Wednesday, March 12, 2008


I step out side of myself, on a dark street in Berkeley. Lost in the rain, blurd vision.

2 comments:

Monkeyhands said...

"For the snark was a boojum you see." This was the Coleridge-esque revelation that came to Lewis Carrol as he was walking along a hillside by himself. The hillside was like a moor, (this is all factual) and this in turn referenced a poem by Wordsworth. And so, the story is told in a way that vaguely references Wordsworth's poem, the name of which escapes me. Needless to say; Carroll took his slightly strange line, "For the Snark was Boojum, you see." and built a 9 part epic poem from it, called "the hunting of the snark." This Poem has been referenced by such uncanny marvels as "Monty Python's Flying Circus", and MTV Cribs. One day, it will headline as the rock opera cartoon made by the Coalition. (Of Righteous People) [Seeking Enlightenment]

it shall be grand.

Monkeyhands said...

what's this word, "antediluvian" ? It's from the text. "Fit the Third: the baker's tale" and it says "As the man they called "Ho!" told his story of woe In an Antediluvian tone."