“Similarly, the sound shhhhhhhh (as in ‘shall’) is linked to a blurred, smudged line, whereas rrrrrrrrrrrrrrr is linked to a sawtooth-shaped line, and an ssssssssss (as in ‘sip’) to a fine silk thread—which shows that it’s not the mere similarity of the jagged shape to the letter K that produces the effect, but genuine cross-sensory abstraction.”
Ramachandran, V. S. The Tell-tale Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Quest for What Makes Us Human. New York: W.W. Norton, 2011. p. 129.
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W.W. Norton
“No I that you can
Ever be can hear
Well enough to say
These words before they
Line up to say
What they say. Lost
In thought in a room
I know with a pen
In my hand, Francie
Asleep and Max
So tiny, fat,
Delighted, hours back,
First sun in days,
By the numbers
In the arboretum.”
Perelman, Bob. “You.” Primer. Oakland, CA: This Press, 1981. p. 25.
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Internet Archive
“This is the kernel of truth in the romantic contrast between the modern traveler and the wandering poet or artisan, between assembly line and handicraft, town and city, factory-produced bread and the home-made loaf, the sailboat and the outboard motor, etc.”
Marcuse, Herbert. One-Dimensional Man. London: Routledge, 2002. p. 76.
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Routledge
“ *
Trees stripped, rather shed
of leaves, the black solid trunks up
to fibrous mesh of smaller
branches, it is weather’s window,
weather’s particular echo, here
as if this place had been once,
now vacant, a door that had had
hinges swung in air’s peculiar
emptiness, greyed, slumped elsewhere,
asphalt blank of sidewalks, line of
linearly absolute black metal fence.
*
Old sky freshened with cloud bulk
slides over frame of window the
shadings of softened greys a light
of air up out of this dense high
structured enclosure of buildings
top or pushed up flat of bricked roof
frame I love I love the safety of
small world this door frame back
of me the panes of simple glass yet
airy up sweep of birch trees sit in
flat below all designation declaration
here as clouds move so simply away.”
Creeley, Robert. “Helsinki Window.” Selected Poems of Robert Creeley. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1991. p. 346.
Catalog Record
University of California Press