voices from corona borealis
Mar. 19th, 2017 06:04 pm12 hours until the vernal equinox
I don't see why it matters since it's going to remain cold for a long time after this.
A kid, Mikaela, asked the woman she was with how my drawings were so good and she said that it took lots of practice. She's right; these are but a few of several thousand train portraits. She had a toy black cat with a jeweled collar that made meowing noises.
I thought that Courtney's name would be Ashley because she has bright blue hair. I also like the way her scarf was arranged.
Seated near her was a woman with purple braids.
I think I heard some people on the Green Line speaking Maya.
There is a book containing a very rough draft of Hamlet. There's a book with a signature that is supposedly his but its association with a well-known compulsive forger means it probably isn't. There's the Third Folio, which contains the tragedy Pericles along with several plays that were either misattributed to Shakespeare or deliberately attributed to Shakespeare to sell copies. There's a zodiac wheel and an attempt to prove that Shakespeare was actually the name of various members of high society hiding subversive messages. There's a map from that era depicting a Pangaea-sized continent in the southern hemisphere with the Arctic Ocean called Oceanus Tartaricus along with a surprisingly detailed Siberia. There's a facsimile of Shakespeare's will and the writing borders on Ivalician Gothic. There's an altered King Lear with a love story between Edgar and Cordelia and the removal of The Fool.
I've never seen the Sargent murals at the Public Library. I've seen the Grail murals and the Muses and for some reason, I thought the Muses were done by Sargent. I did notice the names of famous Bostonians on the ceiling but not the Zodiac on the floor.


Note that the Madonna of Sorrows and Astarte are both standing on crescent moons. Later on, Ashtaroth (there were probably several wars fought over whether the name was pronounced with a voiceless palato-alveolar sibilant fricative or a voiceless alveolar fricative) was depicted as a nude man with the wings, hands, and feet of a dragon, wearing a crown and riding a wolf. In Shadow Hearts, he's depicted with hentacles, and, according to Chris, does not use them in very destructive ways.
Astarte is another name for the star Gemma/Alphecca.
On the other side of her was the bull deity Moloch (Morlock might be a deliberate corruption) with an eye in his forehead, and between them was the goddess Neith and the Zodiac. Moloch reminds me of Chaos, the Walker of the Wheel. So of course he's evil; he's associated with wind.
Sargent linked religious institutions to death and obsolescence. The final panel is blank and was meant to depict Jesus not as Law-Giver but as Teacher, but Sargent was beset with troubles later in his life and died before he finished.
Boloco has some really eclectic burrito ingredients and some colorful paintings of Boston on the walls.
A guy with blue hair was heading towards the library as I was heading to the station.
A guy had a corgi with him.
Claudia likes photography and fashion design. I don't think she's the same Claudia I met a few years ago as she's not that kind of artist nor did I see any tattoos, but then again, she was wearing a coat.
Yes, I did meet people named Courtney and Kim last time, no, they were not the same people.
burning question: could Shakespeare be Jack the Ripper?
I don't see why it matters since it's going to remain cold for a long time after this.
A kid, Mikaela, asked the woman she was with how my drawings were so good and she said that it took lots of practice. She's right; these are but a few of several thousand train portraits. She had a toy black cat with a jeweled collar that made meowing noises.
I thought that Courtney's name would be Ashley because she has bright blue hair. I also like the way her scarf was arranged.
Seated near her was a woman with purple braids.
I think I heard some people on the Green Line speaking Maya.
There is a book containing a very rough draft of Hamlet. There's a book with a signature that is supposedly his but its association with a well-known compulsive forger means it probably isn't. There's the Third Folio, which contains the tragedy Pericles along with several plays that were either misattributed to Shakespeare or deliberately attributed to Shakespeare to sell copies. There's a zodiac wheel and an attempt to prove that Shakespeare was actually the name of various members of high society hiding subversive messages. There's a map from that era depicting a Pangaea-sized continent in the southern hemisphere with the Arctic Ocean called Oceanus Tartaricus along with a surprisingly detailed Siberia. There's a facsimile of Shakespeare's will and the writing borders on Ivalician Gothic. There's an altered King Lear with a love story between Edgar and Cordelia and the removal of The Fool.
I've never seen the Sargent murals at the Public Library. I've seen the Grail murals and the Muses and for some reason, I thought the Muses were done by Sargent. I did notice the names of famous Bostonians on the ceiling but not the Zodiac on the floor.


Note that the Madonna of Sorrows and Astarte are both standing on crescent moons. Later on, Ashtaroth (there were probably several wars fought over whether the name was pronounced with a voiceless palato-alveolar sibilant fricative or a voiceless alveolar fricative) was depicted as a nude man with the wings, hands, and feet of a dragon, wearing a crown and riding a wolf. In Shadow Hearts, he's depicted with hentacles, and, according to Chris, does not use them in very destructive ways.
Astarte is another name for the star Gemma/Alphecca.
On the other side of her was the bull deity Moloch (Morlock might be a deliberate corruption) with an eye in his forehead, and between them was the goddess Neith and the Zodiac. Moloch reminds me of Chaos, the Walker of the Wheel. So of course he's evil; he's associated with wind.
Sargent linked religious institutions to death and obsolescence. The final panel is blank and was meant to depict Jesus not as Law-Giver but as Teacher, but Sargent was beset with troubles later in his life and died before he finished.
Boloco has some really eclectic burrito ingredients and some colorful paintings of Boston on the walls.
A guy with blue hair was heading towards the library as I was heading to the station.
A guy had a corgi with him.
Claudia likes photography and fashion design. I don't think she's the same Claudia I met a few years ago as she's not that kind of artist nor did I see any tattoos, but then again, she was wearing a coat.
Yes, I did meet people named Courtney and Kim last time, no, they were not the same people.
burning question: could Shakespeare be Jack the Ripper?