I have long wished to
know you, Mr. Coverdale, and to thank you for your beautiful poetry, some of
which I have learned by heart; or rather it
has stolen into my memory, without my exercising any choice or volition
about the matter.
Nathaniel Hawthorne - The Blithedale Romance (1852)
When I originally came across these words, I misread the
highlighted part as it has stolen
my memory. That’s why I remembered it – Hawthornes’s words stole into my memory.
Or maybe they stole my memory.
You’ll wonder where the yellow went when you brush your
teeth with Pepsodent... Ich bin ein
Berliner... The lady's not for turning... Clunk click every trip... I counted them all out and I counted them
all back... The pound in your pocket...
No Child Left Behind... A million
housewives every day... 'Is there anybody there?' said the traveller... Shock and awe... Lashings of ginger
beer... Chromium, molybdenum and tungsten...
Every little helps... What’s for
dinner?... April fool... They think it’s all over... It is now.
Viewed as a stretch of personal real estate, our memory
is stolen all the time and there is no real
defence apart from cultivating non-attachment. Unfortunately that tends to come
later in life, once we’ve dropped into the rut and filled our minds with too much garbage.
The modern world steals our memory, systematically and
deliberately. Oddly enough we remember it happening too. Over and over again. Jingle bells, jingle bells...
3 comments:
Dyb, dyb, dyb.
In the rugger club bar it was not teeth.
Sackers - has to be dob, dob, dob.
Demetrius - but did it work?
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