ejp626 Posted November 28, 2008 Author Report Posted November 28, 2008 (edited) Have an unusual query. I'm trying to track down a poem, sort of a long rambling poem with the following lines towards the end: JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES GREEN STAMPS I thought the most likely candidates were early Amiri Baraka or Paul Blackburn, but I've been pretty carefully through their work and I can't find it. It might be some obscure New York poet in a chapbook I read somewhere, which makes it a needle in a haystack. The last google search didn't turn up anything, so I am wondering if this rings any bells. Thanks. Eric Just shows how senile I am. Did another google search and I asked this on the board back in 2004! Maren gave me a lead but it didn't pan out. The only hits are for bumper stickers and t-shirts, but I am 85% sure this was a poem. I have this weird visual memory, where I can usually remember where interesting quotes are in a book, i.e. top, middle or bottom of a page and left or right page. That's as far as it goes, so it isn't as useful as a photographic memory, but it does come in handy sometimes while browsing books. Anyway I can basically see the layout, but not the author or title. Oh well. One day... Edited November 28, 2008 by ejp626 Quote
poetrylover3 Posted November 29, 2008 Report Posted November 29, 2008 The Basic Con by Lew Welch Those who can’t find anything to live for, always invent something to die for. Then they want the rest of us to die for it too. Other favorite poets have to include Wallace Stevens, A R Ammons, William Carlos Williams, Pablo Neruda (especially The Captain's Verses, some of the most beautiful love poetry I know), Ruth Stone (my former teacher), Louise Gluck-October especially, William Butler Yeats, e.e. cummings, Walt Whitman, Longfellow. Anthologies are also noteworthy for making the acquaintance of lesser known and "foreign" poets- including Hayden Carruth's The Voice That Is Great Within Us, Carolyn Forche's Against Forgetting, Peter Forbes' Scanning The Century, The Library of America anthologies of American Poetry: The 17th and 18th Centuries; The Nineteenth Century (what a magnificent gift this is!!!); The Twentieth Century. I'm just now becoming acquainted with Language For A New Century. The Norton Anthology of Poetry remains an essential and basic text. I'm as nuts on poetry as I am on Jazz so this could be a great thread. I'll close this with one of Whittier's less well known poems What The Birds Said, which I find extraordinarily powerful: WHAT THE BIRDS SAID by: John Greenleaf Whittier (1807-1892) The birds against the April wind Flew northward, singing as they flew; They sang, "The land we leave behind Has swords for corn-blades, blood for dew." "O wild-birds, flying from the South, What saw and heard ye, gazing down?" "We saw the mortar's upturned mouth, The sickened camp, the blazing town! "Beneath the bivouac's starry lamps, We saw your march-worn children die; In shrouds of moss, in cypress swamps, We saw your dead uncoffined lie. "We heard the starving prisoner's sighs And saw, from line and trench, your sons Follow our flight with home-sick eyes Beyond the battery's smoking guns." "And heard and saw ye only wrong And pain," I cried, "O wing-worn flocks?" "We heard," they sang, "the freedman's song, The crash of Slavery's broken locks! "We saw from new, uprising States The treason-nursing mischief spurned, As, crowding Freedom's ample gates, The long-estranged and lost returned. "O'er dusky faces, seamed and old, And hands horn-hard with unpaid toil, With hope in every rustling fold, We saw your star-dropt flag uncoil. "And struggling up through sounds accursed, A grateful murmur clomb the air; A whisper scarcely heard at first, It filled the listening heavens with prayer. "And sweet and far, as from a star, Replied a voice which shall not cease, Till, drowning all the noise of war, It sings the blessed song of peace!" So to me, in a doubtful day Of chill and slowly greening spring, Low stooping from the cloudy gray, The wild-birds sang or seemed to sing. They vanished in the misty air, The song went with them in their flight; But lo! they left the sunset fair, And in the evening there was light. Quote
ejp626 Posted February 12, 2009 Author Report Posted February 12, 2009 (edited) Guess I haven't done a very good job updating this. I have been buying a handful of poetry books, mostly books that I was a bit on the fence about when I was younger, but were now super cheap on amazon or half.com. For instance, I picked up Thom Gunn's The Man with Night Sweats and A.R. Ammons' Garbage for close to $5 (w/ shipping). Wow, Gunn's book really was a flashback to the height of the AIDS epidemic in the US, but I think this book does stand the test of time (not as sure about his other work). Anyway, there are sufficient ties between Thom Gunn and August Kleinzahler that his name kept cropping up as I made these purchases. Now I had never heard of Kleinzahler but he has quite an impressive ouvre, including a recent book with a totally kick-ass title: The Strange Hours Travellers Keep. So in a very short period of time I've become a bit of a fan and picked up 4 of his books and have pre-ordered his newest collection (it's out in hardback but the paperback is a bit cheaper). It didn't hurt that he is another case where they must have over-printed and you can get most of his books for a couple of bucks. His mature work tends to be in the style of the urban vignette, fairly accessible with perhaps some surreal touchs (not nearly as much as Simic though). So I think this was a pretty good find and am happily exploring his work. I was also surprised to see that Adrienne Rich has a new collection out called Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth. I've been a fan of her work for a long time, but this is not a particularly strong collection. For me the highlight was the title poem and not much else, but I will wait and reread at a time when I am not so pressed for time. I might be a bit more enthusiastic then or at least more forgiving. Edit: I see that way up in the thread Paul mentioned Kleinzahler, but I didn't pick up on it. We seem to have a constellation of favorite poets in common, so I guess I'll check out some of the others. I'd also echo the praise for Neruda, and I have a fair bit of his work, but like Gluck I find each collection can be completely different from the last. Edited February 12, 2009 by ejp626 Quote
jazzbo Posted February 12, 2009 Report Posted February 12, 2009 T. S. Eliot was the poet that most inspired me. . . . My favorite poem though may be this one from William Wordsworth. . . . . The world is too much with us; late and soon, Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers; Little we see in Nature that is ours; We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon! This Sea that bares her bosom to the moon, The winds that will be howling at all hours, And are up-gathered now like sleeping flowers, For this, for everything, we are out of tune; It moves us not.--Great God! I'd rather be A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn; So might I, standing on this pleasant lea, Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn; Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea; Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn. Quote
Joe Posted February 12, 2009 Report Posted February 12, 2009 Have an unusual query. I'm trying to track down a poem, sort of a long rambling poem with the following lines towards the end: JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES GREEN STAMPS I thought the most likely candidates were early Amiri Baraka or Paul Blackburn, but I've been pretty carefully through their work and I can't find it. It might be some obscure New York poet in a chapbook I read somewhere, which makes it a needle in a haystack. The last google search didn't turn up anything, so I am wondering if this rings any bells. Thanks. Eric Just shows how senile I am. Did another google search and I asked this on the board back in 2004! Maren gave me a lead but it didn't pan out. The only hits are for bumper stickers and t-shirts, but I am 85% sure this was a poem. I have this weird visual memory, where I can usually remember where interesting quotes are in a book, i.e. top, middle or bottom of a page and left or right page. That's as far as it goes, so it isn't as useful as a photographic memory, but it does come in handy sometimes while browsing books. Anyway I can basically see the layout, but not the author or title. Oh well. One day... Eric -- just a guess, but you might look into the work of Bob Kaufman. And even if these lines don't belong to Bob, I think you'll dig his work (assuming you don't know it already. CRANIAL GUITAR: SELECTED POEMS Quote
Serioza Posted February 13, 2009 Report Posted February 13, 2009 Hanshan was a legendary figure associated with a collection of poems from the Chinese Tang Dynasty in the Taoist and Chan tradition. He is honored as an incarnation of the Bodhisattva -figure Manjusri in Zen lore. In Japanese and Chinese paintings he is often depicted together with his sidekick Shide or with Fenggan another monk with legendary attributes. Sitting alone in peace before these cliffs the full moon is heaven's beacon the ten thousand things are all reflections the moon originally has no light wide open the spirit of itself is pure hold fast to the void realize its subtle mystery look at the moon like this this moon that is the heart's pivot I love the joys of the mountains, wandering completely free, feeding a crippled body another day, thinking thoughts that go nowhere. Sometimes I open an old sutra, more often I climb a stone tower and peer down a thousand-foot cliff or up where clouds curl around where the windblown winter moon looks like a lone-flying crane Quote
ejp626 Posted April 30, 2009 Author Report Posted April 30, 2009 A few items of interest regarding Charles Simic. He has a new (2008) collection called That Little Something. I enjoyed it. I thought the 1st and 3rd sections were strongest. The book in that funny phase when it is starting to get pulped and there are lots of very cheap copies at the on-line stores (the number of books you can get for a penny (plus shipping) nowadays is just astonishing). Also, BBC is doing a series on poet laureates. Not familiar with most of them, but this is a short segment featuring Simic: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00k107b It will be available for about 5 more days. Quote
ejp626 Posted October 27, 2009 Author Report Posted October 27, 2009 Have an unusual query. I'm trying to track down a poem, sort of a long rambling poem with the following lines towards the end: JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES GREEN STAMPS I thought the most likely candidates were early Amiri Baraka or Paul Blackburn, but I've been pretty carefully through their work and I can't find it. It might be some obscure New York poet in a chapbook I read somewhere, which makes it a needle in a haystack. The last google search didn't turn up anything, so I am wondering if this rings any bells. Thanks. Eric Just shows how senile I am. Did another google search and I asked this on the board back in 2004! Well, I was fairly close. I've been scanning and then recycling a ton of paper lately. Kind of feels like passing my entire academic career through a shredder at 50 pages a pop -- though not quite so satisfying. Anyway, this reminded me that I never got the answer to this question, so I went back to the interwebs, and what do you know, now this poem shows up, cited in Google Books a couple of places. I know there is a lot of controversy over Google Books and copyright etc., but I think what they are doing is great. Anyway, it turns out it is not Baraka but Don L. Lee (aka Haki Madhubuti) "In the Interest of Black Salvation." Now I just need to track down if I have the chapbook the poem is in. It turns out he is releasing a new volume of his collected poetry -- and is giving a reading in Hyde Park next week, though I don't think I will be able to make it. Well, I'll keep an eye out to see if he is doing any downtown or northside readings. Quote
jeffcrom Posted October 27, 2009 Report Posted October 27, 2009 Have an unusual query. I'm trying to track down a poem, sort of a long rambling poem with the following lines towards the end: JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES JESUS SAVES GREEN STAMPS I thought the most likely candidates were early Amiri Baraka or Paul Blackburn, but I've been pretty carefully through their work and I can't find it. It might be some obscure New York poet in a chapbook I read somewhere, which makes it a needle in a haystack. The last google search didn't turn up anything, so I am wondering if this rings any bells. Thanks. Eric Just shows how senile I am. Did another google search and I asked this on the board back in 2004! Well, I was fairly close. I've been scanning and then recycling a ton of paper lately. Kind of feels like passing my entire academic career through a shredder at 50 pages a pop -- though not quite so satisfying. Anyway, this reminded me that I never got the answer to this question, so I went back to the interwebs, and what do you know, now this poem shows up, cited in Google Books a couple of places. I know there is a lot of controversy over Google Books and copyright etc., but I think what they are doing is great. Anyway, it turns out it is not Baraka but Don L. Lee (aka Haki Madhubuti) "In the Interest of Black Salvation." Now I just need to track down if I have the chapbook the poem is in. It turns out he is releasing a new volume of his collected poetry -- and is giving a reading in Hyde Park next week, though I don't think I will be able to make it. Well, I'll keep an eye out to see if he is doing any downtown or northside readings. Wow - had no idea this thread was here - this is the first post I noticed since I joined back in March. I have the Don Lee poem in a book called Understanding the New Black Poetry, edited by Stephen Henderson, but it was published in 1972, so it would probably not be much easier to find than the original chapbook. Anyway, I'm excited to see this thread. Here's one from memory - I can vouch for the words, but not the line breaks or punctuation. It perfectly captures the feeling I had wandering the beautiful and unfamiliar streets of Copenhagen 'round midnight after hearing Jesper Thilo's quartet last week. Morning Joy Piano buttons stitched on morning lights; Jazz wakes with the day. As I awaken with jazz, Love lit the night. Eyes appear and disappear To lead me once more To a green moon. Streets paved with opal sadness Lead me counterclockwise To pockets of joy And jazz. -Bob Kaufman Quote
king ubu Posted October 28, 2009 Report Posted October 28, 2009 Die Junta erlässt Richtlinien für Folterer Es ist strengstens verboten, zu foltern ohne einen triftigen Grund zum Foltern. Ob ein triftiger Grund zum Foltern vorliegt, ergibt sich am besten durch Foltern. Stellt es sich im Laufe des Folterns heraus, dass kein triftiger Grund zum Foltern vorliegt, so sind alle Spuren des Folterns zu beseitigen, indem der Gegenstand des Folterns beseitigt wird. Der Tod wird daher nicht durch Foltern bewirkt, obwohl er die Folge des Folterns sein mag. Wer immer diese Wahrheit über das Foltern leugnet, gibt damit triftigen Grund zum Foltern. Felix Pollak (1909 Wien - 1987 Madison, USA) taken from this great book: Quote
ejp626 Posted November 21, 2009 Author Report Posted November 21, 2009 Anyway, it turns out it is not Baraka but Don L. Lee (aka Haki Madhubuti) "In the Interest of Black Salvation." Now I just need to track down if I have the chapbook the poem is in. It turns out he is releasing a new volume of his collected poetry -- and is giving a reading in Hyde Park next week, though I don't think I will be able to make it. Well, I'll keep an eye out to see if he is doing any downtown or northside readings. Wow - had no idea this thread was here - this is the first post I noticed since I joined back in March. I have the Don Lee poem in a book called Understanding the New Black Poetry, edited by Stephen Henderson, but it was published in 1972, so it would probably not be much easier to find than the original chapbook. Anyway, I'm excited to see this thread. ... Well, I found a copy, though now I can't recall which of his early chapbooks it was in. It seems he has not kept it in print whenever he puts out a new collected or selected poems. I think it is unfortunate, but I guess he has mellowed and doesn't want to attack the church anymore. On a much more debased note, Roger Ebert has been running a limerick competition here: http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2009/11/ho...eet_mrlear.html I guess the competition will be open for another few days. A little of this goes a long way, and there are already 250+ limericks at the site. Still, some of them are awfully clever. Probably 70% or more are dirty. Here is a "clean" one that I submitted: The world’s too much with us, he sighed. To reimagine the world, I have tried, emulating the Greeks. This lasted for weeks, then I threw myself into the tide. Quote
Teasing the Korean Posted November 21, 2009 Report Posted November 21, 2009 (edited) Big fan of Weldon Kees, e.e. cummings, Wallace Stevens. Read poetry pretty regularly on the bus or subway during the 12 years or so I lived in the northeast. Since I've gone over to the dark side and drive a car, I don't get to read as much in general as I used to. I lugged all of my poetry books to my office. It's nice to close the door once in a while and revisit a favorite poem I haven't read in a long time. --------------------------- Those Winter Sundays Sundays too my father got up early And put his clothes on in the blueback cold, then with cracked hands that ached from labor in the weekday weather made banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him. I'd wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking. When the rooms were warm, he'd call, and slowly I would rise and dress, fearing the chronic angers of that house, Speaking indifferently to him, who had driven out the cold and polished my good shoes as well. What did I know, what did I know of love's austere and lonely offices? - Robert Hayden Edited November 21, 2009 by Teasing the Korean Quote
AllenLowe Posted November 21, 2009 Report Posted November 21, 2009 reading a Langston Hughes bio - there was a great poet. Quote
Joe Posted November 21, 2009 Report Posted November 21, 2009 Saw Tomaž Šalamun read last night. Tremendous poet from Slovenia. http://www.blackbird.vcu.edu/v7n1/poetry/salamun_t/index.htm Quote
Matthew Posted November 21, 2009 Report Posted November 21, 2009 Just finished reading (again!) James McMichael's Each In A Place Apart, and again I came away thinking that it was the best American poem in the last fifty years, a work of poetic genius IMHO. Quote
ejp626 Posted March 26, 2010 Author Report Posted March 26, 2010 (edited) The poem is based directly on Giacometti's piece of artwork in the MOMA: Palace at MOMA. It turns out more than one person has been inspired by this somewhat haunting piece (or its title at minimum). There is a play by Howard Moss and an album by ex-Wilco member Jay Bennett. This is perhaps too literally inspired by the piece, but in the process of writing it, I developed a longer sequence of poems of 7-8 poems about the goings-on in this strange kingdom. The Palace (at 4 A.M.) This early in the morning, few are up except those supposed to chase the bats away. The backbones are all hung up in the closet. The are sorted out, lined up by size. The should be taken to the cleaners. The guests are folded up and tucked under their beds on the fourth floor. A tiny woman, dressed all in red, enters through the main door. She has missed the last train. She stands in the hallway, rain dripping off her red coat onto the carpet. There are three large doors behind her. She will stand there until dawn. On the second floor, the bathtub tilts against the wall at an oblique angle. A plastic pillow floats in the tub all night. It waits for someone with a wet head. An eagle sits on the roof and screams. Edited March 26, 2010 by ejp626 Quote
Tom Storer Posted March 26, 2010 Report Posted March 26, 2010 I recently discovered the Scottish poet Don Paterson, who is also poetry editor at Faber & Faber. I think he's fantastic. His poem that seems to be most often reproduced is this sort of sonnet: Waking with Russell Whatever the difference is, it all began the day we woke up face-to-face like lovers and his four-day-old smile dawned on him again, possessed him, till it would not fall or waver; and I pitched back not my old hard-pressed grin but his own smile, or one I'd rediscovered. Dear son, I was mezzo del' cammin and the true path was as lost to me as ever when you cut in front and lit it as you ran. See how the true gift never leaves the giver: returned and redelivered, it rolled on until the smile poured through us like a river. How fine, I thought, this waking amongst men! I kissed your mouth and pledged myself forever. - Don Paterson This is also perhaps his most frankly sentimental poem, which of course is part of its appeal. He also writes longer and less straightforward poems, and he can have a wicked sense of humor. I also like Derek Walcott very much--he has a new book out of which I read a rave review. Also Robert Creeley, James Merrill, and W.S. Merwin when I have the patience to supply the punctuation. I recently read a book by Carol Ann Duffy called "The World's Wife," a witty collection of pieces from the point of view of the missus of famous male characters from history and mythology. Of historical poets, I like Shakespeare, of course; John Donne; Keats; Whitman; Dickinson; and I have a special fondness for Robert Frost, the first poet I was aware of (literally--my second-grade teacher had been a nurse for Frost in his last years and read us "The Pasture" and "Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening"). Quote
ghost of miles Posted August 29, 2010 Report Posted August 29, 2010 Video clip of Frank O'Hara in 1966 (not long before his death) reading Having a Coke With You Quote
Serioza Posted September 9, 2011 Report Posted September 9, 2011 (edited) Drunk, don't let your beezer* sag: As the poet said, “It's one colour with our flag,” — Bloody flaming red! There's nothing that will force our guild To change its social ritual; The common happiness we build, And piss on individual. * * * The roads which led to Russia's sorrow Went through blind faith and merry-making; Collective march to “bright tomorrow” Has ended in hangovered waking. Igor Guberman Edited September 9, 2011 by Serioza Quote
jeffcrom Posted September 10, 2011 Report Posted September 10, 2011 I had forgotten about this thread - again. Tonight I thought of Ai - a "1/2 Japanese, Choctaw-Chickasaw, Black, Irish, Southern Cheyenne, and Comanche" poet who writes amazing, chilling character poems. The title poem of her 2003 collection Dread is on my mind tonight - it's a portrait of New York City policewoman Shirley Herlihy, who is obsessed with finding some trace of her brother's remains in the World Trade Center rubble. That poem is too long to post here, but here's another great Ai poem, from Killing Floor. THE GERMAN ARMY, RUSSIA, 1943 For twelve days, I drilled through Moscow ice to reach paradise, that white tablecloth, set with a plate that's cracking bit by bit like the glassy air, like me. I know I'll fly apart soon, the pieces of me so light they float. The Russians burned their crops, rather than feed our army. Now they strike us against each other like dry rocks and set us on fire with a hunger nothing can feed. Someone calls me and I look up. It's Hitler. I imagine eating his terrible, luminous eyes. Brother, he says. I stand up, tie the rags tighter around my feet. I hear my footsteps running behind me, but I am already going. Quote
ejp626 Posted September 10, 2011 Author Report Posted September 10, 2011 (edited) Every now and then I forget this thread, and I'm the one who started it! I'll try to look up Dread. Sounds interesting if more than a little depressing. Anyway, these are the first two stanzas of W. H. Auden's Atlantis: Being set on the idea Of getting to Atlantis, You have discovered of course Only the Ship of Fools is Making the voyage this year, As gales of abnormal force Are predicted, and that you Must therefore be ready to Behave absurdly enough To pass for one of The Boys, At least appearing to love Hard liquor, horseplay and noise. Should storms, as may well happen, Drive you to anchor a week In some old harbour-city Of Ionia, then speak With her witty sholars, men Who have proved there cannot be Such a place as Atlantis: Learn their logic, but notice How its subtlety betrays Their enormous simple grief; Thus they shall teach you the ways To doubt that you may believe. ... The poem is much on my mind these days, since it ends this play called Strangers by Ninaz Khodaiji. I've set up a staged reading of Strangers next week in Chicago, and I had to go off and write to get official permission from Curtis Brown to include the entire poem as part of the performance. Which is a good example of why it is rarely worth including others' work as an element of your work. Too many hurdles in today's world, though the people at Curtis Brown were very reasonable. Edited September 10, 2011 by ejp626 Quote
ejp626 Posted September 10, 2011 Author Report Posted September 10, 2011 I think I had said I would include something of the newer poems out of Merwin's Migration, which I just picked up. This one is about John Berryman (author of the brilliant The Dream Songs) and apparently a bit of a mentor to Merwin. I don't know if the audio here still works (I couldn't get it to): Berryman on-line I won't quote the whole thing (you can follow the link for that), but I did like Berryman's advice to Merwin, which ends the poem: as for publishing he advised me to paper my wall with rejection slips his lips and the bones of his long fingers trembled with the vehemence of his views about poetry he said the great presence that permitted everything and transmuted it in poetry was passion passion was genius and he praised movement and invention I had hardly begun to read I asked how can you ever be sure that what you write is really any good at all and he said you can't you can't you can never be sure you die without knowing whether anything you wrote was any good if you have to be sure don't write Quote
ejp626 Posted September 10, 2011 Author Report Posted September 10, 2011 I should have noted "Berryman" is from Opening the Hand (1983), while this poem is from Merwin's 1988 collection The Rain in the Trees: Waking to the Rain The Night of my birthday I woke from a dream of harmony suddenly hearing an old man not my father I said but it was my father grasping my name as he fell on the stone steps outside just under the window in the rain I do not know how many times he may have called before I woke I was lying in my parents’ room in the empty house both of them dead that year and the rain was falling all around me the only sound Interestingly, this is on-line at something called the Merwin Conservancy: http://www.merwinconservancy.org/tag/waking-to-the-rain/ which seems to be a mix of nature conservancy, poet commune and on-line hang-out. Quote
Larry Kart Posted September 10, 2011 Report Posted September 10, 2011 Sheep Trails Are Fateful To Strangers Dante would have blamed Beatrice If she turned up alive in a local bordello Or Newton gravity If apples fell upward What I mean is words Turn mysteriously against those who use them Hello says the apple Both of us were object. *************************** There is a universal here that is dimly recognized. I mean everybody says some kinds of love are horseshit. Or invents a Beatrice to prove that they are. What Beatrice did did not become her own business. Dante saw to that. Sawed away the last plank anyone he loved could stand on. Jack Spicer -- "The Heads of the Town Up to the Aether" Quote
jeffcrom Posted September 11, 2011 Report Posted September 11, 2011 I had forgotten about this thread - again. Tonight I thought of Ai - a "1/2 Japanese, Choctaw-Chickasaw, Black, Irish, Southern Cheyenne, and Comanche" poet who writes amazing, chilling character poems. The title poem of her 2003 collection Dread is on my mind tonight - it's a portrait of New York City policewoman Shirley Herlihy, who is obsessed with finding some trace of her brother's remains in the World Trade Center rubble. That poem is too long to post here.... I'll try to look up Dread. Sounds interesting if more than a little depressing. I did end up posting "Dread" here. It somehow seemed important to me to type it up and post it today. Quote
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