>> My thought is that the bishop will, perhaps grudgingly,
>> approve of any music with a message of morality.
>
>Music does not in general have messages. The *words* to
>*songs* may, but that's another matter. And the words to
>any modern song are going to be completely incomprehensible
>anyway.
Thanks! I just had the thought I should have a line or two about the
necessity of translation so no one will think it might be evil
invocations.
But the songs are in the appropriate language. One agency reg he hates
is a yearly total immersion -- agents for a specific area/period must
spend a week together speaking only their target language. This
includes nightly karaoke sessions which are recorded for analysis.
(Because of his range of periods, he must attend five a year.)
>Since he appears in conjunction with the king, your bishop
>ought probably to be an archbishop.
I know it's a little off, but I don't see a way around it without
complicating things.
I think it was natural that a priest was present when he came ashore
the first time (huge ship appears in the night, LST-like boat comes
out of it at dawn -- the local nobles, priest, and braver residents
congregate at the point where it lands). The priest sent a message to
his bishop.
My thinking: A bishop would probably be the closest higher authority,
and I'm not sure anyone higher would quickly come because of a message
from a village priest.
The archbishop was present when the protag had his first audience with
the king, but only as furniture -- I'd have to go back and check, but
I think the only interaction mentioned is the bishop whispering
something to the archbishop, and later the archbishop nods to the
bishop, at which point the bishop steps forward to give a speech.
I'd rather not make the archbishop a full-fledged character because:
1) I already have a lot of characters (a problem when dealing with the
protag's life in four worlds)
2) It's a lot for a little -- most of his interaction is going to be
with the local authority, and the majority is matters too unimportant
to bother an archbishop
3) The priest is awestruck and rather wishy-washy except in matters
which clearly violate his faith. The bishop is hard-nosed but open to
subtle, if lavish, bribes. I don't know how to paint an archbishop in
that setting.
> Why are you worried about his attitude?
He's trying very hard to avoid problems.
Its impossible for him to take the ship to another world, and he'd
hate to have to spend all of his time on the ship, so having the
approval of local authorities is important.