, and you could barely think you had a bad day before a bunch of invading nomads/neighbour country armies/europeans/whatever burned your crops, destroyed your house and killed you after an hour of torture. (I suppose life is still more or less like this for most people, globally seen) 

<p>Is this the everyday life of the average Verdurian? And I may be naive, but how did and do people manage it to live their life under such circumstances? 



<hr><i>Mark responds:
<p>Well, stories concentrate on the dramatic.  You can make 20th century
life look even worse: if you're fortunate enough not to live under a
Nazi or Communist dictatorship, or to be starving to death in a Third
world famine, you're at the mercy of robber barons, liable at any moment
to be struck down by cancer, or embittered ghetto dwellers, or serial
killers, or terrorists, or AIDS.  

<p>If I may generalize, universal catastrophes are rare; most of the time,
most people are able to "manage somehow, with everybody's help," as the
Japanese say when being toasted.  

<p>It's not hard to get used to things when you don't know anything 
different.  E.g. modern naturalistic descriptions of the past often
emphasize how everything and everyone stank terribly.  No doubt, but
that would strike a modern time traveller, not the natives, who were
used to it.

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    <b>Irgend Jemand</b>
 <i>14:00 6/23/02</i>
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