On Fri, Jul 08, 2005 at 02:13:11PM -0400, Jason Cooper wrote: > Michael Thompson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) scribbled: > > On Friday 08 July 2005 17:32, Jason Cooper wrote: > > > Michael Thompson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) scribbled: > > > [snip] > > > > > > > > To see the world in a grain of sand, > > > > and to see heaven in a wild flower, > > > > hold infinity in the palm of your hands, > > > > and eternity in an hour. > > > > > > This one bugged me for a week till I remembered a moment ago where I > > > heard it. Tomb Raider, right? > > > > You proboly know it from Lara Croft, Cradle of Life, when Lara opens the > > book > > of her father and splits the cover, it is a message from her father. But it > > was a poem by William Blake called Auguries of Innocence. > > That's so embarassing. In my defense, I don't think William Blake had > sketches of Angelina Jolie to accompany his poems. Perhaps if he had my > memory would be better... :) > > cooper.
This is WAY off topic, but William Blake is also well known as an engraver and painter on top of being a poet. While not sketches of Jolie, he did draw lots of very memorable (and disturbing) pictures, in particular his biblical illustrations. W -- "So what you have here is a highly nonlinear system of partial differential equations in two variables. But, if you sub in 0 for both angles you can prove conclusively that two attached rods will, in fact, hang." ~DeathMech, S. Sondhi. P-town PHY 205 Sortir en Pantoufles: up 5 days, 17:11 -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list