


they wants to include pictures in the newspaper and iconographer Otto von Chriek, a black-ribboner vampire applies. The Patrician, Vetinari, has heard of the press and makes a visit, and gives it tentative approval. Sacharussa Cripslock confronts him about denying her elderly grandfather his income, but William’s enthusiasm captures her, and they plan the second edition of The Times. Foul Old Ron and his cronies are recruited to stand on the street corners and sell them. Mr Goodmountain convinces him that he could sell copies to the public at a few pence each and make a good profit. William could do his newsletter this way. The Hubwards Gate was the centre-piece for the $5 triangular William’s woodblock is broken so the dwarfs print him off the newsletter for him and he goes down to the Hubwards Gate to hand them over to his messengers.Ĭripslock’s have engraved some of the Discworld stamps like this Merchants guild two pence. The workshop is ones of those in the yard of The Bucket, the Watchman’s choice of drinking establishment. They can put together a page within minutes, proof read it, make corrections and rattle off a hundred copies. What is more they have developed movable type. He wakes up in a dwarf workshop, and they have a printing press. He was one such a mission on a freezing icy evening when an out of control cart knocks him flying. He would neatly write the stories onto a block of wood and take it to Mr Cripslock who would carefully remove the excess from around the letters and it would be used as a printing block. This took him one day per month, and earned him enough money to live reasonably well for that month.He came from a landed gentry family, but totally disagreed with his father Lord de Worde and has gone his own way of life. He wrote newsletters about the events in Ankh-Morpork for the rulers of the neighbouring states. Three men, one long and thin, another large in every direction and a third unable to scratch his nose, slipped silently into Ankh-Morpork by rowing boat under the Water Gate.
