I am amazed, and know not what to say!
Debra Rienstra wrote:
> Goodness, here's another one! Really, I'm surprised someone hasn't written a
> dissertation on this.
>
> Debra Rienstra
> Associate Professor of English
> Calvin College
> 1795 Knollcrest Circle SE
> Grand Rapids, MI 49546
> 616-526-8526
>
>>>> Debra Rienstra <[log in to unmask]> 5/14/2008 11:28 AM >>>
> Apparently, this floor care line of interpretation has a more distinguished
> tradition than we thought. Consider this work (attached) by Henry Fuseli.
> ;)
>
> Debra Rienstra
> Associate Professor of English
> Calvin College
> 1795 Knollcrest Circle SE
> Grand Rapids, MI 49546
> 616-526-8526
>
>>>> Katherine Eggert <[log in to unmask]> 5/14/2008 12:23 AM >>>
> Me, I'm still imagining Hamlet: The Floor Care Quarto. A play that begins
> with "Hoover's there?" and that gives us a prince who is too much i' the
> Dyson,
> who worries that the ghost may be a Dirt Devil, who sweeps (of course) to his
> revenge with wings as Swiffer as thought, and who, in the end, was likely to
> have proved most Royal.
>
> Forgive me.
>
> Katherine
>
>
> Katherine Eggert
> Associate Professor and Chair (on leave, 2007-2008)
> Department of English
> University of Colorado
> 226 UCB
> Boulder, CO 80309-0226
> (303) 492-7382
> [log in to unmask]
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Marshall Grossman" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Tuesday, May 13, 2008 11:57 PM
> Subject: Re: Once more into the breach
>
>
> And there were evenings when Hal made him wonder whether he should have too.
>
> Heather James wrote:
>> Harry, that's persuasive. I've got just three more papers to grade. My
> second favorite of all time:
>> "The fact that Orlando cannot recognize anyone means that he does not
> distinguish friend from foe. The primary job of a knight is to be able to
> distinguish between enemies and alibis."
>> I sympathize. But my very favorite:,
>>
>> "Britomart fends off those who want to have sex with her with a sword."
>>
>> If Harry were to tell tales out of school, which he's too nice to do, he'd
> have to mention the undergraduate—me—who meant to go on at length about
> Bolingbroke's "self-castigation," but in fact took a _slightly_ different
> orthographic tack.
>> Heather
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Harry Berger Jr <[log in to unmask]>
>> Date: Tuesday, May 13, 2008 7:20 pm
>> Subject: Re: Once more into the breach observed
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>
>>
>>> School's almost out and the List is soft and smiley. This is good. If
>>> you'd prefer to stay on edge and gritstricken, try Shaksper. There,
>>>
>>> someone's intentionality is always bigger than someone else's.
>>> Emoticons abound.
>>>
>>>
>>> On May 13, 2008, at 5:04 PM, Beth Quitslund wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>> I know we should be done with this silliness, but I'm only just
>>>>
>>> past
>>>
>>>> midterms
>>>> and need the outlet. This from a paper I graded today by a
>>>>
>>> student
>>>
>>>> in my intro
>>>> to textual analysis class:
>>>>
>>>> "An important role that partakes in the poem of 'Adam's Curse' is
>>>>
>>>> syntax."
>>>>
>>>> And to think that we haven't reached the lesson on irony yet.
>>>>
>>>> Beth
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ***************************************
>>>>
>>>> Beth Quitslund
>>>> Assistant Professor
>>>> Dept. of English
>>>> Ohio University
>>>> Athens, OH 45701
>>>>
>>>> phone: (740) 593-2829
>>>> FAX: (740) 593-2818
>>>>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
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