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Stephen wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Apr 2007 23:22:36 +0100, "St." <dot### [at] dotcom> wrote:
>
>> Next topic? Sure: "The Black Robe" by Wilkie Collins - 1824-1889.
>>
>> (Pulled via "The Hat")
>>
>> Set your imagination alight...
>
> Oh! Drat. Couldn't it have been the "Moonstone" or "The lady in White" by Wilkie
> Collins? I've read them. And the Moonstone gives lots of scope; India, Fakirs,
> Robinson Crusoe, Napoleon etc.
>
Oh. Now i'm confused. I thought it was about what one comes
up with, looking at the title alone (instead of the content)
- do i now really have to read the story each time? ;)
(though it's hard to NOT think of submarines if it would've
been "20000 leagues under the sea"... ;) - but i'd not have
associated India with "Moonstone"...
-Markus
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"Markus Altendorff" <maa### [at] anthrosphinxde> wrote in message
news:461eaf4a$1@news.povray.org...
> Stephen wrote:
>> On Wed, 11 Apr 2007 23:22:36 +0100, "St." <dot### [at] dotcom> wrote:
>>
>>> Next topic? Sure: "The Black Robe" by Wilkie Collins - 1824-1889.
>>>
>>> (Pulled via "The Hat")
>>>
>>> Set your imagination alight...
>>
>> Oh! Drat. Couldn't it have been the "Moonstone" or "The lady in White" by
>> Wilkie
>> Collins? I've read them. And the Moonstone gives lots of scope; India,
>> Fakirs,
>> Robinson Crusoe, Napoleon etc.
>
> Oh. Now i'm confused. I thought it was about what one comes up with,
> looking at the title alone (instead of the content) - do i now really have
> to read the story each time? ;)
Heh, no. I'm sure Stephen is holding his tongue in his cheek here...
:o)
Here's another one: "Before Adam" by Jack London, 1876-1916.
Now, interpretate that title in any way that you want, Stills or Anims.
I personally like this one, (even though I've only just seen it), and it
sets your mind thinking about what it may have been like before Adam. But
*who* is Adam?
Here's another example: "The Doctors Dilemma" by Bernard Shaw,
1856-1950. What 'Dilemma'? Who 'is' the Doctor?
Set your mind alight...
~Steve~
> -Markus
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On Fri, 13 Apr 2007 00:22:51 +0100, "St." <dot### [at] dotcom> wrote:
>
> Heh, no. I'm sure Stephen is holding his tongue in his cheek here...
>:o)
Yes, I'm just showing off :-)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Moonstone
Regards
Stephen
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St. wrote:
> Here's another one: "Before Adam" by Jack London, 1876-1916.
>
> Now, interpretate that title in any way that you want, Stills or Anims.
> I personally like this one, (even though I've only just seen it), and it
> sets your mind thinking about what it may have been like before Adam. But
> *who* is Adam?
"Before Adam"? Ouch. That just screams for trouble with
Creationists ;) [well, actually, no - there are at least
five days available before that, and you could depict "The
Hiding Of The Dinosaur Skeletons" and apply for public
funding ;)]
> Here's another example: "The Doctors Dilemma" by Bernard Shaw,
> 1856-1950. What 'Dilemma'? Who 'is' the Doctor?
Funny, now somehow the image of a phone booth popped up in
my mind... ;) it's weird how pre-made popular culture has
gotten a hold on imagination. I guess i'll never be a "real"
artist :)
-M
P.S.: We're still "officially" going to use the "The Black
Robe" title, are we?
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I'm just a bystander for this process. But my intent was that each of the
two responses were equally valid:
i) A key moment from the book (but hey, who's actually gonna bother to read
some of these obscure ones)?
ii) Whatever comes to mind from the words "The Black Robe." Me, I'm thinkin
Vader. Not that I'd actually use Lucasfilm characters.
Markus Altendorff wrote:
> - do i now really have to read the story each time? ;)
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