Thank you, Doug. When I wrote I was invested on a daily level registering
and working to interpret the local landscape of my neighborhood ("Crossing
the Millenium, 1999"). That particular I remember looking up at the clear
sky and getting struck by the pure absence of objects and my desire to name
(them).
If anyone wanted an autopsy du mot!
But thanks, again.
Stephen V
Blog: http://stephenvincent.durationpress.com
> Having started to read now, & gotten to it, i was just going to say it
> was as snappy as you could get. But I really do like those really short
> ones that work, as this so ably does...
>
> Doug
>
>
> On 8-Feb-05, at 8:09 PM, Kenneth Wolman wrote:
>
>> At 09:58 PM 2/8/2005, you wrote:
>>> Wednesday, February 10, 1999
>>>
>>> The sky without a cloud:
>>>
>>> Language without a mask.
>>
>> I can't begin to explain the hypnotic effect of this, but it's there
>> all
>> the same.
>>
>> K
>>
>> -------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Kenneth Wolman www.kenwolman.com kenwolman.blogspot.com
>>
>> "This is the best of all possible worlds only because it is the only
>> one
>> that showed up."-- Russell Edson
>>
>>
>
>
> Douglas Barbour
> Department of English
> University of Alberta
> Edmonton Alberta T6G 2E5 Canada
> (780) 436 3320
> http://www.ualberta.ca/~dbarbour/dbhome.htm
>
> Reserved books. Reserved land. Reserved flight.
> And still property is theft.
>
> Phyllis Webb
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