(Q - Hogan: Hello Michel, it's Hogan. Hello in your poem, we can see a reference to a tale in the title and in the text which follows we can also see a reference to
another tale. So my question was just a stylistic effect by hiding what we need to understand, where in one or the other of these tales can we draw underlying information for the game.
?)
MB: No, no tale is to be explored, except for pleasure, but the text does indeed allude to or evoke certain tales, I fully assume the consequences, but there is nothing to look for in these tales. The text itself is as it is, there is everything in it. And once again, I don't have at all, my mind is not at all clear. There are some, how shall I say, subtleties or some tricks in this text which aim not to give either, not to provide evidence, but there is no point looking beyond what my little brain could have conceived.
MB: No, no tale is to be explored, except for pleasure, but the text does indeed allude to or evoke certain tales, I fully assume the consequences, but there is nothing to look for in these tales. The text itself is as it is, there is everything in it. And once again, I don't have at all, my mind is not at all clear. There are some, how shall I say, subtleties or some tricks in this text which aim not to give either, not to provide evidence, but there is no point looking beyond what my little brain could have conceived.