tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6296220663430292238.post7183808267339262405..comments2023-10-05T00:44:26.992-07:00Comments on A Little Tag End of the World: A Zarathustra in rhinestones: why Wichita Lineman is a great work of artFrancis Halsallhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09870451660885140991noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6296220663430292238.post-10629917324849705472019-07-08T19:04:36.199-07:002019-07-08T19:04:36.199-07:00This info is well worth reading.
Very in-depth ind...This info is well worth reading.<br />Very in-depth indeed.<br />Thumbs up! <br />Good work must be appreciated. <br />Looking for consistent updates from you.<br />Well, they’ve also covered some more tips around this topic in their site! <br /><a href="https://topshoesbrand.com/best-lineman-boots/" rel="nofollow">Click on the link</a>Isabel Fernandeshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13518946041699663322noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6296220663430292238.post-5161253576195415892019-02-16T03:54:25.206-08:002019-02-16T03:54:25.206-08:00I read a article under the same title some time ag...I read a article under the same title some time ago, but this articles quality is much, much better. How you do this.. <a href="https://www.sparklesrhinestones.com/" rel="nofollow">rhinestones</a><br />SEO Experthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05405614014009487653noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6296220663430292238.post-66617371436329508512012-03-30T06:51:55.948-07:002012-03-30T06:51:55.948-07:00“And I need you more than want you
And I want you ...“And I need you more than want you<br />And I want you for all time”<br /><br />If the lover only wanted, want might, in time, be satisfied. But the lover’s need surpasses, even, his wanting, even though he wants “for all time”. How can you need something more than, bigger than, that surpasses “all time”? Then there is that strange “and” that just arrives — “And I need you more than want you”. Is the lineman responding to something already thought, or said, or felt? Whatever it is, it is beyond the song. These two lines fail to contain the unmentionable: an inarticulate yearning that cannot even be said. An existential truth, to be sure. Perhaps, even, an affirmation?<br /><br />Of his ‘Lover’s Discourse’, Roland Barthes wrote, ‘The necessity for this book is to be found in the following consideration: that the lover’s discourse is spoken, perhaps, by thousands of subjects (who knows?) but warranted by no-one; it is completely forsaken by surrounding languages ... Once a discourse is thus driven by its own momentum into the backwater of the “unreal”, exiled from all gregarity, it becomes a site, however exiguous, of an affirmation.’<br /><br />An affirmation of a solitude in extremis, but an affirmation of desire ... nonetheless.<br /><br />‘Do not take opium, but put salt and vinegar in your soul’s wound, for when you sleep and no longer feel suffering, you are not. And to be, that is imperative. Do not then close your eyes to the agonizing Sphinx, but look her in the face, and let her seize you in the mouth, and crunch you with her hundred thousand poisonous teeth and swallow you. And when she has swallowed you, you will know the sweetness of the taste of suffering’<br />Miguel de Unamundo, ‘The Tragic Sense of Life’<br /><br />The suffering must become sweet for the sufferer, but only eventually. Pain alone, only, is melancholic, path(os)etic, autistic even. Situating the self in this sweet, suffering void, in which there is only want, need, desire, maybe, even, love, we are on our own but not alone. The lineman has no-one to communicate to but he sings on, sings out, and his yearning song is barely bearable, only just, because he keeps on keeping on singing it.Tina Kinsellahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12032014062114357714noreply@blogger.com