Beautiful little short. CG smoke – reminds me of the old fractal videos I liked to much. I’ll put those up over the next couple days.

Avoid the month Lenaeon, wretched days, all of them fit to skin an ox, and the frosts which are cruel when Boreas blows over the earth. He blows across horse-breeding Thrace upon the wide sea and stirs it up, while earth and the forest howl. On many a high-leafed oak and thick pine he falls and brings them to the bounteous earth in mountain glens: then all the immense wood roars and the beasts shudder and put their tails between their legs, even those whose hide is covered with fur; for with his bitter blast he blows even through them although they are shaggy breasted. But through the fleeces of sheep, because their wool is abundant, the keen wind Boreas pierces not at all; but it makes the old man curved as a wheel.

And it does not blow through the tender maiden who stays indoors with her dear mother, unlearned as yet in the works of golden Aphrodite, and who washes her soft body and anoints herself with oil and lies down in an inner room within the house, on a winter’s day when the Boneless One gnaws his foot in his fireless house and wretched home; for the sun shows him no pastures to make for, but goes to and fro over the land and city of dusky men, and shines more sluggishly upon the whole race of the Hellenes.

Hesiod, Works and Days
Lenaeon: late January and early February
Boreas: the north wind
Boneless One: the octopus or cuttlefish

Come, come, leave business to idlers, and wisdom to fools; they have need of ‘em.

Bellmour, in Congreve’s “The Old Bachelor”

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The Beatles – “Revolution”
Hey Jude Single

This version is awesome. I heard it on the radio ages ago but only recently realized it was a “real” version.

Illustrations by Rockwell Kent for the Arion Press edition of Moby Dick.

In this way your corn-ears will bow to the ground with fullness if the Olympian himself gives a good result at the last, and you will sweep the cobwebs from your bins and you will be glad, I ween, as you take of your garnered substance.

But if you plough the good ground at the solstice, you will reap sitting, grasping a thin crop in your hand, binding the sheaves awry, dust-covered, not glad at all; so you will bring all home in a basket and not many will admire you.

Hesiod, Works and Days

Confessions of an Item Hoarder

Confessions of an Item Hoarder

Aw.

Do not let a flaunting woman coax and cozen and deceive you: she is after your barn. The man who trusts womankind trusts deceivers.

Hesiod, Works and Days