Log24

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Easter Translation

Filed under: General — m759 @ 8:37 pm

IMAGE- 'East Is Always Further East,' by Benjamin Paloff (abstract)

See also James Joyce on Humpty-Dumpty 
and posts in this  journal from April 10, 2012.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

To Be Awake

Filed under: General — m759 @ 8:28 am

For a former editor of Humpty Dumpty

American Mathematical Society meets Eliot and Joyce

Click to enlarge.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

A Puzzlement

Filed under: General — m759 @ 11:09 am

“In part viXra.org is a parody of arXiv.org….”

http://vixra.org/why

Related material:

Update of 9 PM for James Joyce:

Henneagram

Cover illustration, 'The Man Who Was Thursday'

Perigee Books paperback, 1980

Thursday, February 2, 2006

Thursday February 2, 2006

Filed under: General — m759 @ 9:00 am
A Great Fall

From today’s New York Times,
Frey Says Falsehoods Improved His Tale“–

“Overall, his portrayal in A Million Little Pieces is of a person who ‘I created in my mind to help me cope’ with drug addiction and recovery. He said most of the invented material ‘portrayed me in ways that made me tougher and more daring and more aggressive than in reality I was, or I am.'”

A not uncommon strategy.

From Log24 last September:

And
Hennessey Tennessee
tootles the flute,

And the music
is somethin’ grand;

A credit to old Ireland
is McNamara’s band.


The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix05B/050925-db4.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Click on picture for details.
Related material:
James Joyce on
Humpty Dumpty.

Tuesday, June 17, 2003

Tuesday June 17, 2003

Filed under: General — Tags: , — m759 @ 5:20 pm

Claves Regni Caelorum

On actor Gregory Peck, who died Thursday, June 12, 2003:

"He had early success in 'The Keys of the Kingdom,' in which he played a priest."

As Peck noted in a videotape played at his memorial service June 16,

"As a professional," he added, "I think I'd like to be thought of as a good storyteller; that's what's always interested me."

June 16, besides being the day of Peck's memorial, was also Bloomsday.  My entry for 1 PM on Bloomsday, a day celebrating the Ulysses of James Joyce, consists of the three words "Hickory, Dickory, Dock."  A comment on that entry:

"I prefer the Wake."

The following, from the Discordian Scriptures, provides a connection between the Bloomsday mouse and the Wake of patriarch Gregory Peck.

Hickory Dickory Dock

Hickory, dickory, dock!

Here we are on higher ground at once. The clock symbolizes the spinal column, or if you prefer it, Time, chosen as one of the conditions of normal consciousness. The mouse is the Ego; "Mus", a mouse, being only "Sum", "I am", spelt Qabalistically backwards.  This Ego or Prana or Kundalini force being driven up the spine, the clock strikes one, that is, the duality of consciousness is abolished. And the force again subsides to its original level. "Hickory, dickory, dock!" is perhaps the mantra which was used by the adept who constructed this rime, thereby hoping to fix it in the minds of men; so that they might attain to Samadhi by the same method. Others attribute to it a more profound significance — which is impossible to go into at this moment, for we must turn to:
 
Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall….

The Bloom of Ulysses has a certain philosophical kinship with Yale literary critic Harold Bloom.  For material related to the latter Bloom's study of Gnosticism, see Chaos Matrix.  For the conflict between Gnostic and Petrine approaches to religion, see Poul Anderson's Operation Chaos.

From an account of Peck's memorial service:

"Mourners included… Piper Laurie…."

OK, he's in.

 

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