Glory Under the Mud: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{retitle|''{{PAGENAME}}''}} '''''Glory Under the Mud''''' was a book by Edward Watkinson, published in 2524. (PROSE: ''[[Walking to Babylon (novel)|Walking to...")
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'''''Glory Under the Mud''''' was a [[book]] by [[Edward Watkinson]], published in [[2524]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Walking to Babylon (novel)|Walking to Babylon]]'')
'''''Glory Under the Mud''''' was a [[book]] by [[Edward Watkinson]], published in [[2524]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Walking to Babylon (novel)|Walking to Babylon]]'') It contained stories about lost cities and [[occult]] artefacts.
[[Category:Books]]
 
Page 137, paragraph 2 read:
:''The wise traveller is prepared for all sorts of eventualities - a loose button, lost luggage, a broken limb, falling in love. The [[archaeologist]] is prepared for anything, because the past, like the future, may contain anything. There are a limited number of unexpected events that our traveller might encounter, but the archaeologist could discover anything. Even with a good knowledge of the site and of the civilisation under investigation, the archaeologist is prepared to be [[shock]]ed. Shock is rare – most archaeological work is slow, steady, even dull – but it is always around the corner.'' ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Steal from the World (short story)|Steal from the World]]'')
 
[[Category:Non-fiction books]]
[[Category:Works written by Edward Watkinson]]

Latest revision as of 17:20, 3 September 2020

Glory Under the Mud was a book by Edward Watkinson, published in 2524. (PROSE: Walking to Babylon) It contained stories about lost cities and occult artefacts.

Page 137, paragraph 2 read:

The wise traveller is prepared for all sorts of eventualities - a loose button, lost luggage, a broken limb, falling in love. The archaeologist is prepared for anything, because the past, like the future, may contain anything. There are a limited number of unexpected events that our traveller might encounter, but the archaeologist could discover anything. Even with a good knowledge of the site and of the civilisation under investigation, the archaeologist is prepared to be shocked. Shock is rare – most archaeological work is slow, steady, even dull – but it is always around the corner. (PROSE: Steal from the World)