Friday, October 10, 2008

John William Godward Dolce far niente painting

John William Godward Dolce far niente paintingJohn William Waterhouse Miranda - The Tempest paintingJohn William Waterhouse Gather ye rosebuds while ye may painting
Just a chance in a million,” one of the older boys said gravely, and another gravely nodded.
“A million trillion,” another said.
“Knocked him crazy as a loon,” another cried, and with a waggling forefinger he made a rapid blubbery noise against his loose lower lip.
“Shut yer Goddamn mouth,” an older boy said coldly. “Ain’t you got no sense at all?”
“Way I heard it, ole Tin Lizzie just rolled right back on top of him whomp.”
This account of it was false, Rufus was sure, but it seemed to him more exciting than his own, and more creditable to his father and to him, and nobody could question, scornfully, whether that could kill, as they could of just a blow on the chin; so he didn’t try to contradict. He felt that he was lying, and in some way being disloyal as well, but he said only, “He was instantly killed. He didn’t have to feel any pain.”
“Never even knowed what hit him,” a boy said quietly. “That’s what my dad says.”
“No,” Rufus said. It had not occurred to him that way. “I guess he didn’t.”

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