"...we part with tender relations stretching far behind us, that never can be exactly renewed..."
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I've come to visit and to thank you for leaving your comment at my blog. It was a gem and appreciated. You, Hemingway and baseball will be forever entwined in my imagination.
Now I'm off to have a look about.
easywriter |
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07.21.05 - 8:47 pm | #
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Hello
I think you have a real great site. I always search for this kind of information online and i am glad to have cross your site. I look forward to all the updates. I have found a great web site, go to http://ibcnews.blogspot.com
Thanks again.
Yash |
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07.24.05 - 7:27 am | #
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Thanks, Yash, for your compliment.
S. L. Cunningham |
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07.24.05 - 10:25 am | #
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Great posts and info like usual.
EuroYank |
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07.24.05 - 12:30 pm | #
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Assuming I have a correct understanding of Memes - I'm going by the blogging version - I don't know how Memes can have anything to do with folk-tales and myths which are passed on. To my mind, Memes are just a lazy framework. If one grabs your attention it is fun to climb yourself and to fill in the gaps with your own answers, and can lead to some points of conversation, but other than that what is there to replicate about it. Just the framework. Which like Chinese whispers gets distorted in the copying and pasting.
And unlike Myths and fairy tales, other people's answers are not committed to the memory banks and re-told time upon time.
(I haven't yet read the post below also about Memes - maybe this has already been said!!)
Doris |
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07.26.05 - 4:02 am | #
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Doris:
Your point that "other people's answers are not committed . . . and retold time upon time" is a good one.
Thanks for visiting and commenting. . .
Scot
S. L. Cunningham |
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07.26.05 - 3:24 pm | #
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Commenting by HaloScan
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