Sugarcane, I guess you know which one of the characters in On The Road is actually based upon one of the Pranksters - there's a song about him.
"I have seen where the wolf has slept by the silver stream." Gosh that alliteration can give you chills.
Sugarcane, I guess you know which one of the characters in On The Road is actually based upon one of the Pranksters - there's a song about him.
"I have seen where the wolf has slept by the silver stream." Gosh that alliteration can give you chills.
"No harmonic knowledge, no sense of time, a ghastly tone, unskilled vibrato, and so on. Chuck is one of the worst guitar players I know" -Gravity Jim
P.S. I changed my username for privacy reasons but you guys can call me Sergio or Serge as always, lol.
I've been recently reading J.A. Wylie's Illustrated History of the Waldenses, which is a reprint of a part of a larger work of his, History of Protestantism. It's a record of an early "proto-reformation" community of Christians that lived in the Piedmont region of northwest Italy. One of the first groups to translate the Bible into the common language, they lived in peace & did their thing until near the end of 1000 AD when the Church of Rome began to make incursions into the region. The friars & monks that arrived in the area weren't too pleased that the Waldensians didn't follow Romish doctines such as the veneration of the saints & respect of holy relics, to name just a couple. They didn't put a lot of stock in the pope, either. They were declared heretics & suffered terrible persecution.
Although they are often thought to have been founded by a merchant by the name of Peter Waldo, they predate him & their name comes from an anglicization of the term "Vaudois" or "Vallenses", which I understand to mean "valley dwellers"
Met a man who read mysteries and thrillers, five a week--they were such junk. He'd sit with a box full of them, read one, and toss it in a garbage can.
I'm glad my Dad didn't throw away his Western novels--they helped him learn to read when he was already a man in his 20s. I have a shelf full. So many Louis L'Amours. We loved the Lonesome Dove books and could talk about them.
My love of reading, studying, and teaching lit has left me with walls of books, and I can't bear to get rid of even useless ones that I hated. I've only ever thrown away one book, stupid book by the screenplay writer for Rainman. Color of Light or some idiotic copy of Updike. A 70s novel. Sex scenes that read like a cross between Penthouse Forum letter and instructions on pipe fitting at a plumbery.
If we'd known we were going to be the Beatles, we'd have tried harder.--George Harrison