pumpkinhollow (
pumpkinhollow) wrote in
ph_logs2024-03-05 05:57 pm
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Entry tags:
Mingle - Emergency Potluck
Pumpkin Hollow Community Bulletin
WELCOME POTLUCK
Greetings, residents! Those more observant sorts among you may have noticed a large influx of very crowded ferries. In order to welcome our new residents en masse, Town Hall is holding a potluck in Town Square. Please bring a dish if you are able and make a new friend!
All of our newest arrivals need only bring themselves. We look forward to welcoming you all into our community, and may your lanterns always be lit.
This event is open to all! In light of our new influx of prospective players following the Great Sail Migration, we've decided to offer a small public event to tide everyone over until the TDM this weekend.
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"So, is that fruit of the earth, or not?"
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Anzu holds up the piece of paper, stares at it, then rotates it a couple of different ways. Then he looks at Cecil; his mouth's twitching, like he's suppressing an urge to laugh. His eyes are certainly merry—amused.
"Ziskayt, this is a positively fiendish arrangement for a plant's habits!" he exclaims. "It's almost the vegetable lamb, except I assume the nuts at the end don't go baa, nu?"
He taps the side of his jaw again.
"Hast thou heard of the matter of the palm tree?" he asks, trusting that Cecil will assume by default that he's going somewhere with this sudden tangent.
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"I...haven't. My sister stopped taking me to Hebrew school after I celebrated bar mitzvah. There weren't many other Jewish people in the town I'm from. It was...there's...I don't know as much as you two do about everything, alright?"
Typical American two-day Jew, but not wholly by choice.
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Anzu reaches out a languid hand, offering Cecil the option of a handclasp, something to hold on to. His expression is gentle, but internally, he's kicking himself for not being even a little more considerate—the rabbi's son, and grandson, and great-grandson, with good yikhus coming out of his nose, he who was so lucky to grow up with little fear of persecution, at least until he was eleven, and to grow up with no fear of assimilation, nor fear of abandonment.
Of all people, he should be mindful not to lord such things over others.
"Dearest," he says, softly, "thou need'st not explain, but ah … please, sweetness, blame thyself not." He takes a deep breath, considers telling Cecil about his own disconnection, of his own making, too—and decides to burden not the other man with such matters; there'll be time.
Instead, he smiles at Cecil, and says, "mine husband says that no one is too old to learn Torah. And in any case, he certainly spoke highly of thy reasoning and thine attitude both. Anyone can memorise psakim. Interpretation and application, such are the things more valuable, and much harder."
He leans back, flicking his hand at the wrist rhythmically; he rocks back and forth just a little, though not quite as prominently as during prayer.
"In any case, darling," he continues, breezily, "the matter of the palm tree. Halakhically, it is a grass, and bananas require the blessing of fruits of the earth. Theoretically. I do not eat bananas. Feh. Might as well eat a sponge. But, ah. It seems like an analogous case to the peanut, nu?"