First and best, I'd say (the AmperSandman?). But of course Blake was
a printer and the grandaddy of graphic artist/designers, too, so he
knew the beauty of the analphabetics.
Anyone else like the orthograph (aka, "pound sign"): #? I'm fascinated
by its long history of shifting meanings, beginning with what I think
was its original usage on early (English?) maps to mark a village (8
fields around a town square)--Candice
At 05:00 AM 7/11/00 +1100, you wrote:
>Also you'd miss the work of Blake.
>
>Perhaps the first ampersander?
>
>Alison
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