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Friday, October 9th, 2015

    Time Event
    11:52a
    http://folkyourself.blogspot.com/search/label/Chimera
    гарный фламандский фолк с прелестным женским вокалом кон 70 - нач 80х, два альбома, там мона скачать
    на пробу послушать напр. -
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wjeYkkpeeXg
    1:09p
    золотое ведро россии
    http://holywarsoo.net/viewtopic.php?pid=877667#p877667

    "...Луна горит багровым: rubedo
    Все сущее - воронее гнездо."

    "рубедО" всё же лучше рифмуется с "ведро"
    "Все сущее - Грааль, сиречь ведро"
    8:45p
    Walter Scott
    After Scott's work had been essentially unstudied for many decades, a revival of critical interest began in the middle of the 20th century. While F. R. Leavis had disdained Scott, seeing him as a thoroughly bad novelist and a thoroughly bad influence (The Great Tradition [1948]), György Lukács (The Historical Novel [1937, trans. 1962]) and David Daiches (Scott's Achievement as a Novelist [1951]) offered a Marxian political reading of Scott's fiction that generated a great deal of genuine interest in his work. These were followed in 1966 by a major thematic analysis covering most of the novels by Francis R. Hart (Scott's Novels: The Plotting of Historic Survival). Scott has proved particularly responsive to Postmodern approaches, most notably to the concept of the interplay of multiple voices highlighted by Mikhail Bakhtin, as suggested by the title of the volume with selected papers from the Fourth International Scott Conference held in Edinburgh in 1991, Scott in Carnival. Scott is now increasingly recognised not only as the principal inventor of the historical novel and a key figure in the development of Scottish and world literature, but also as a writer of a depth and subtlety who challenges his readers as well as entertaining them.

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