LIFE IN THE FAIRY KINGDOM
The Queen does allow promising artists of all species in to the Palace grounds for portrait painting of the landscape. This is limited to two days in spring, two days in summer, two days in autumn and two days in winter. If the Queen likes the work produced, the artist gives her the original, which is hung in the Grand Hall, and is allowed to sell reproductions to the general public. If however Her Majesty does not like the portrait, the artists leaves the Palace hurriedly and does not return ever. On the plus side this is more humane than what Gwendolyn did. If her sense of artistry was offended, the one doing the offending tended to die. The Palace does have the biggest portrait collection though estates like L’Evallier’s runs the monarch close here.
The Queen endeavours to visit each of the realm’s 7 regions in the course of a Kingdom year (15 months as opposed to our 12 though they have 7 days in a week). The barren regions she tries to get out of the way early in her touring season so she can then focus on enjoying the rest of her visits. Few live in the barren regions but some stay there due to family ties and others are employed by the fairy government to do what they can to drain the excess magic from too many battles out of the land. Some progress has been made but the magic has to be drained out “manually”. More spells would be like adding more litter to an oil spill - no good at all. Those in the barren areas appreciate the royal visits, knowing the rest of the Kingdom tends to forget all about them deliberately. The Queen hopes, in her lifetime, to see at least a small area here fully restored.
The Council do not travel around the Kingdom much. Each and every Council member goes back to their constituencies at holiday times and some (but not all) weekends. In the Kingdom, it is the royals who are most in touch with the common people. Having said that, certain Council members are better than others at remembering there is life outside the Palace and they’d do well to listen to people’s concerns. L’Evallier is very good, as is Rodish, then later Balkish and, perhaps surprisingly, D’Dathson, the orc. It should be said that it isn’t this currrent Council who are guility of benign neglect here. It’s been a fact of life since the Council concept was adopted. But it does explain why the royals, even the defecting Eileen, can usually guarantee getting a warm welcome anywhere and why the Council does not.
Some of the more green minded fairies, the better thinking witches and wizards, are beginning to team up to try to restore some of the Kingdom’s barren areas. FNN has suggested this is a kind of collective guilt for actions taken by the ancestors of these people. This only produced an angry response from the green minded and led to the FNN studios being turned into an upside down frying pan during a thunderstorm. Everyone was soaked. Equipment was wrecked and had to be replaced. FNN have not offended these people again. The Queen and Council approve of these green-minded beings’ work (and the treatment of FNN). The main problem faced is that magic cannot be used to undo the damage done by the earlier magic. The land needs a kind of massive drainage scheme to get rid of the magic remaining in it and this is what these people are working on.
The Queen endeavours to visit each of the realm’s 7 regions in the course of a Kingdom year (15 months as opposed to our 12 though they have 7 days in a week). The barren regions she tries to get out of the way early in her touring season so she can then focus on enjoying the rest of her visits. Few live in the barren regions but some stay there due to family ties and others are employed by the fairy government to do what they can to drain the excess magic from too many battles out of the land. Some progress has been made but the magic has to be drained out “manually”. More spells would be like adding more litter to an oil spill - no good at all. Those in the barren areas appreciate the royal visits, knowing the rest of the Kingdom tends to forget all about them deliberately. The Queen hopes, in her lifetime, to see at least a small area here fully restored.
The Council do not travel around the Kingdom much. Each and every Council member goes back to their constituencies at holiday times and some (but not all) weekends. In the Kingdom, it is the royals who are most in touch with the common people. Having said that, certain Council members are better than others at remembering there is life outside the Palace and they’d do well to listen to people’s concerns. L’Evallier is very good, as is Rodish, then later Balkish and, perhaps surprisingly, D’Dathson, the orc. It should be said that it isn’t this currrent Council who are guility of benign neglect here. It’s been a fact of life since the Council concept was adopted. But it does explain why the royals, even the defecting Eileen, can usually guarantee getting a warm welcome anywhere and why the Council does not.
Some of the more green minded fairies, the better thinking witches and wizards, are beginning to team up to try to restore some of the Kingdom’s barren areas. FNN has suggested this is a kind of collective guilt for actions taken by the ancestors of these people. This only produced an angry response from the green minded and led to the FNN studios being turned into an upside down frying pan during a thunderstorm. Everyone was soaked. Equipment was wrecked and had to be replaced. FNN have not offended these people again. The Queen and Council approve of these green-minded beings’ work (and the treatment of FNN). The main problem faced is that magic cannot be used to undo the damage done by the earlier magic. The land needs a kind of massive drainage scheme to get rid of the magic remaining in it and this is what these people are working on.