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Lady Gwendolyn Linley ([info]lady_gwendolyn) wrote in [info]toujoursliberer,
@ 2008-05-10 17:25:00

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Entry tags:gwendolyn_linley

Lady Gwendolyn's Political Salon
Subject: A Whig Salon
Where: Lady Gwendolyn's salon in Mayfair
Who: Lady Gwendolyn Linley, Fox and Burke as NPCs to set the scene
Warnings: None
Open to: All

As always, the doors to her salon were open to anyone who could convince the footman to let them in. Lady Gwendolyn glided from group to group, serving up smiles and coffee, but always returning to the main group in the center of the salon. That group, comprised of the more influential Whig politicians, had been debating England's response to the French Revolution for the past ten minutes and had not agreed on anything but the excellence of Lady Gwendolyn's tea cakes.

"It is the greatest thing to happen this century," Fox argued. Charles Fox, the leader of the Whig opposition, was a great, shaggy bear of a man, who had stopped paying attention to his personal hygiene years ago. "It is the greatest thing to happen to Europe! How can we, the people's party, fail to support it and recognize it?"

"Because it has gone too far," exclaimed Burke in evident exasperation. Though also a Whig, he was a more outspoken critic of the French Revolution than any of the Tory majority in the House of Commons. "It may once have been about liverty, but look at France now! They have dismantled their entire society and anarchy springs up in its place!"

Lady Gwendolyn drifted away from the main group as the footman opened the door. Charming Smile Number One, Curtsy Number Three- "Welcome to my salon."


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[info]lady_gwendolyn
2008-05-17 02:42 am UTC (link)
"Are you sure?" Lady Gwendolyn asked, treading the fine line between solicitude and outright prying.

"Oh! I have been meaning to ask- what fo you think of Wilberforce's new bill to outlaw the slave trade? Everyone has been talking about abolition for ages but it does seem very bad timing to introduce it now. France so occupies everyone's mind that no one at all cares about whether or not we ought to abolish slavery."

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