Actually, everybody's wrong. The Supreme Ascendancy in Modernist
Poetrix is Australia, where Wordsworth is still alive and well thanks
to secret language experiments conducted by the CSIRO. He has
certainly amazed the French lately with his innovative experiments in
the applications of ovine technology on biodegradable modernism and
coffin making, bringing exciting new life to the whole question of the
death of the author. He was last spotted lecturing on Ovinity,
Modernism and Anti-Empiricism at Wollongong University's department of
Microbiology and Linguistics and his much anticipated survey The Last
200 Years: The Secret Antipodean Supremacy in High Modernist Poetics
(with an introduction by Edgar Allan Poe), due out later this year, is
rumoured to be in film production with 20th Century Fox.
xA
On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 12:14 PM, Jamie
McKendrick<[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> That would Opus Dei. Or else the Protestants.
>
>
>> Which group does the fiendish plots?
>>
>> At 09:32 PM 8/25/2009, you wrote:
>>>
>>> Dear Mairead,
>>> Just found this, which may be of interest, on a California Jesuit
>>> website -
>>> one of the Frequently Asked Questions (though it's the first time I've
>>> asked it):
>>>
>>> Some Jesuits are priests, some are brothers: what's the difference?
>>>
>>> Jesuits can choose to be priests or brothers. Both groups of men take the
>>> same vows and live and pray in a religious community. Priests are
>>> ordained and
>>> administer the Sacraments and celebrate Mass. Although brothers do not
>>> feel
>>> called to the life of a priest, they participate fully in the work of the
>>> Society
>>> of Jesus, whose mission is "the service of faith and the promotion of
>>> justice."
>>>
>>> Best wishes,
>>> Jamie
>>
>
--
Editor, Masthead: http://www.masthead.net.au
Blog: http://theatrenotes.blogspot.com
Home page: http://www.alisoncroggon.com
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