Who’re you? Wittgenstein?
He’s dead
What a shame
Actually would he enjoy living in England now
No, because he was Jewish.
So are lots of people.
Somehow they get hurt or even killed at times
What times?
Nazi.times
Stalin-times
Tsar-times
GoodFriday-times
Greedy-times
Allthe-time
In the Times
Of the times
Oh, time!
Well it’s about time we stopped it.
About time
On time
In time
After time
Time and Motion
Soon we’ll have the Flood
Why has Boris not built an Ark?
Because he doesn’t Noah how to
Because God didn’t see him
Because there was a full stop at the end of the sentence.
Day: May 17, 2024
Is the mind a receptacle?

He wanted to put her teeth right out of his mind
Ruth Rendell
Out of sight out of mind
Old English adage.
Oh the mind has mountains…
Gerard Manley Hopkins
The mind is deeper than a well and higher than a star
That’s a line from one of my poems I believe.
I tried to put it out of my mind but it refused to budge
I’m in two minds about this job.
Sometimes we need mindless activity.
You must be out of your mind to think thatm
Keep me in mind.
I thought I’d lost my mind
Auden and God
https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2007/12/06/auden-and-god/
““To pray,” Auden wrote, “is to pay attention or, shall we say, to ‘listen’ to someone or something other than oneself. Whenever a man so concentrates his attention—be it on a landscape, or a poem or a geometrical problem or an idol or the True God—that he completely forgets his own ego and desires in listening to what the other has to say to him, he is praying.” This may seem a denatured idea of prayer, but Auden took it seriously, and seems to have prayed in exactly this sense. The only value he found in “petitionary prayer”—prayer that asks for something—was that the act of expressing desires can reveal what they are, so that “we often discover that they are really wishes that two-and-two should make three or five, as when St. Augustine realized that he was praying: ‘Lord, make me chaste, but not yet.’” Auden prayed to a God whom he knew he thought about in falsely human-centered terms, but only by doing so could he listen with any attention: “I can see…what leads [Paul] Tillich to speak of God as ‘Ground of Being,’ but if I try to pray: ‘O Thou Ground, have mercy upon us,’ I start to giggle.””
