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…this would certainly help explain why the “fasten passenger-side seatbelt” light sometimes flashes on my car dashboard when all I have on the seat beside me (as far as I can tell) is my briefcase.
And, to think that the Americans actually figured this out nearly 70 years ago… quite amazing!
(image from my good friend Gerald Brandt, who unfortunately has little additional information to share about the source of this remarkable juxtaposition…)
(original image source unknown)
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My dear Dad was a churchman, and somewhat of a crusader as well—no doubt a little like Thomas Fuller. (The brackets in the above quote are mine).
Caution is advised, Gentlemen—from the moment of that first gaze…
Her eye (I’m very fond of handsome eyes)
Was large and dark, suppressing half its fire
Until she spoke, then through its soft disguise
Flash’d an expression more of pride than ire,
And love than either; and there would arise,
A something in them which was not desire,
But would have been, perhaps, but for the soul,
Which struggled through and chansten’d down the whole.
—Lord Byron, Don Juan (canto I, st. 60)
Original image sources unknown.
Strasbourg, France
A 1979 advert illustrated by the unmatchable Tomi Ungerer…
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A clever (if somewhat passive aggressive) poster designed by Serbian ex-pat artist Vuk Vidor (now living in Paris)… found online here.
(The tongue-in-cheek definitive style of the poster reminds me a little of the short guide to comparative religions [original author unknown] that I e-published last year, entitled An Excremental Exegesis. Both pieces “paint with a large brush,” yet to remarkably telling effect).
Morelia, (Michoacán) México
A picture really is worth a thousand words. I was happy to stumble across this oh-so-telling illustration by Rogelio Naranjo today, here.