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Post by pataphysical on Jun 21, 2008 10:45:30 GMT -5
Linda, I love you.
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frozensquirrel
Hard Day's Night
With our love, we could save the world. If the only knew!
Posts: 37
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Post by frozensquirrel on Jun 28, 2008 18:56:27 GMT -5
Many feel it was intended to portray "one Beatle screwing another", as this was the time that the ill will was strongest. (Allen Klein, the lawsuit, etc.) Lennon, I Loathe You??? Nice!
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Post by brotherdave on Jun 29, 2008 19:15:47 GMT -5
Lily the Pink
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Post by iameye on Jun 29, 2008 19:36:27 GMT -5
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Post by brotherdave on Jun 30, 2008 20:10:12 GMT -5
It was a song (of sorts)...>
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Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2008 20:14:33 GMT -5
yes, we've been there....something new?
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Post by malus on Jul 1, 2008 7:13:23 GMT -5
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Post by P(D)enny La(i)ne on Jul 1, 2008 7:45:55 GMT -5
Lots of interesting stuff in this thread, but are we overlooking someone who was really close to the inner circle?
Namely, Mal Evans' wife.
Lily Evans.
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Post by B on Jul 1, 2008 9:25:47 GMT -5
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Post by iameye on Jul 1, 2008 12:55:06 GMT -5
Hell, I'll lie. Nah. "A lie, hell why?" eL. I [il]L. whY?
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Post by malus on Jul 1, 2008 13:00:28 GMT -5
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Post by P(D)enny La(i)ne on Jul 1, 2008 13:29:38 GMT -5
And (of course) JAMES Potter is the father of the extraordinary, magical child, just as James McCartney is the father of another extraordinary, magical child. It may be nothing, but it may be something.
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Post by iameye on Jul 1, 2008 18:09:25 GMT -5
And (of course) JAMES Potter is the father of the extraordinary, magical child, just as James McCartney is the father of another extraordinary, magical child.It may be nothing, but it may be something. who? why? oh you mean jim, yes ;D
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Post by malus on Jul 2, 2008 16:33:22 GMT -5
Blue Lotus, Dark Lily, L.I.L.Y., Lillith, Lily, Dark Rose, Blue Rose, Black Dahlia,...
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Post by plastic paul on Jul 2, 2008 18:09:45 GMT -5
What an awful program that was!!!
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Post by thespacebetween on Jul 3, 2008 0:41:58 GMT -5
"Lily" was Alice in the looking glass world..
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Post by malus on Jul 3, 2008 9:51:07 GMT -5
Great find! I know that Pan refers to himself a "fawn" (Pan's Labyrinth). Is Lily a concubine of Lucifer?
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Post by thespacebetween on Jul 3, 2008 22:59:14 GMT -5
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Post by Doc on Jul 4, 2008 1:17:31 GMT -5
Faun? Let's consider the 1980 movie Faun of George de la Peña, vs. the original Faun of Wacslav Nijinsky from 1912. The likeness is amazing. No--miraculous. Excellent movie craft. Enjoy the fantastic sequence from the movie "NIJINSKY" here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TbSoI93ATU
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Post by malus on Jul 6, 2008 9:12:14 GMT -5
Thanks for the correction.
Pan's ancient Roman equivalent was Faunus, and they were both Horned God deities.
The Columbian connection... Lilium columbianum=Columbia Lily or Tiger Lily Always a Columbia connection;-)
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Post by iameye on Jul 9, 2008 0:05:16 GMT -5
"Lily" was Alice in the looking glass world.. lily was the white queen
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Post by iameye on Jul 9, 2008 0:08:06 GMT -5
Faun? Let's consider the 1980 movie Faun of George de la Peña, vs. the original Faun of Wacslav Nijinsky from 1912. The likeness is amazing. No--miraculous. Excellent movie craft. Enjoy the fantastic sequence from the movie "NIJINSKY" here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TbSoI93ATUthe white king played the fawn Depending on their species, male deer are called stags, harts, bucks or bulls, and females are called hinds, does or cows. Young deer are called fawns or calves. A group of deer is commonly called a herd. Hart, from Old English heorot ‘deer’, is a term for a stag, particularly a Red Deer stag past its fifth year. It is not commonly used, but Shakespeare makes several references, punning the sound alike "hart" and "heart" for example in Twelfth Night. "The White Hart" and "The Red Hart" are common English pub names, and the county Hertfordshire is named after them. Whinfell Forest once contained a landmark tree called Harthorn[1] The history of the word deer was originally quite broad in meaning and came to be specialized. In Middle English, der (O.E. dēor) meant a beast or animal of any kind. [2] This general sense gave way to the modern sense by the end of the Middle English period, around 1500. The German word Tier, the Dutch word dier and the Scandinavian words djur/dyr/dýr, cognates of English deer, still have the general sense of "animal". The adjective of relation pertaining to deer is cervine.
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Post by jarvitronics on Jul 9, 2008 16:44:29 GMT -5
the white king played the fawn The fawn is listed in the "pawns" column as the pawn directly in front of the white king, it doesn't mean that the white king "played" the fawn. The Walrus is a bishop and the Carpenter is a knight, and there are four oysters just like in the poem. (The oysters are pawns of course). Have a cigar. -j
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Post by iameye on Jul 9, 2008 22:39:44 GMT -5
Thanks Jarv, D'oh! what was I thinking? cigar? is it cuban?
odd though I earlier said Alice was the pawn in front of the white king who is the main character in that passage. So what happened to fawn?
Eventually I will actually read this book.
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Post by iameye on Jul 12, 2008 0:57:38 GMT -5
cool, but who implemented it? a lot of people. I think the best explanation for The Beatles satanic messages and imagery, is simply, "they thought it was cool", its pretty likely if you think about it.
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