Sunday, May 25, 2014

XIX. La chambre [est ensoleillée]



Her scalloped roses, the modern consonance of their near-infrared left
Longer, then wooden, incurving of watermelon radish—Calder’s Nénuphars rouges (1956),
Another éolienne fixed against the surrounding void—Scoring to retrace
The experience, of Anne Brassey’s unmoored December (1876) on the Sunbeam
Samuel Palmer’s constant marble in the mackerel sky's heavy, confounding
Nuclei, after Calvert’s The Chamber Idyll (1831), for a hole in the network where one takes

Hold—The penned flock, the bride, the vapor of restored Palestine; paths taken
By the Geometer larva on hindering knotweed—A.S. Byatt’s The Shadow of the Sun (1964); left
Wing, Julian Barnes’s Staring at the Sun (1985)—On the communal green confounding
Insensitivity to one situation, of wanting the reverse—On tire
à boulets rouges
The outbuilding of the tennis court fractured by artesian wells, the upskirt mishandling retraced
Of being a category, the holding pattern of 19, when a body most resembles Ernest Henry’s 2-Litre Sunbeam

Grand Prix (1922) mated to a three-speed gearbox—Direction of four-wheel shifting the sex-hyphen as the sunbeam
Emerging from cloud cover; spotlighting a corner of the orchard for the fall burn, and taken
For Bruckner’s Locus iste (1896)—Andre Breton’s (b. 19 February 1896) chapter in Herbert Read, retracing
The movement; Leonora Carrington read at 19, where, a thought of a blacked-out house; inside, coherent life continued—Left
With extreme reluctance, the deific proclaiming itself in the photic sneeze reflex confounding
Henry Green’s her dark body thrusting, then as if she opened the eye hole to the furnace (1946)—C’est la lanterne rouge;

Self-contained, a way of taking possession of the bright things seen, and signature of local unfolding rubbed with jeweler’s rouge—
Fleeing her father’s home with his idols, Rachel fitted herself into the angles of Jean’s back, apart from the sunbeam
Of the bedside lamp; yellow, burnt twice—Peter Hughes-Winterton, solid and confident above her and her slipping feet, confounded
By Oliver's reentry, of a white rocking horse; a horseshoe in 19 diorite pieces, with its human vacancy taken
For visual insistence—Oliver’s overarching for Lawrence, conceives for her, every subsequent nuclei derived from this one original by which Anna retraces
Her intended flight, and scene of a major retrospective, to Mexico (1960)—Kierkegaard’s Immortality is not a learned question (1846); left   

Unknotting the adhesion forming, the wire of the electric fire grate attaining the hearty rouge
Of coal-stoked domains—Calder’s sheet metal, rods, wire suspended in that ice-cream cone of a building (1964) retracing
Memories of the scraped fish skeleton; on another day, the ingested beach glass and plastic rings—A mote in the sunbeam,
Coleridge’s disquisition of Opus Maximum (1834) in the pioneer program confounding
Immortality's scattered stones on the walls of the forcing house before Jean and Gregory’s hypoxic sunbeams are taken

For weariness; all their opinions unearthed—Henry roving in the incandescent orchard taken
From the writing that day; suggesting otherwise, from the black tail of the spinal cord left
No expansion of time—TAT, which stood for The Absolute Truth, as the nightshade under the tablecloth confounding
The vital question; incubating it in a cryptoporticus of
Ab Eo Quod (1956), le fil rouge—
Black, the catalytic leaf in the crucible bottom rubbed of its oxidation, where the rose attar retraces—
The unseen log fire, flaked pink, for a moment, and blobbed suddenly into her basin, of egg tempera, mixing sunbeams

Taken from S
échan’s sunbeam on foil, the precarious glass escaped, by the gray cat, returned—
Confounding a succession of pets, the rounds of a future
Histoire d'un poisson rouge (1959)—
The work until then preserving this
blind spot, retracing the shadow’s tendons, from the room looking down to the window.

12 comments:

Σφιγξ said...

To be read.

https://books.google.com/books?id=879MIsFGsLAC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Nature%27s+Engraver+Uglow&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj_3tC6yL_iAhWFmlkKHYl_B1cQ6AEIJzAA#v=onepage&q=Nature's%20Engraver%20Uglow&f=false

Σφιγξ said...

Chunks of the Earth

"While most volcanic rocks at the surface of our planet are themselves products of the mantle, the magmas that produce them undergo changes on their ascent to the surface such that they no longer represent the mantle they left behind. Sometimes the magmas contain an actual piece of the mantle: a rock that has been ripped from the depth and transported to the surface intact. These little trinkets of crystallised mantle are called xenoliths, from the Greek for 'foreign' and 'rock,' signifying that they are an extraneous component within the magma. This, however, makes them very valuable to scientists, who can use them to analyse and understand different parts of the Earth's interior to which they wouldn't otherwise have access. The problem is that these xenoliths formed under different pressure and temperature conditions at depth from the conditions they travel through to get to the surface. They sometimes undergo a violent journey to the surface that doesn't leave them totally unaffected. Nevertheless, researchers are able to back-track the processes these rocks from the deep underwent their rise."

Natalie Starkey's Fire and Ice: The Volcanoes of the Solar System (2021)

https://books.google.com/books/about/Fire_and_Ice.html?id=aD8gEAAAQBAJ#v=onepage&q&f=false

Σφιγξ said...

Cologne: Böll is in many ways one of my Spiritual fathers. I recognized it immediately in Ansichten eines Clowns (The Clown) (1963). Flashbacks, spiritual values, and intergenerational guilt of nonesuch people.

Sandbach and Ballard's Planets in Containment (1980) is in part a synthesis of the Ukrainian-French astrologue Alexandre Volguine. I have a stellium in Capricorn (Mercury, Jupiter, Neptune, and Venus) reading the last degree of Venus in Capricorn some assign to Aquarius (Saturn's vacation home), which is not applicable to me, as Love requires the longest-applied, concentrated effort from me. Until it does not; by (in)complete flashes of insight.

Anyhow, the Vertex-Moon in Cancer and Anti-Vertex Jupiter highlights houses 8 and 2 respectively, and the following

Σφιγξ said...

254. Venus-Mercury-Jupiter

"These people have the innate ability to see the worth and the beauty of all ideas, and hence, are good at appreciating another individual's point of view. They need to couple this ability with an attempt to bring all ideas together into a harmonious and synthesized whole. They may drift easily from one idea to another and never really tie their thoughts together. In this incarnation, the love inherent in their thinking needs to reach toward an all-encompassing and expansive outlook.
POSITIVE: An ability to communicate easily manifests as an enthusiastic exchange of ideas.
NEGATIVE: Lazy thinking manifests as mental disorder."

257: Venus-Mercury-Neptune

"These individuals are capable of communicating in an easy and pleasant manner, and, in this lifetime, they are learning how to think and express themselves with greater subtlety. They need to beware of [sic] allowing their minds to take a superficial approach to ideas, for this will eventually lead them into mental confusion. Rather than being satisfied with mere surface solutions to mental problems, they need to strive to think more intuitively, and to allow their minds to open up to the psychic energy inherent in their being.
POSITIVE: Beautiful ideas are expressed subtly.
NEGATIVE: Lazy thinking leads to mental confusion."

Σφιγξ said...

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Elizabeth_Finch/lthOEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Elizabeth%20Finch%20Julian%20Barnes&pg=PP1&printsec=frontcover

Σφιγξ said...

https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/julian-barnes/staring-at-the-sun/

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Unquiet_Grave_(book)

https://medium.com/@ek.azul/venus-in-capricorn-e63d8ab17087

Σφιγξ said...

Yes, I will put Exercise 90 here. I will finish it before year's end. I aspire to the inner balance to submit the details in the butterfly wings.

I stepped into Siena's room, and the blinds were open illuminating the room.

I am going to assemble this, the adult version of Lego, with my Dremel in her room for a few days this winter. The exercise in spacial visualization is appreciated. I have constructed two smaller versions by the same company.

Blue with white trim.

http://www.greenleafdollhouses.com/dollhouse-kits/fairfield-dollhouse-kit.html


I have the end of December before I start the accountancy degree online in January.

I have benefitted from the in-person class taught by a former patient (!) I just remembered yesterday that this woman and her daughter were in a room when I responded to a situation where the scheduled meal insulin was given at too high of a dose. D50W was not an option given the parlous state of an ultrasound guided IV. Oral intake was acceptable and endocrinology was consulted to adjust the dose. Many are upset about insulin admin before and after surgery.

"Hudson et al., in a retrospective observational study of 1474 elective patients showed an HbA1c of ≥ 6% [42 mmol/l] in almost a third of patients [31%]. This was associated with elevated intra-operative BG values, a known predictor of adverse outcomes [34], and in isolation, was shown to be an independent predictor of 30-day mortality [35]."

https://cardiothoracicsurgery.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13019-018-0700-2

In general, I like assembling things as an exercise in patience, blueprint reading, dexterity, and spiritual upliftment. Like the mandala. What is the most important is the mental balance from start to finish. Passive hobbies are difficult fir me to enjoy.

Σφιγξ said...

*Spatial

I remember playing Katamino and Rush Hour with her, and we both enjoyed it.

https://parentingscience.com/spatial-intelligence/#:~:text=Spatial%20intelligence%2C%20or%20visuo%2Dspatial,perform%20when%20they%20design%20buildings.

https://www.thinkfun.com/products/rush-hour/

Σφιγξ said...

https://books.google.com/books?id=TZ-_zNC15twC&printsec=frontcover&dq=Tomorrow+in+Battle+Think+of+Me+%22window%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&source=gb_mobile_search&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj-k9mLsKL7AhUkD1kFHdx1DaMQ6AF6BAgKEAM#v=onepage&q=Tomorrow%20in%20Battle%20Think%20of%20Me%20%22window%22&f=false

Σφιγξ said...

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Tomorrow_in_the_Battle_Think_on_Me/TZ-_zNC15twChl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Tomorrow%20in%20Battle%20Think%20of%20Me%20%20%22inherited%20scene%20of%20aerial%20combat%22&pg=PA48&printsec=frontcover

I do not pine for last autumn, but I recall liking this passage quite a lot. The Greenleaf construction mentioned above is not ripe. I take accounting classes next semester. To be continued.

https://www.google.com/books/edition/Horev_Keter_Crown_Bible/zlWMxha7lSMC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=parashat%20vayera%20avraham&pg=PA21&printsec=frontcover

Exercise 90. Thank you, for reminding me.

https://1drv.ms/i/s!AsA4BY25Ql_1mx1h6W8Y91QaAAL7?e=wL7lDb

Exercise 91, now.

Σφιγξ said...

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=d6Pcp944sRI

Σφιγξ said...

https://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/2017919/jewish/Marrying-Task-to-Purpose.htm

https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/a60964033/new-alloy-defying-the-limits-of-metal/