Showing posts with label oxford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oxford. Show all posts

2012-06-15

boy you goin' down!



oh, shelley!

his first gothic novel was published in the year he matriculated to Oxford, where he attended precisely one lecture (on minerology - which he walked out of dejectedly before the end, complaining that all they were talking about was rocks, rocks, rocks!). he proceeded to follow his passion for chemistry and metaphysics -- experimenting in one discipline by burning gaping acid holes through the carpet in his college rooms, and experimenting in the other by writing an inflammatory pamphlet "On the necessity of atheism", which was Dawkins-like in the strength of its assertions that people follow religion out of intellectual laziness. he sides instead with the British empiricists, who follow reasoning deriving from sensory experience alone. unlike the politely academic metaphysicists before him, it was probably his social commentary on humanity's remembered fear of church power moguls, that got him in trouble... or perhaps the assertion that the clergy pretend knowledge of the divine (ouch!). he and his coauthor were sent down (read: kicked out), for the offense.

if you want to read the absurdly strongly-worded pamphlet, the 1811 version is online via the University of Maryland's Shelley Resource Page, or the 1813 version via the Secular Web.

alternatively, if you are more interested in the poet's coach-driver hair, squeaky voice, shambolic delight in dueling pistols, or natural propensity for the human steeplechase, it's all in the published recollections of his pamphlet co-author, and oxford sidekick du-jour, thomas jefferson hogg, whose 1832-3 account, Shelley at Oxford, has been digitized by Project Guttenberg.

finally there's kate beaton's delicious take on shelley's prophecy of his own death over at Hark A Vagrant, where the toussle-haired shelley and byron are some of my favourite melodramatic historic reinventions.

2012-06-08

not today, clue balloon. not today



and so ends clue balloon's first crime-solving adventure...

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9

2012-06-07

clue balloon: gets a call


oh dear - poor clue balloon. perhaps everything in your hunt for clues is not quite as expected...

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 ... and more!

2012-06-06

clue balloon: gets carried away...



clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 ... and more!

Update: apologies for yesterday's early release! hang in there - this narrative arc might get bumpy!

2012-06-05

clue balloon: uses literary devices


oh clue balloon! deploying 'would' where a plain 'will' ought to suffice. it's a very trendy literary device, which lends a hint of subjunctive mystery with that whiff of the counterfactual... poor clue balloon - getting a bit caught up in narrative devices, and not concentrating on CLUES!

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ... and more! Update: apologies for today's earlier incorrect posting - gotta keep the story in order ;)

2012-06-04

clue balloon: keeps an open mind


oh clue balloon, you are clearly gathering all the relevant clues to solve this crime...

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ... and more!

2012-06-03

clue balloon: casts a broad net


ah, clue balloon, speculating wildly in your hunt for clues... not a little influenced by the grimy monochrome underbelly of the other place over at cambridge noir. here's lookin' at you, d.

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3, 4 ... and more!

2012-06-02

clue balloon: seeks connections



oh clue balloon! how i love your spectacularly tenuous sleuthing! colin dexter would be proud... or perhaps appalled.

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3 ... and more!

2012-06-01

wot! crime? quick - send up the clue balloon!


following on from yesterday's post, a new solution to the colin dexter effect! cynan's genius idea. crime fighting, now solved!

clue balloon: episodes 1, 2, 3 ... and more!

2012-01-11

haiku for a cold night




Getting this shot was pretty tricky - to catch the colours in the sky I had to go for the longest exposure I could manage hand-held(no tripod with me at the time), a fairly high ISO, and that fabulous forced flash to catch the snowflakes drifting past the lens...

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