KUNAR OCH SVENSON. BEOW OND BRECA. Jag är finsk så jag måste vara tyst på tyska, svenska och finska men jag kan skriva ENGELSKA. JIHUU! Voin kirjoittaa englanniksi mitä vain, koska olen "myötätuntoinen konservatiivi". I am a compassionate conservative so I can write *anything* in English. Here I am having a nice evening by myself, texting with my new female friend. I use so-called SMS messages, that even her old-fashioned Nokia cell phone can use. For example I texted that she is nice, and I texted her about the Saxons and the Saka, and the runes etc. I mentioned Tolkien, Beowulf, Kalevala, the Gothic language and the Finnish language - Tolkien was interested in all of the following: the Anglo-Saxon runes, the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf, the Finnish national epic Kalevala, the Gothic language and the Finnish language. Tolkien also used Anglo-Saxon runes as the basis of the Dwarven runes. Now I must go outside for a cigarette. Kalevala consists of many poems - it is not the same poem, but many of them and they have been combined together to form a book - actually several of them. But I think Kanteletar is better than Kalevala, since Kanteletar is every-day poems whereas Kalevala is a fantasy book, not unlike Tolkien's fantasy literature, like the Lord of the Rings and Silmarillion for example. The former was completed by J. R. R. Tolkien himself, and the latter was collected and completed by his son Christopher Tolkien. I also like the book "The Hobbit" a lot, which I think is of better quality than LOTR, even though the former is a children's book and the latter is for adults - both young and older adults. Michael Moorcock is a great author, too, he must not be forgotten. H.P. Lovecraft is OK, but his world view was quite racist when he was still alive. I do not know if any of the other heritage of Lovecraft is of any importance, except for his monster stories, of which at least one of them, "The Call of Cthulhu" contains a mysterious beast by the name "Cthulhu".