Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Thursday, February 22, 2018
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
In the Arena
See also the previous posts:
• In the Arena | II | III | IV | V | VI | VII
• Wrestling: "The Heterosexually Acceptable Form of Homosexual Foreplay"
• The Domain of Eros
• Olympic Male Beauty
• Olympic Male Beauty II
• Ball[s] Sports
• Colin
Images: Photographers unknown.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Stag of the Cabbages
Hares are wild creatures which have tended to live close to people on moorland and farmland. Yet even though we are such close neighbours, humans haven't ever managed to understand all of the hare's secrets. We appear to have complex feelings toward the hare – a mixture of awe, affection and fear.
To us, hares are mysterious and full of contradictions – all at once comical and regal. One minute timid, the next bold, verging on "bonkers." They are mostly solitary and nocturnal creatures.
For most of the year you'll not see a single one, then suddenly in the spring they'll appear in droves, brazenly leaping about the open countryside. Where do they come from? Where do they go?
– Zoë Greaves
Excerpted from Hare
Old Barn Books (2015)
Excerpted from Hare
Old Barn Books (2015)
Note: "The stag of the cabbages" is one of a number of imaginative names for the hare that Zoë Greaves gathers together in her book, Hare. Others include "the hare-kin," "the dew-hopper," "the swift-as-wind," and "the cropper of herbage."
See also the previous posts:
Strong-Hearted | A Curious Fact | A Unique Position | Elaborate Means
Images: M. Breuer/Gettys Images.
Thursday, February 1, 2018
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