Chapter 200: A Million Words a Day (Merry Christmas!) )

Fourteen books from the Victorian era in England, each of which caused a sensation in the British literary scene at that time, with a total of more than 7 million words, took Harvey eleven hours to translate, an average of more than 600,000 words per hour.

"Writing 600,000 in an hour, is this really a feat that humans can accomplish!?"

The Count of Henrietta took out his handkerchief to wipe the cold sweat from his forehead, and it would take him at least two weeks to read more than seven million words, let alone create. A family may not be able to produce so many works in their lifetime, and he naturally doubts the origin of these works, and doubts whether they were actually created by Harvey, which is a normal thought that any ordinary person would have in such a situation.

Seven million words is actually not too much in Harvey's opinion, many of the online texts he has come into contact with on the earth can reach this word count, and seven million words are only a few days of reading during his obsession with online texts, at that time he developed the habit of reading ten lines at a glance, and every time he reads the content of a book, the text will naturally turn into a vague scene in his mind.

Even if it is not a creation, translating more than 7 million words in one page is impossible in the eyes of ordinary people, and Harvey still needs to rectify the content when translating.

And turning the impossible into possibility is the power of magic.

[Text Conversion]

Category: Prophecy

Class: 2

Purpose: The caster can transform the text they understand into another language they are familiar with.

Limitations: The caster needs to have an objective understanding of the two languages, and the higher the familiarity with the two languages, the higher the success rate of translation.

Explanation: Knowledge is not objective, it is determined by people's cognitive ability. Man's ability to understand the world is limited, and the ontology of the world cannot be recognized by others, and man can only know the sensations that the ontology of the world gives us—phenomena. You can't tell if a phenomenon is true or not, you just need to judge what that judgment does for you. —"Pure Language", by Immanu Bo. ”

As the successor of socialism, Harvey has always scoffed at idealism, and the explanation of this spell is one of them, but the mystery that Harvey is exposed to is indeed changing his mind, the existence of ancient gods, the language of goblins, the magical effect of spells, etc., Harvey prefers to believe that there is a deeper scientific essence that can be understood by logical thinking.

Leprechauns can understand the meaning of English and even Chinese, and Harvey has wondered if this is because "himself" appeared in this world, and the knowledge he possessed was projected into the deeper part of the world through some channel, and the goblins happened to be related to it to understand the words that did not exist in this world.

To get back to the point, the spell of [Text Conversion] is indeed very practical, this spell is cast on Harvey himself, the effect of the spell is like a computer usually only uses 10% of the computing performance, after casting this spell, the computer can not be said to play 100%, at least it can improve the computing performance of more than 50% for language translation, and the process is completely controlled by Harvey.

In addition to requiring the caster's knowledge of the language, the long-term translation will also make the caster's spirit become manic, and even the high-ranking caster cannot translate more than seven million words in one night.

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On the same day, Harvey took the steam train back to Elroy, taking with him the flying scooter and the results of his raid on Norton's Magic Shop.

The Count of Henrietta was left alone in the manor, shut himself up in his study, and instructed his servants not to disturb him except to bring food and drink. Wandering in the ocean of knowledge should be a wonderful enjoyment, but more than seven million words! The ocean was too wide, and it contained enough information to drain the Count of all his energy, and he was not sure if he would drown.

He spent two days watching "Jane Eyre", the protagonist Jane Eyre was born in an unnamed town in the Kingdom of Barron, her father was the town's priest, she was adopted by her uncle after the death of her parents, but she lived a more undignified life than a servant, she was tortured and ridiculed, in this bleak life Jane Eyre did not despair, still remembered her father's teachings, and treated others kindly.

Jane Eyre was sent to an orphanage by her snobbish aunt and had a painful childhood, until she found a job as a governess using the press as an adult, and she arrived at Thornfield Manor, the biggest turning point in her life, and met the love of her life, Rochester.

The hope that Count Henrietta saw in Jane Eyre contrasted sharply with the brutal circumstances depicted, and several times when he read it, he could not help but put down the manuscript and calm his mind, his throat was choked by something, his eyes were moist at times, and he did feel something in Jane Eyre, which was out of step with this era.

Count Henrietta spent another day sorting out all the clues, plots, and characters, and the written records filled his desk.

"Oh my God, it does look like it was written by a female writer, and the first half of the description makes me wonder if the author really experienced something like this, but this is undoubtedly one of the works that Harvey spent a night working on!" Count Henrietta was shocked by his conclusion that the cultural background of Jane Eyre was in line with the Kingdom of Barron, and the social atmosphere and various experiences depicted were all set in the Kingdom of Barron, which can confirm that the work was born in the Kingdom of Barron and is still a modern work.

Despite the difference in style, he was extremely sure that the work was written by Harvey.

After reading it, a faint regret only stayed in his heart for a moment, and the earl adjusted his mentality to watch the second book, "Great Expectations" written by Charles Dickens in his later years.

The original work was written by a writer after experiencing the ups and downs of life, at that time it was at a low point in the life of the author Charles, he had just broken up with his wife, entangled with a young actor, and developed an extramarital affair, but this extramarital affair did not heal him but brought more pain, Charles's dark state of mind at that time was fed back into this work, and the work was full of the shortcomings of the society at that time and the true portrayal of human sophistication.

The protagonist Pip is a person at the bottom of society, with a happy family, his sister often harasses him, his brother-in-law also cares for him, and life is quite passable, all changes start when he saves a fugitive. Pip soon forgets about it, and one day he meets the love of his life, Estella, who is young and beautiful, and who is of noble birth, and Pip feels inferior to his humble status and resents his origins, but Estella is just playing with his feelings.

Until one day he was sponsored by an unnamed wealthy London businessman to go to school, and saw the life of the upper class in London, the most prosperous city in the world at that time, he soon indulged in a life of drunken money, but when he learned that the person who funded him was not a mysterious rich businessman but the fugitive he rescued, all the balance was broken...

"Great Expectations" has been adapted into countless works on the earth, including stage plays, TV series, movies, etc., even in the modern era of information explosion, "Great Expectations" has been praised by the audience as one of the most memorable works.