In the large reading room of the Salzburg University library, the librarian hanged himself from the large chandelier because, as he wrote in a suicide note, after twenty-two years of service he could no longer bear to reshelve and lend out books that were only written for the sake of wreaking havoc, and this, he said applied to every book that had ever been written. — Thomas Bernhard

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Found Object

(sleepover)

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Jupiter appearing in his godly radiance to Semele

with fireballs hurtling towards her

After Cornelis Bloemaert (engraving)
After Abraham van Diepenbeeck
Print made by Bernard Picart
Date
1730-1733 (circa)

British Museum

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Jupiter and Semele

from The Loves of Jupiter

After Michiel Coxie I
After Marcantonio (School of)
Print made by Virgil Solis
Date
1530-1562

British Musuem

Much as the Sun causes each thing

To lie so clearly before our eyes,

To linger too long on its splendor

Is to be suddenly robbed of sight.

My soul, its object thus supplied,

Leaves me abandoned by my senses,

As if, within me, to my surprise,

Semele were ravaged in my sight

By her Lover who, thundering on high,

Snatched her life in a flash of light.

— Maurice Sceve, translated by Richard Sieburth

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Fundamentalists claim to be returning to an original Christianity based on biblical texts, seemingly unaware that as early as the third century, Christian scholars such as Origen were arguing that the scriptures, at a time when the New Testament was still not in its final form, needed to be interpreted allegorically rather than literally. Who are the traditionalists here? — Charles Freeman

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HH 253

an Irving Klaw photograph

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Entangled State 5

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Backwards Map 8

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The Arrow

Print made by Léon Davent
After Francesco Primaticcio
Date 1540-1545

The British Museum

Pricked to the quick by conscience,

And loathing my little worth,

I know of no art or proper science

That might keep me from self-hurt,

This grief so sharp, so oddly angry

I cower at every blow of hope.

If only, out of pity, she would play

My dittany, Artemis to my Stag,

And wrench the arrow from this wound

That bathes my burning pain in blood.

— Maurice Sceve, translated by Richard Sieburth

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Diana and Acteon

 Drawn by Alexander Runciman

Date
1736-1785

British Museum

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