LYRICS

The applications are to blameAll the people do all dayIs stare into a phone (Placebo, Too Many people)

“Take nothing but memories, leave nothing but footprints!” (Chief Seattle)

When rock stars were myths (Sandi Thom, I Wish I Was A Punk Rocker)

Machines were mice and men were lions once upon a time, Now that it's the opposite it's twice upon a time (Moondog)

Time is an illusion (Einstein)

Sunday, 19 May 2019

Combination of the Two (3)


It’s confusing, isn’t it? Man evolves for untold years, and then apparently he’s got it wrong and along comes modernity. Fontella Bass may be ahead of the game; her Chess move carried her out to sea and to the avant-garde jazz scene in Paris


The physical universe is seen from Earth; anything else is a convincing illusion, the universe of perspective we are in. This is the one sorcerers have created and that acolytes serve. The physical universe is also psychic since the two are intertwined. Evolution, it stands to reason, can only be physical, and so we are back to the primeval kingdom of the chase, blood and everlasting hunt (Sir Gawain and the Green Knight ).



The hunt is blood and rebirth. One bounds over hill and dale, the domain of the woodsman who sees stags framed against twilight trees, who cuts and plants to secure the prey. Strength is in the decadent world of death and rebirth, the strength that is symbolised by the full moon rising over majestic sights of yore
 
In its heyday a castle was communal, physical and psyche; dirt and cleanliness; housebound and womanly; horsebound and warrior; young, old, maiden and monk. As an example of physical evolution, that takes some beating!
Physically speaking, Detroit has all of that apart from horses and warriors (Drama3). The point I’m making is that modernism stands for hygiene – lack of decadence – and not for any of the above. Detroit declined through decadence, and that was a sign of communal living. Decadence breeds strength and revival – evolution. In the US, where capital has not yet got a choke-hold, some of that is still evident. Latin America, for all its left/right lunacy, still breeds decadence in its poverty-stricken communes (Hyborian Bridge 62/2). Physical and psychic strength; dirt and cleanliness.

What that seems to say is that where capital doesn’t rule – Detroit, quite a lot of Latin America – decadence does and, with it, physical evolution. Physical evolution is not factual, it is poetic – the sun and moon are physical twins; rusticated cottages twine with the vine; Puritan maidens throb in the bosom of nature (Hyborian Bridge 61/3)
HOME.[1] 
Letitia Landon poem set to this picture
Aye, here, dear love, is just a home,
    Like what our home should be;
A home of peace—a home of love—
    As made for thee and me.

A cottage with its roof of thatch,
    Its porch of the red rose,
Its white walls hidden by the wreath
    The bridal jasmine throws.

The rooms are dark, for the green vines
    Have twin'd each lattice round;
Where, veil'd by leaves, the wild wind harp
    Breathes forth its lonely sound.

And round are many landscapes hung,
    Each of some foreign shore,
Of rock, and storm, to make us prize
    Our own calm home the more.

A green turf lies before the door,
    A fairy carpet spread
With silver daisies—pearls of dew,
    Meet for the Elf-queen's tread.

About are beds of many flowers,
    Sweet shrubs, and blossom'd trees;
Beside that elm the dove-cote's plac'd,
    Beneath that ash, the bees.

And there the little green-house stands,
    A refuge for the spring ;
Where, even in the winter time,
    The rose is flourishing.

There is a murmur on the wind,
    Of the far billow's sweep:
Come on this mount of scented plants,
    And you can see the deep.

Look to the east, where the grey wave
    Is blent with the grey sky,
To where the setting sun has left
    It's purple pageantry.

How pleasant, in another hour,
    Our wand'ring there will be!
When the dim ships, like shadows, ride
    Over the star-lit sea.

When sailing in the deep blue heav'n,
    The moon, like a young bride,
Comes timid, as she fear'd to claim
    Her empire o'er the tide.

Then, to return from the white cliffs,
    Where winds and waters beat,
How shall we love the leaves and flowers
    Of our own calm retreat!

We should be happy;— yet let all
    Sweet dreams, like these, depart:
It matters not whate'er his lot,—
    Love's home is in the heart.⁠


Landen was as facile as Byron; a fallen woman who painted physical tableaux as eternal as sunrise. The physical universe of fate and melodic trees (with wind-chimes, “The Ram and the Peacock” BWS) changes very little. The description Howard gives of an Aquilonian woodsman’s home is very similar (Hyborian Bridge 62/2) 
Rembrandt’s painting Susanna and the Elders (prev) has the same languid ease of limbs and trees. The merging of Man with nature that has the languid grace of vine-laden walls and sunken wells, of deer nibbling, of sweetgrass grazing.
Romantic nature is the physical decadence that inspires evolution. If you pick-out Howard’s illustrators of dreamy rusticity the pattern becomes clear.


Roy Krenkel, Satyrs Fighting from AMRA#6
Evolution is a physical power, brawny and lusty, of the type that Weird Tales covers are famous for. That is, the human physique and the psychic luster of scenes of erotic danger.

Our physical sense of the universe is proportionate between sun and moon, between man and woman, brawn and beauty, life and death. Above all it is an earthpower, an earth that rotates between sun and moon.
That physical power has been abandoned by the acolytes of a hygienic universe of perspective, or the vanishing point of technique (“speed” Pictorial 47). A parallel world of the lens that is as devilishly convincing as a mirage in the desert.


Dubai