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Joined: Jan 2001
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Before I built a wall I'd ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out


Dr. Bill, they may not make sense in the literal sense of moving the stones out of the fields, but I like the sound of them in a more figurative sense. Y'know, don't build a wall between yourself and another person just because of a prejudice or a stupid fight or a perceived slight, but know what the other guy's about before building said wall.

My farmer friends in Saskatchewan tell me that there are plenty of stones there, too. You have to stop the tractor and get them out of the way. Or so I hear. Never done it, myself!


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Carpal Tunnel
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Oh, just another kind of outdoor game,
One on a side. It comes to little more:


it's not about walls; it's an allegory. about blancmanges and Wimbledon fortnight.



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about blancmanges and Wimbledon fortnight

Is this just an off the wall expression, or are you er, sketchy?


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Dr. Bill, I have to express my admiration for a posting which is cogent and beautifully written. In all the postings we all rush to put up it's a real treat to see the language used to its best advantage.

Now, by the way, how come you spell "plow" in the English fashion? Since this week's theme is words from Sherlock Holmes, are you letting us know that you are an imposter attempting to con all us unwitting Garridebs?


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wwh Offline
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Dear BYB: Thank you for words kinder than I deserve. My dictionary says that the British spelling is plough. I use both without noticing until someone else points out my inconsistency. And of course, in discussing the poem, I focussed on the literal aspects from which Frost developed his allegories. I am sure the curmudgeon neighbor would have been bewildered if Frost had told him the poetic interpretation of his blunt apothegm.


#37681 08/07/01 04:13 PM
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I alway heard them called "pudding stones"-- from a New Englanders complaint that the stones in his field where a large and thickly studded in his field as raisins in his good wifes pudding..-- i have them too-- there are not to much of a problem because i don't have fields to plow- but i find them all the time when i want to plant something in the garden.

though i am pretty sure the term for them is glacial erratics..


#37682 08/07/01 05:38 PM
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wwh Offline
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Pudding stones are glacially rounded sedimentary stones containing various sized smaller stones rounded many years before by current in a river, for example. The rounded stones in New England were slowly tumbled over and over by the superbulldozer action of the enormously heavy ice sheet advancing and retreating every year for many many years.


#37683 08/07/01 05:53 PM
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huh? re: Pudding stones are glacially rounded sedimentary stones ... The rounded stones in New England were slowly tumbled over and over by the superbulldozer action of the enormously heavy ice sheet advancing and retreating every year for many many years.

so pudding stones can be created by a river-- but NE pudding stones are created by a glacier-- and properly called glacier erratics? the very same glaciers that came to a halt here on Long Island north shore -- creating overlapping terminal morains? -- North Hills morain and Ronconkama morain form the back bone of Long Island..and fill my yard with the same pudding stones


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So the image of walls is an ....phor?

Actually an interesting proposal, mav. So the dia- or epi- of the metaphor can actually be malleable depending on
interpretation. You just created a new theory!...so you need a new --phor for it! (maviphor?) And here you thought you were just kidding! I guess life is too short to grok the difference between dia- and epi- when one's time is spent in such worthwhile endeavors as constructing whole alias networks of websites and bios, etc., etc...right, mav?


#37685 08/08/01 01:34 PM
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wwh Offline
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While we are at it, how about a discussion of the origin, and subsequent broadening of application of the phrase "off the wall." It sounds like it started with graffiti, but has been broadened to the point that at times it is hard to tell what it means to some of the users.


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