Found in an Oxfam shop for 99p, I have to describe this picture.
Manifestly a copy, on the window-sill sits a half-burnt candle, and single apple. What d'you call a single glazed window, divided into different regular-sized panes by wood?
Outside, is a Oxfordshire-like scene: a parish church, and Tudor-style houses. In the distance I can see medieval fields and hedgeows, plus the begining of rolling hills.
Most strikingly, flying by are two gorgeous swans... or are they witches' daemons?
All in all, like LO this is a simple yet strangely beautiful picture.
[/u]
LO: A strangely beautiful picture
6 posts
• Page 1 of 1
LO: A strangely beautiful picture
==========================================
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
-
Melancholy Man - Yoruba Warlock
- Posts: 5589
- Joined: Fri Dec 26, 2003 11:08 pm
- Location: Lon.: -3.52. Lat. : 58.59
It may be as it is said in Lyra's Oxford
"Everything has a meaning, if only we could read it"
"Everything has a meaning, if only we could read it"
"Tell Them Stories"
Waste not fresh tears over old griefs.
Euripides (484 BC - 406 BC)
"You can't cross bridges that you've burned."
Don't stand by my grave and cry,
I am not there,
I did not die.
Follow your instincts! Otherwise what are they there for?
"It is not our abilities that make us who we are, it is our choices." ~Dumbledore
Beware: I bear more grudges than lonely high court judges.
Waste not fresh tears over old griefs.
Euripides (484 BC - 406 BC)
"You can't cross bridges that you've burned."
Don't stand by my grave and cry,
I am not there,
I did not die.
Follow your instincts! Otherwise what are they there for?
"It is not our abilities that make us who we are, it is our choices." ~Dumbledore
Beware: I bear more grudges than lonely high court judges.
-
WindsFluteOfTheSky - Grazer
- Posts: 23
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2004 9:34 pm
- Location: The Planet Pluto!
I do feel a bit queasy about this you know. There's one area where I take a quite different view from PP's. PP read literature at Oxford in the classical, Leavisite, canonical and text-oriented tradition. He's notably scornful of literary theory - and I think thjis is an expression of his scorn.It may be as it is said in Lyra's Oxford
"Everything has a meaning, if only we could read it"
I came late to studying literature so I was steeped in the post-structuralism and learned from a theory-centred perspective. The prevailing philosophy of the latter part of the twentieth century maintained that nothing has intrinsic meaning, that the meaning of a text is not fixed but negotiated with each individual reader in the light of the reader's own ideology and experience of the world.
That, of course, is why we all have our own firm ideas about whether Lyra and Will were bonking each others brains out, or whether Baruch and Balthamos were doing the same.
Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by the age of eighteen (Albert Einstein)
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
- Enitharmon
- Ageing Drama Queen
- Posts: 6220
- Joined: Wed Apr 09, 2003 1:13 pm
- Yahoo Messenger: swanofkennet
- AOL: SwanOfKennet
- Location: New Liverpool, town of pie, peas and gravy
Well young Max, we know you're a dyed-in-the-wool empiricist who ignores evidence that contradicts the surface meaningI have to say, post-structuralism sounds to me to just be a good excuse for when you interpret things incorrectly.
Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by the age of eighteen (Albert Einstein)
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
The Book of Enitharmon
Currently reading: Vanity Fair by William M Thackeray
- Enitharmon
- Ageing Drama Queen
- Posts: 6220
- Joined: Wed Apr 09, 2003 1:13 pm
- Yahoo Messenger: swanofkennet
- AOL: SwanOfKennet
- Location: New Liverpool, town of pie, peas and gravy
<Grabs telescopic splatting-device>I have to say, post-structuralism sounds to me to just be a good excuse for when you interpret things incorrectly.
*Smugly grins, abruptly ducks, and subsequently runs.*
<Squishes Max>
==========================================
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
That accent o' yers, are ye frae Holland like me?
Visit an almost daily photo-diary of the Hyperborean North.
View the Hyperborean North from a Rabbit's Eye View
CURRENTLY READING ==> The Economist
-
Melancholy Man - Yoruba Warlock
- Posts: 5589
- Joined: Fri Dec 26, 2003 11:08 pm
- Location: Lon.: -3.52. Lat. : 58.59
6 posts
• Page 1 of 1
Return to “%s” Companion Books
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group
Content © 2001-2011 BridgeToTheStars.Net.
Images from The Golden Compass movie are © New Line Cinema.
Images from The Golden Compass movie are © New Line Cinema.