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BtS, it's odd but like a lot of people I have a great aversion to monkeys, or those of the monkey family. I am sure someone has documented this (Jung? Probably not! David Attenbrough? Probably) but it is the fact that when you look into their eyes they are so human that it is frightening that they are close to you genetically. And they seem to want to talk to you. Which is scary because I don't want to talk to them. That does sound very cruel.
We are not so different to the other primates. John Gray's "Straw Dogs" indicts Christianity and Humanism in equal measure. It's compelling and convincing stuff to this reader.
From an area in Italy in 1847 to a fire in London in 1916 to a bassoonist turned singer in 1975. J is common to all.
OK...think of an area of Italy and those who came from it....perhaps turning into J
or mills on fire in 1916
or the singer who debuted in Fidelio in that year...if I gave his Christian name then Google brings the answer straight out. I had hoped that seeing as how it is a well known operatic role that Google would come up with too many references too soon but, wouldn't you know it, right at the top!
And another devilish composer also composed a piece of work whose title includes J
EDIT: Actually there is another link that has just occurred to me between the devilish composer and the mills on fire.
or the singer who debuted in Fidelio in that year...if I gave his Christian name then Google brings the answer straight out. I had hoped that seeing as how it is a well known operatic role that Google would come up with too many references too soon but, wouldn't you know it, right at the top!
[/QUOTE]
Googel throws up Siegfried Jerusalem from that information.
i Lombardi translated means those from Lombardy...Verdi signed the contract with the Paris Opera in 1847 to produce this new opera which was renamed Jerusalem.
The term "dark Satanic Mills", which entered the English language from this poem, is interpreted as referring to the early Industrial Revolution and its destruction of nature and human relationships. This view has been linked to the fate of the Albion Flour Mills, which was the first major factory in London, designed by John Rennie and Samuel Wyatt and built on land purchased by Wyatt in Southwark. This was a rotary steam-powered flour mill by Matthew Boulton and James Watt, with grinding gears by Rennie, producing 6,000 bushels of flour a week.
The factory could have driven independent traditional millers out of business, but it was destroyed, perhaps deliberately, by fire in 1791. London's independent millers celebrated with placards reading, "Success to the mills of ALBION but no Albion Mills." Opponents referred to the factory as satanic, and accused its owners of adulterating flour and using cheap imports at the expense of British producers. An illustration of the fire published at the time shows a devil squatting on the building. The mills were a short distance from Blake's home.
The fourth composer that I threw in was Penderecki who wrote "Seven Gates of Jerusalem". He also wrote "The Devils of Loudon"...which tied in rather neatly, I thought, to "satanic" mills.
I got confused with the last puzzle because it said 'Fire in London 1916' so, of course, I thought it was Jack London d. 1916 and his 'To Build a Fire' or it referred to the 1916 Zeppelin raids but then I see it was a fire in 1791. Confused??
I have been wrestling with Virgin Media's attempts to upgrade my internet to 30 Mbps... A long process involving protracted calls with a polite but ineffectual young gentleman somewhere in India
Back on now... though I doubt if my faster connection will lead to faster conundrum-cracking...
Had no clue about K. Looks as if Rubbers is half-way there anyway...
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
I'm not quite there with theologians or lexicographers....
well - Karl Barth is quite important as a theologian; scratching my head for lexicographers - Liddel and Scott weren't Karls, not sure about Funk or Wagnall...
Hans Richter played the trumpet in the first performance of the Siegfried Idyll on the steps of the Wagner home on Cosima's birthday. The only time...
That leads to Karl Richter.
Karl Bohm - there is a Bohm maker of violins and trumpets.
I'm not quite there with theologians or lexicographers....
First one correct. The third did not make trumpets, only all sizes of string instruments (displayed at the International Exhibition in London in 1862). The lexicographers are better known for their earlier work collecting (and publishing) folk tales.
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