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Tag Archives: river
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 13
one step-width water of linked stones trills in the stones glides in the trills eels in the glides in each eel a fingerwidth of sea Alice Oswald – Dart Julie makes swift progress for the waters of the lake are … Continue reading
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 12
I also took a digital approach to letting the river guide the composition, through a process called sonification. In the same way we might visually represent a set of data in a graph or diagram, sonification represents data through sound. … Continue reading
Posted in Home
Tagged Flaneur, Iain Sinclair, lockdown, memory, river, Rob St John, time, Walter Benjamin
2 Comments
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 11
What I want to say is I owe all the happiness of my life to you. You have been entirely patient with me and incredibly good. I want to say that–everybody knows it. If anybody could have saved me, it … Continue reading
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 10
The old river in its broad reach rested unruffled at the decline of day, after ages of good service done to the race that peopled its banks, spread out in the tranquil dignity of a water way leading to the … Continue reading
Posted in Home, The Flow of Time
Tagged birdsong, climate change, London, memory, pollution, river, time
4 Comments
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 9
The flow of the Ill had often taken me in its current. I had spent so long wandering along its banks and along the cobbled paths away from Petite France that I had rarely explored the local vicinity of my … Continue reading
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 8
The Thames cuts a lonely swathe through maps of contemporary London. She’s one of the last visible remnants of a natural landscape lost beneath concrete and steel. She trails sadly through the megalopolis like a party ribbon hanging from the … Continue reading
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 7
He has the feeling he’s staring back in time, or at another part of time. And, as he stares, the white, blown carcass of a moon-like fish – a tench – stares back from the reed bed, its ripped flesh … Continue reading
Posted in Home, The Flow of Time
Tagged Dee, Julie Baptiste, lockdown, memory, river, time
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The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 6
Every year is getting shorter never seem to find the time. Plans that either come to naught or half a page of scribbled lines Hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way The time is gone, the song is … Continue reading
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 3
So now, with my youngest daughter back from university, we have three of us at home under lockdown. But my wife, as a key NHS worker, still has to go out. Her patients need her, which is why she and … Continue reading
The Flow of Time: Lockdown, Day 2
When Boris Johnson evokes cod-Churchillian wartime metaphors in place of any semblance of wise leadership when formulating our national response to COVID-19 and Emmanuel Macron repeatedly declares that ‘we are at war’ with the virus, we know we’re in serious … Continue reading