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DS, I am currently re-visiting SWTWC and am really enjoying its poetry, page by page. I have found that the best time for me to read undistracted is after mid-night...it also adds to the book's images and the tone, I find!
This last night passage (after being amazed all over again by RB's details of the old wooden boardwalk "...it had been there ever since Will remembered, since civilization unthinkingly poured forth the dull hard unresisting cement sidewalks.")
"Jim skimmed like a dark owl after a mouse. Will hopped like a weaponless hunter after the owl. They sailed their shadows over October lawns."
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quote: Originally posted by fjp451: DS, I am currently re-visiting SWTWC and am really enjoying its poetry, page by page. I have found that the best time for me to read undistracted is after mid-night...
If I tried that trick, I would find myself awakening at the Soul's Midnight, neck all a-crook and wondering why I didn't leave the late-nighters to the kids! I get sleepy at 9.30 - but then I wake up at 5.30, so there you have it. Ye gods, yes! The imagery is perhaps his most pronounced of all his works. It's incredible, it's poetic, all filled with black and white magicks. Most writers could write all day and not come up with most of these passages. Something Wicked This Way Comes is the longest poem I have ever read!
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| Posts: 3402 | Location: Horrorwood, Karloffornia | Registered: 02 October 2002 |    |
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The horse troops clopped by and battalions of drums, then a band of bagpipes, which we had never heard before, so she drew a picture on the blackboard. We recognized it instantly as a penis and scrotum, and so did she when she heard the buzz and stepped back for a look, so she made the bag rounder and made the pipe stand up, which fascinated us even more, and finally she erased it and turned and said, her face glowing, "Small minds think small thoughts."
Let's make this more participatory, shall we? Guess from which work this comes.
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| Posts: 3402 | Location: Horrorwood, Karloffornia | Registered: 02 October 2002 |    |
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So guess.
Here's another beautiful passage:
My mind had been on eternal things for a while, at least on death, the door to eternity. I knew that dead people were buried in boxes in the ground, and I often wondered what they did there, in the dark with no food, no radio, no books. Grownups did have, I knew, an ability to sit still for a long time, but death seemed like quite a feat even for them, even knowing that the Lord would come and get them and they would fly up to heaven.
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| Posts: 3402 | Location: Horrorwood, Karloffornia | Registered: 02 October 2002 |    |
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