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Talk:Gnomes

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Thank you whoever added the clarification about the Nomes of the Bromeliad series. It had slipped my mind. ~ vsl

That seems to have been Jogibaer, actually; vsl's comment was 30 Aug 2005. --Old Dickens 22:34, 27 June 2008 (UTC)

Whoops... discreetly drawing a veil. Couldn't remember if it was one of mine or not but it felt like it - actually somebody else's... (fetches coat and leaves quietly)--AgProv 19:49, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

No need to rush off; vsl might have signed it properly, too. --Old Dickens 21:07, 28 June 2008 (UTC)

Swires first appearance

"Buggy Swires, first appearance as a Watchman in Jingo)." - This sentence reads a bit ambiguously. I'm pretty sure Swires' first appearance was The Light Fantastic as the first gnome we meet (after Rincewind earlier thinks they're extinct). He's just called "Swires", but we can assume it's Buggy? Does this sentence say that Buggy's first appearance as a watchman was in Jingo, or his first appearance ever?

Also a thought re. Buggy Swires and Wee Mad Arthur living solitary existences away from the beehive-like society of the nac mac Feegle. If a typical Feegle clan has one fertile Queen, and only one "drone" gets to be her husband and father of the next generation of Feegles, this leaves thousands of Feegle playing out a existence parellel to workers and drones within the Hive. We must sidestep the great unspoken - and possibly taboo - topic of whether sexual frustration (whether consciously realised or not) adds to the characteristic propensity to violence of the species, although this is tempting to consider if you think deeply about the Feegle.

There are species of bees that will either live solitary lives or exist in far smaller looser communities than that of the honeybee. The bumblebee is a prime example. Could Swires and Wee Mad Arthur be, in effect, "bumblebee" versions of the Feegle? [1] The bumblebee lives in more modest communities of no more than fifty individuals. Other bee species genuinely live more solitary lives, only seeking out others during the mating season: [2]. So who knows, there may be "keldas" of the same inclination as Swires and Arthur out there - as TP writes ferociously independent and strong female characters, such a one might be actively seeking for the right Pictsie and her quest might well lead her to Ankh-Morpork...--AgProv 23:50, 29 January 2008 (CET)

Or are the Gnome jewellers just filling another niche like urban rat-catching or piloting buzzards? They seem adaptable. --Old Dickens 22:34, 27 June 2008 (UTC)

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