‘The Serendipity of Distance’ was NOT a crafted speech delivered “on a cold and wet [WINTER1] afternoon in March 1984 by Professor Geoffrey Blainey, Faculty of Arts dean at the University of Melbourne, Chairman of the Australia-China Council and former head of the Australia Council to [1,000] Rotarians assembled in the Capitol Theatre” @ Warnambool in the federated state of Victoria, Australia, eep
‘At last it was there. It had stopped right out of cover into a break between the reeds. Raising a finger to warn her, he passed the field glasses.
‘By that clump of reeds,’ he whispered, ‘at ten o’clock.’
‘She took the glasses, drew herself up with some difficulty, and looke. She gave a little gasp that filled out and became a sigh, a soft ‘Ooooh’.
‘What is it?’
‘She sat back and lowered her glasses to her lap.
‘ ‘Jim,’ she said, ‘it’s a dunlin. You couldn’t miss it. They used to come in thousands back home, all along the shore and in the marshes. Common as starlings.’
‘He took the glasses and sared at the rare creatures he had [never set eyes on before] laid eyes on until yesterday that was as common as a starling.
‘ ‘Dunlin,’ he said.
And immediately on his lips it sounded different, and it wasn’t just the vowel. She could have laughed outright at the newness of the old word now it had arrived on this side of the globe, at its difference in his mouth and hers.
‘ ‘But here,’ he said.
‘He raised the glasses again.
‘ ‘It doesn’t occur.’
‘But it was there just the same, moving easily about and quite unconscious that it had broken some barrier that [MIGHT HAVE BEEN LAID DOWN A MILLION YEARS AGO], in the Pleiocene, when the ice came and the birds found ways out and since then had kept to the same ways. Only this bird hadn’t.
‘ ‘Where does it come from?’
‘ ‘Sweden. The Baltic. Iceland. Looks like another refugee.
‘He knew that word now. Just a few months after he had first heard it, it was common, you saw it in the papers every day ..
‘..the frame of the lens being also in some way magical, a boundary it would find it difficult to cross. He was sweating with the effort, drawing sharp breaths. At last, after a long time, he didn’t know how long, he laid the glasses regretfully aside and found Miss Harcourt regarding him with a smile. ..
‘I was the first to see it,’ he told her, I must be, or someone would have left a record. Miss Harcourt, we’ve discovered something!’
Enjoie-enjoie-enjoie ‘Monkeys with Keypads’ people.
John
Raison Drive (how we Nobel Prize for PHYSICS type-people enjoy our address, whhooppeee)
Littlehampton SA 5250
OveR
We Auss-ies have been Bushed by Location Scale Scope Dimension and utterly bewildered concerning our personal identities since late Feb 1606\ Jan 26 1770 but We-shall-probably-sortIt-all-out@ the Death, OK
1 the writer is not at all poking fun at historically stupid and ecologically ignorant usages which contradict 10,000 years of reliable, predictable, human-food-supplies-secure and radically/ critically immunologically Bio-organic-protective weather systems fact but what one southern Australian people (Yuhn-dalap SWWA – Leeuwin-Naturaliste Coastal Park) coastal region people – called mah-kara, first winter rains – but March is the (increasingly with man-made global heating Weather-systems moving with the rotation of the Earth eastward across the Indian Ocean at the say 30 – 35 degrees south of the equator band of latitude) hotter and drier mid-month of autumn (Fall) in our Old-people’s country
‘It was just before that, in late November, that Jim caught one day, in a casual sweep of his glasss over a marshy bank, a creature that he recogni [s] ed and then didn’t: the beak was too long an down-curved, the body too large for any of the various sandpipers. He stared and didn’t know what it was. He couldn’t have been more puzzled, more astonished, if he’d found a unicorn.
‘Next day, on the offchance, he took Miss Harcourt to the place and they waited, silent for the most part, and talking about nothing much when they did talk, while Jim covered the area with his glasses.
‘Miss Harcourt rather sprawled, with her boots at the end of outstretched legs and her great skirt rumpled, not at all minding the dust. Her bonnet was always lopsided and she didn’t mind that either. She had her own rules and kept them but she didn’t care for other people’s. Jim’s father thought her mad. ‘That old girl you hang about with,’ he sneered ‘she’s a bit of a hatter.’ But she spoke like a lady, she didn’t hit the bottle and had, except for her passion for photography and the equipment she lugged about, no visible eccentricities. People found her, as a subject for gossip, unmanageable, unrewarding, and she oughtn’t to have been; they resented it. So his father and some others called her mad but could not furnish evidence.
‘Jim chewed a match, working it round and round his jaw.
‘At last it was there. It had stepped right out of cover into a break between reeds. Raising a finger to warn her, he passed the field glasses.
‘;By that clump of reeds,’ he whispered [AT TEN O’CLOCK].’ ‘1
Time is not a traveller Tenterfield saddle-er but alas from February 26, 1606 not @ Cape York in the terms of your normal healthy primary schooler crude Anne-Rand-Alan-Greenspan-Nathaniel-Branden barely-awake Philosophic-objectivist if not utterly fake consciousness but somewhere down the west coast of Cape York Peninsula until 1015 Hours FER Westpac East-antarctica longitudinal trisphere time 17/11/2025 it was thought to be
John
Australia
1as Auss-ie arguments over god con tan weh and many of us catastrophically sit out in the patio defecating and the humidity is, well you all know what phew-midity is about huh we some of us menfolk ponder the most bright dark pink holes known to quantum optics in a vibrant society of grown-up human beans well we don’t actually what are we gynaecologists or ‘pervesn+1′
xn+1 this word, from the economic depression, hardship & widespread poverty 1930s period is not recommended for young Australians’ usage for help call Lifeline 13 11 14 or text 0477 13 11 14 and a stern warning from the garbment (turnout couture dress outfit uniform) you may be arrested and stuck in police cells overnight or for just an hour or two depending how the officers feel at the time perhaps as many as eight times
2 NOTES re YOUR personal micro relationships domains young people that in my role as educator and gnarly old social work chief i want to re-issue โฃ
(i) Do you hold yourself interpersonally in non face 2 face, anonymous or virtual social RELATIONS where the other (party] is not known to you directly or personally in adversarial, defensive or basically suspicious or untrusting relation to THEM
(ii) How are your interpersonal RELATIONSHIPS with others affected by THEIR physical size, athletic talent or social skills in speech or writing, that is to imply how physically and socially or politically empowered these people are in relation to yourself
Screenshot
Now those young guys as in David Malouf’s 1982 Fly Away Peter..
“Europe, Jim decided must be a mad place. And now they said there was to be a war
“He sat apart with his back to a tree and ate the sandwiches he had brought while the others had their spread. Ashleycarried a glass of champagne across to him and sat for a bit, with his own glass, but they didn’t speak.
“Later, when he handed the ladies down onto the wooden landing stage he had constructed, at the end of a tenty-foot catwalk, each of them said ‘Thank you, Jim,’ and the gentlemen tipped him. Ashley never said thank you, and he pretended not to see the coins that passed, though he wouldn’t have deprived Jim of the extra shillings by forbidding it [Symph. # 5 in E Flat Major begins\ promo for @ABCjazz passes ‘by’].
“Ashley didn’t have to thank him. And not at all because Jim was only doing what he was employed to do.
“At either end of the boat they held a balance. That was so clear there was no need to state it. There was no need in fact to make any statement at all. But when Ashley wanted someone to talk to, he would [second movement begins] come down to where Jim was making a raft of reeds to attract whistlers, or laying out seed, and talk six to the dozen, and in such an incomprehensible rush of syllables that Jim, often, could make neither head nor tail of it, though he didn’t mind. Ashley too was an enthusiast, but not a quiet one. Jim understood that, even if he never did grasp what Wagner was – something musical, though not of his sort, and when Ashley gave [up-tempo third movement] up words altogether and came to whistling, he was glad to be relieved at last of even pretending to follow. Ashley’s talk was one kind of music, and the tuneless whistling another. What Ashley was doing, Jim saw, was expressing something essential to himself, like the ‘sweet pretty creature [Movement Four begins] ‘ of the willy wagtails.
“Ashley did not present a mystery to Jim, though he did not comprehend him. They were alike and different, that’s all, and never so close as when Ashley, watching, chattered away, whistled, chattered again, and then just sat, easily contained in their double silence.”
I’ve had my mobile dog ‘n bone powered down – i get my internet per Personal (oowwhhh you are a one you cute not to c’est fetching little electromechanical device, you) Hotspot (ooowh-oo – double ooowhhhoooo – eep) – for the best part of eight hours with the exception of 3 @Xcomms posts, were they, an hour and a half ago and now the transmit of this @wordpress.com outing.
I have not once done that since i got my first Telstra ‘cellphone’ in late 2011. It was excellent ‘headwork’ and fun, kind-of new, borrowed and not blue, to completely hash a say 150 year old tropaic slogan or sloganic inorganic trope.. a minor study in dishabituation and of a radically critical Antonio Gramsci..
[ Antonio Francesco Gramsci was an Italian Marxist philosopher and politician. He was a founding member and one-time leader of the Italian Communist Party. A vocal critic of Benito Mussolini and fascism, he was imprisoned in 1926, and remained in prison until shortly before his death in 1937.. @Wikipedia Druids Collective of Sherwood Forest
brief discursive analysis of thepre Club-of-Rome Euro-American psychiatric allopath crap drug marketing ideas of so called tolerance and addictive appetites for nano-scaled biochemical molecules in the human body hooley-freaking-dooley we’ve done it hard, team, but never you mindfully or mindlessly and fake-consciously ‘Disneyborough-Dr Timothy Leary & Ted Kaczyinski mind the Pommie Open University people of 1975 are ‘here’ or at least honing-in though Christ in his Infinite-wisdom knows what that particular contrarian ideologically-powered & absurdly tendentious (other-people’s money, it’s always other people’s money in “count-trees” run by idiots, crooks, crocks & seriously doddery former great men or great women am-i-right-or-am-i-right?) Australianism is supp-hosed 2 mean.. a ‘nylon’ pant-stocking worn by Germaine Greer versus my wife’s aunt Rona Joyner period young ladies.
I’ve not done this as any vicarious affective empathy exercise on behalf the poor oppressed youngsters of Australia who have a barking prime minister seeking to save them from what he calls the Algorythm but Honest 2 Betsy because I’d had a complete headfull of existentially lost sheep wallowing in creative self expression for rabbits and mental 10 year-old boys who don’t yet (bless the actual ones) get any of life, love or anythingand a compleat f_cking gutsfull of 100s of millions of public dollars worth of crap people in Canberra pretending to do real national interest politics man, woman, and i’ve enjoyed the break.
This evening’s ๐๐ก๐ข๐ช๐ซ๐ต๐ถoh my goodness, what a cracker of a New-era playlist, @ABCClassic. They’re keeping it rolling and coming and it’s divine. We’re remaking Australian and elsewhwere’s Free 2 Air radio you all should have noticed by this but ” ” That’s OK” ” if you have’nt.
Ashley Crowther had come home after more than twelve years to find himself less of a stranger here than he expected.
He had been at school in England, then at Cambridge, then in Germany for a year studying music, and might have passed anywhere on that side of the world for an English gentleman. He spoke like one; he wore the clothes – he was much addicted to waist coats and watch chains, an affectation he might have to give up, he saw, in the new climate; he knew how to handle waiters, porters, commisionaires, etc. with just the right mixture of authority, condescension and jolly good humour. He was in all ways cultivated, and his idleness, which is what people here would call it, gave him no qualms. He took a keen interest in social questions, and saw pretty clearly that in the coming years there would be much to be done, stands to be taken, forces to be resisted, changes to be had and come to terms with. The idea excited him. He approved of change. With all that to think of he didn’t see that one had to have a vocation, a job named and paid for and endured for a certain number of hours each day, to be a serious person.
Ashley Crowther was a very serious person. He was dreamy, certainly, and excitably inarticulate, but he liked what was practical, what worked, and in the three years since he came of age had owned four automobiles. Now he was interested in the newest thing of all, the air. He didn’t fly himself, but his friend Bert did, and he was quite content, as in other cases, to play the patron and look on.
In the crude categories that had been in operation at Cambridge, athlete or aesthete, he had found himself willy-nilly among the latter. He had nevber been much good at games – his extreme thinness was against him – and he not only played the piano, Chopin and Brahms, but could whistle all the Leitmotifs from The Ring. But his childhood had been spent in the open, he had never lost his pleasure in wide spaces and distant horizons, in climbing, riding, going on picnics, and the creatures he had been surrounded by in those formative years had never deserted his dreams. Moving as they did in the other half of the world, far under the actualities of the daylight one, they had retained their primitive power and kept him in touch with a continent he had been sent away from at eleven but never quite left. Perhaps that is why when he came back at tweenty-three he has not a stranger.
Waking up that first morning in the old house – not in his own room, the room of his childhood, but in the big main bedroom since he was now the master – he had been overwhelmed by the familiarity of things; the touch of the air on his skin – too warm; the sharpness of the light even at twenty to seven – it might have been noon elsewhere; above all, since it is what came closest to the centre of his being, the great all-embracing sound that rose from the dazzling earth, a layered music, dense but deeply flowing, that was clippered insects rubbing their legs together, bird-notes, grass stems chaffing and fretting in the breeze. It immediately took him up and carried him back. He stepped out onto the verandah in his pyjamas – no need for even the lightest gown – [and it was all about him, the whole scene trembled upon it]. The flat earth had been transposed into another form and made accessible to different sense. An expansive monotone, its excited fluting and throbbing and booming from distended throats had been the ground-bass, he saw, of every music he had ever known. It was the sound his whole being moved to. He stood barefoot on the gritty board sand let it fill his ear.
‘How can you do it?’ his friends back there had said, commiserating but admiring his courage, which they altogether exaggerated.
‘It’s my fate,’ he had replied.
The phrase pleased him. It sounded solemn and final. But he was glad just the same to discover, now he was here, that he was not a stranger, and to feel, looking out on all this, the contentment of ownership and continuity.
It was his grandfather who had taken up the claim and put his name to the deeds; but he had died while the land was still wild in his head, a notion, no more, of what he had staked out in a strange and foreign continent that his children must make real. Ashley’s father had created most of what lay before him. Now it was his.
There was still everything to do – one saw that at a glance. But Ashley saw things differently from his father and grandfather. They had always had in mind a picture they had brought from home’, orderly fields divided by hedgerows, to which the present landscape, by planning and shaping, might one day be made to approximate. But for Ashley this was the first landscape he had known and he did not impose that other, greener one upon it; it was himself. Coming back, he found he liked its mixture of powdery blues and greens, its ragged edges, its sprawl. the sense it gave of being unfinished and of offering no prospect of being finished. These things spoke of space, and of a time in which nature might be left to go its own way and still yield up what it had to yield; there was that sort of abundance. For all his cultivation, he liked what was unmade here and could, without harm, be left that way.
There was more to Ashley Crowther’s image of the world than his formal clothes might have suggested – though he was, in fact, without them at this moment, barefoot on scrubbed boards – or, since he was shy, his formal manners, which were not so easily laid aside.
After breakfast he changed into a cotton shirt, twills, boots and a wide-brimmed hat and took a ride round his property, beginning with the little iron fenced enclosure where his parents, his grandparents and several smaller brothers and sisters were interred under sculptured stone.
.. Bert came with his flying machine. They watched it wobble in over the swamp, then circle the house and touch down, a bit unsteadily, in the home paddock. It sat there in the heat haze like a giant bird or moth while cows flicked their tails among cow-pats, and did not sem out of place. It was a landscape, Ashley thought, that could accommodate a good deal. That was his view of it. It wasn’t so clearly defined as England or Germany; new things could enter and find a place there. It might be old, even very old, but it was more open than Europe to what was still to come.
He also discovered Jim.
.. ‘What were you doing?’ he asked. It was a frank curiosity he expressed. There was nothing of reproach in it.
‘Watchin’ that Dollar bird,’ Jim told him. ‘You scared it off.โ
‘Dollar bird?’
‘Oriental,’ Jim said. ‘Come down from the Moluccas.’
His voice was husky and the accent broad; he drawled. The facts he gave were unnecessary and might have been pedantic. But when he named the bird, and again when he named the island, he made them sound, Ashley thought, extraordinary. He endowed them with some romantic quality that was really in himself. An od interest revealed itself, the fire of an idividual passion.
Ashley slipped down from the saddle, and they stood side by side, the grass almost at thigh level. Jim pointed.
‘It’s in that ironbark, see?’ He screwed up his eyes. ‘There, over to the left. Second branch from the top. Red beak. Purple on the throat and tail feathers. See?’
Ashley stared, focused, found the branch; and then, with a sharp little leap of surprise and excitement, the bird – red beak, purple throat, all as the young man had promised.
‘I can see it!’ he exclaimed, just like a child, and they both grinned. The young man turned away and sat on a log. He took the makings of a smoke from his pocket. Ashley stumbled forward.
‘Have one of mine,’ he insisted. ‘No, really.’ He offered the case, already snapped open, with the gold-tipped tailor-mades under a metal band that worked like a concertina.
‘Thanks,’ the young man said, his square fingers making an awkward job of working the band. He turned the cylinder, so utterly smooth and symmetrical, in his fingers, looking at the gold paper round the tip, then put it to his lower lip, struck a wax match, which he cupped in his hand against the breeze, and held it out to Ashley, who dipped his head towards it and blew out smoke. Jim lit his own cigarette and flipped the match with his thumbnail. All this action carried them over a moment of nothing-more-to-say into an easy silence. Ashley led his horse to a stump opposite, and crossing his legs, and with his body hunched forward elbow to knee, fell intensely still, then said abruptly:
‘Are you out here often? Watching, I mean?’
‘Fairly.’
‘Why?’
‘I dunno. It’s something to do, isn’ it?’ He looked about, his grey eyes narrowed, and the land was a flat circle all round, grass-tips, tree-stumps, brush, all of it seemingly still and silent, all of it crowded and alive with eyes, beaks, wing tips.
.. Ashley followed his gaze .. he was intensely aware for a moment how much life there might be in any square yard of it. And he owned a thousand acres.
.. Ashley laughed too. He drew himself tighter together, the knotted legs, the elbows in hard against his body, and the laughter was like an imp he had bottled up in there that suddenly came bubbling out.
“Listen,’ he said, ‘how would you like to work for me? How would you – ‘
.. ‘into an observing place, a sanctuary. It’s mine, I can make what I like of it. And you’d be just the man.’
The author
What went before-after above-below (Quantum-superposition gag there} – was the 2nd chunk of ‘Fly Away Peter’ published on ‘Monkeys,’ David Malouf’s writing, this first โoutโ 43yrs ago when Paul Keating, who had volunteered at ex Premier Lang – the Big Fella’s – office as a student, found his feet as federal Treasurer. My thanks are extended to the writer.. with more than a few thoughts as to the place and part of revitalising textual literary product about public participation, aegis, authority, autonomy, agency, ownership, authenticity, clarity, decision & relationships: in sum the new humanising or collaborative project that hoves into imaginary macro view as global institututions render themselves utterly irrelevant if not obscenely dysoperational.
The other side of the .. it’s been micro-rewarding to let most excellent Australian mid 20th century fiction ‘roll,’ be read and transcribed. This kind of work-as-fun is dead-set contributory to a culture, society and economy in lethal (deadly) trouble communicating anything but gruntiness and customer service patter to other adults and kids, bless their increasingly dizzy trending dozy bewildered Sam Altman, Jensen Huang, AWS Oceania Auckland, McKinsey & Company Australia & New Zealand, Nickelodeon, Wiggles, Bluey & Jarjums comprehensively falsely equivalenced Fake-science heads ..and ahmm hearts.
John Blundell
Adeal-lide, Addled-laid damn, the Palermo of the Sthrn Hmsphr (except Italy’s done some work to fix theirs) Adelaide
Speshull zoo animals & stuff
Alpha-profits fish & chip shops
Have those accountants got a deal for you – cheerio to Merv Nancarrow and Adelaide Rotary
For all the people-muga of ‘Far Western’ Eyre Peninsula my home a long time and birthplace of my daughter Zoe – lฤซf.. ฮถฯฮฎ zoรญ
Absent-minded professor-style I did actually in the concluding paragraph of the following essay omit the punchline which is that some 20 years ago when my life was at least direly constrained by gangsters and halfwits in an ex British colonial “frontier” Garrison-town (place de sรปretรฉ in the French language) I heard on the Australian Broad & Bloke Casting Corporation’s Science Show that as a matter of pride to us simple folk the ‘Wi-Fi’ was discovered by two jokers in Sydney (?) seeking black holes: hoo-oo-whee; you ain’t goin’ nowhere..
Ooh-wee, ride me high Tomorrow’s the day that my bride’s a-gonna come Ooh-wee, are we gonna fly Down into the easy chair
Genghis Khan and his brother Don Couldn’t keep on keeping on We’ll climb that bridge after it’s gone After we’re way past it
Around 1977 – which actually was a shithouse footy year 4n mih
โBlinded by the Lightโฑฝ,โ decades ago when I was say a mega-fit prime (hoโho-ho) of life 30ish Australian Rules Football player and regional manager of government services charged with seeing out the 9th of May 1901 British Empire crap – see the photo i have of myself of that time.. that was time, not Time, my cherished audience of students. Capital values? Oh bring back capital punishment man for judgment is actually me you dumbarses sayeth your lord god of hosts occasionally given to burning down backpackersโ hostels and evidently continually given to mincing the tiny bodies of of the descendants of the sons of Shemp, Larry, Moey & perhaps CURLY – Curlyโs a real person who grew up in Redfern, Sydney, NSW ๐ฆ๐ฆ๐บ so GOD MORNING ftrnn vnng v nght Curly 4ROM Hotshot boarding house 2012 & 2013 John in the rapidly destabilising Brian Cox ancient animist and lunatic Julius Sumner Miller objectivist domain^.. you deadset not fake TV or podcast #History students must at this truly terrible moment for our country get a mental grip on the corruption of mainstream Australian culture by USA men with money in the 1940s and 1950s morons and business criminals – there was this Blinded-by-the-light ditty, OKโ
Let me Relate to you, dear reader (s) that despite scores of occasions (temporo-spatial events, cโest) of that Manfred Mann songline burbling blathering and blustering away in a rebellious adolescent (that means Teenager in toffy social list post GWF Hegel inspired & engineered language and shit, young people) Socratic pre First-millenium stand-off i never mentally Digestedยณ the content beyond the second line which ran โwrapped up in a dream da-di-da-di 123โ or some shit.
And is it some remarkable Ronald Reagan Disney Ford Foundation Cultural-studies stinger or what that i canโt find the โDreamlandโ Type-thing even now. Talk about Footnotes of Human-history!
The @NVIDIA corporation and barking-mad Sammy of course have this logging of nonsensisation well in hand – along with their stupored little๐๐๐s – hey itโs a trinity – must be the Father, the Son and the Billy Gatesโ Billygoats then.
It became clear to me this morning as i procured a “Wired Fidelity,” or some shit, signal with which to connect Wonkadoodle HP Pavilion x 360 Convertible: 14 dh1xxx Rename-in-a-rather-fetching-emphatic (dark-ish) powder-blue, to the Internet that the proverbial proton, or positively charged ‘particle’ is like zero – as genuine mathematicians have known since the 9th century (FM) no quantum – and that if the 19 teens European physicist musing about the sunlight on the walls of the buildings (or wherever) as he sat in a Vienna tram-car had not been monumentally befuddled by the light and may even at some fiurther point in his studies have mentally cracked onto Heat and unlike a now five generation string of Vanity-project mental troglodytes realised fiery ‘holes’ cannot be black.
You bet your while, brown or black arse this – what you’ve just been so fortunate as to ‘digest4‘ – represents phenomenological explication (de text. blah, blah Greta-thun early 20thC Anglo-american blah (Literary Studiesn my darlings my flaneurs my wonks and my James Dean September 30 1995 priapistae) meriting the Nobel Prize for Physics 2025 – give me Nobel-lit and I’ll shut you down for the monstrous Normalisation-era of History objectivist global societal parasites you have been.
John Blundell
Australia
We are your servants team.. but, ahm, don’t obstruct our work, will you?
Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night
Madman, drummers, bummers Indians in the summer with a teenage diplomat In the dumps with the mumps As the adolescent pumps his way into his hat With a boulder on my shoulder, feelin’ kinda older I tripped the merry-go-round With this very unpleasin’, sneezin’ and wheezin’ The calliope crashed to the ground
The calliope crashed to the ground!
But she was blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night
Some silicone sister with a manager mister Told me I got what it takes She said, “I’ll turn you on sonny to something strong Play the song with the funky break” And go-kart Mozart was checkin’ out the weather chart To see if it was safe outside And little Early-Pearly came by in his curly-wurly And asked me if I needed a ride
Asked me if I needed a ride!
But she was blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light
She got down, but she never got tired She’s gonna make it through the night She’s gonna make it through the night
But, mama, that’s where the fun is
But mama, that’s where the fun is Mama always told me not to look into the eyes of the sun But mama, that’s where the fun is
Some brimstone, baritone, anticyclone, rolling stone Preacher from the East Says, “Dethrone the dictaphone, hit it in its funny bone That’s where they expect it least And some new-mown chaperone standin’ in the corner Watchin’ the young girls dance And some fresh-sown moonstone was messin’ with his frozen zone Remind him of romance
The calliope crashed to the ground!
But she was blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night Blinded by the light Revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night
blinded by the light (Indians in the summer with a teenage diplomat) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night (In the dumps with the mumps) blinded by the light (As the adolescent pumps his way into his hat) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night
blinded by the light (I tripped the merry-go-round) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night (With this very unpleasin’, sneezin’ and wheezin’) blinded by the light (The calliope crashed to the ground) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night
blinded by the light (And throws his lover in the sand) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night (And some bloodshot, forget-me-not said daddy’s within earshot) blinded by the light (Save the buckshot, turn up the band) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night
blinded by the light (Told me I got what it takes) revved up like a deuce, another runner in the night (She said, “I’ll turn you on, son, into something strong”)
She got down but she never got tired She’s gonna make it through the night
Blinded by the Light lyrics ยฉ Sony Pop Music Publishing, Eldridge Publishing Co.
โฑฝ students โgoโ Demesne one of those very old peopleโs words young people had never heard of maybe until Year 12 if they loved doing English literature study (which many of them ‘hated’ for the entire period of their exposure to the works of late 16th and early 17th century Wheelright – my maternal grandfather was first in his adult career apprenticed as a wheelright i mean seriously, kids, uh-oh, Playwright in the challenging if not miserable five ( ‘go’ lower-case because of course numbers are not capital values but you all knew that) years prior
3 What, oh Master? Are you going to eat my poo directly out of my neatly euphemised homologated homogenised (?) proverbially literarilly-flourishing b-a-d metaphor-wielding rear orifice again? Students may refer to Mad Molly by Erica (Fear of Flying) Jong c 1980 of Mad-molly-had-a-child-damn-thing-went-wild fame OK
4 there’s an extraordinarily educative early post WWII book read by virtually every English-speaking adult interested or personally ambitious in public affairs – A PELICAN ‘paperback’ BOOK – written by R. H. Barrow which will explain ‘digesting’ as an epoch-marking indeed youkneeversal poesis False-equivalence rhetorical Culture-bomb for you all. There’s a Quintillian quotation to build or destroy civilisations with as its ‘frontispiece’