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5:05 AM
I've worked my way through the whole book. I'm curious now if I could place the days not just in relative time, but absolute time - there are several references to months, and once to a full moon. It may be possible to determine the year.
I have copied my entire timeline to before the original, and will now pare down to the important parts
 
 
2 hours later…
7:34 AM
0
Q: Meaning of "and light shows between his tightly buttoned torso and his father’s leg."

Viser Hashemi It is a photo of a family. The wind puffs out the huge stiff curved sleeve of the woman’s dress, and brushes back off his forehead the long hair of the father’s boy who is turned towards the drama of his parents’ faces; though he is holding his father’s hand, he is separate from the group, and l...

 
 
3 hours later…
10:08 AM
0
Q: Iliad book 2 - "branch of ares" meaning

benfdI have been reading the Iliad, Penguin Classics translation, and in the second book when Homer is naming the groups of greeks and trojans the translation keeps adding "branch of ares" to different peoples names. I cant find anything online that explains this naming, does it form part of the poems...

 
 
3 hours later…
1:11 PM
@verbose Do you know anything about the Devdas syndrome?
 
1:56 PM
Someone recently created the tag ; I have merged it with , which we already had.
 
2:24 PM
2
Q: How did Hans Christian Andersen know so much about Indian culture and geography?

Knight wants Loong backHans Christian Andersen was a nineteenth-century Danish writer who wrote fairy tales about various events. In his short fairy tale "What the Moon Saw", in the part named "First Evening" he writes, “Last night”, I’m quoting the Moon’s own words, “I was gliding through the cloudless Indian sky. My...

0
Q: Why War and Peace is not considered as an epic?

Knight wants Loong backThe plot of War and Peace involves more than 500 characters. More than 200 of them are real historical figures put to life on the pages of Tolstoy’s novels. The novel is set 60 years before Tolstoy's day, but he had spoken with people who lived through the 1812 French invasion of Russia. He read ...

0
Q: Why did Pierre want to assassinate Napoleon?

Knight wants Loong backPierre’s friend Andrei was shown to have great respect for Napoleon, as his view on historic events being the will of a few important people is embodied best by Napoleon. While lying wounded on the Austerlitz battlefield, Andrei meets Napoleon and realizes the true nature of his hero, who is exci...

0
Q: What is the actual meaning of verse?

Knight wants Loong backI often hear people using the words “stanza” and “verse” interchangeably, the small quotes of The Holy Bible are also called verses, and even the non-chorus part of songs are also called verses. I’m in need of an explanation of the actual meaning of verse and what can be and what cannot be called...

1
Q: Identify the source of this quote by T.S. Eliot

Knight wants Loong backI came across this quote of T.S. Eliot There are a large number of people… who believe that all ills are fundamentally economic. I’m craving to know Eliot’s view on it and for that I need to find the source and full quote.

0
Q: What does Shelley mean by "if we could scorn fear" in "To a Skylark"?

Knight wants Loong backPercy Bysshe Shelley’s “To a Skylark” is not only a beautiful ode but a very realistic view of human nature as compared to the “blithe spirit”. Shelley all throughout the poem is sure that Skylark was in joy, he was not in dilemma as Wordsworth when he saw a highland lass and said Will no one te...

0
Q: Is "Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought" a deliberate contradiction by Shelley?

Knight wants Loong backShelley was admiring the “profuse strains” of the “blithe spirit” and when he compares human songs with the skylark’s Waking or asleep, Thou of death must deem Things more true and deep Than we mortals dream, Or how could thy notes flow in such a crystal stream? He was of strong view that Skyla...

0
Q: What was the relation between Stephano and Trinculo?

Knight wants Loong backThe two funny characters, Stephano and Trinculo, in Shakespeare’s play The Tempest, fight with each other when Ariel was speaking behind Trinculo when Caliban and Stephano were talking. I want to know what was the relation between Stephano and Trinculo? Was Stephano more powerful just in matter o...

 
2:49 PM
0
Q: Why was Miranda prohibited from telling her name to Ferdinand in "The Tempest"?

Knight wants Loong backIn Shakespeare’s play The Tempest, when Ferdinand was carrying up the logs, Miranda came up to him and tried to help him. They talked a little and then the conversation went as follows: Ferdinand: I do beseech you, what is your name? Miranda: Miranda. Oh my mother, I have broke your hest to say ...

0
Q: Understanding the last lines from Oscar Wilde’s The Model Millionaire

Knight wants Loong backThe Model Millionaire is a short story about a young man, named Hughie Erskin, who although does not have much money himself, is moved to pity by the sight of an elderly beggar who is posing as model for his artist friend. Although, he can barely afford to do so, the young man gives the beggar th...

0
Q: What did Convict mean by “I’m a number: number 15,729”?

Knight wants Loong backNorman McKinnel’s play “The Bishop’s Candlestciks” is an adaptation of the opening chapter of Victor Hugo’s celebrated novel Les Miserable. The play is based on the concept that no man is a born offender. It is the circumstances that force him to be so. Punishment or conviction is not the way to ...

0
Q: Is this interpretation about the structure of Shelley’s “To a Skylark” correct?

Knight wants Loong backShelley’s poem “To a Skylark” is one of the glories of English Literature. The poet calls it a “blithe spirit” rather than a bird, for its song comes from Heaven. I was reading a book and they said about the stanzas, rhyming scheme, meter of the poem but there was this line The first four lines ...

0
Q: “The Dear Departed” is “A Comedy in One Act” and “The Silver Box” is “A Comedy in Three Acts”. Is there some relation?

Knight wants Loong back“The Silver Box” was a play produced by John Galsworthy in 1906 and it gained huge popularity. It is not about comedy, Livens dialogues shows so much of reality of how big shots keep judges in their pockets. It is a three act play, and the author called it “A Comedy in Three Acts”. “The Dear Depa...

0
Q: Was “The Dear Departed” influenced by Balzac’s “Father Goriot”?

Knight wants Loong backHonore de Balzac’s masterpiece “Father Goriot” tells the story of a father who loves his two beautiful daughters as forms of God. The daughters, Delphine and Anastasie, didn’t ever truly cared for their father and all they wanted was money. In his play ‘’The Dear Departed”, Houghton satirizes the...

0
Q: What does the expression “Hang it” mean?

Knight wants Loong backThe play, “The Dear Departed” by William Stanley Houghton, is about the essencelessness of love by the daughters for their old father. In the play, there is an old man named Abel who one day slept few hours more than usual to which his daughters, Mrs. Slater and Mrs. Jordan, thought him dead. The...

0
Q: What is central theme of ‘Sordello' by Robert Browning?

Knight wants Loong backRobert Browning’s first poem, written when he was 20 years old, Pauline was successful. But even in that very first poem there were few things which were not clear, and J.S. Mill wrote about the lack of exact theme in Pauline. When Browning became 28 years old he published a long poem named ‘Sord...

0
Q: Who and for what called Shelley “beautiful and ineffectual angel”?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading a blog, which was shared to me on a virtual platform, where it was written that “XYZ called Shelley as ‘beautiful and ineffectual angel’”. I don’t remember who was that XYZ but that blog was quite reliable because the other profuse informations which in it were quite of intellectual...

0
Q: Meaning of “But mercy is above this sceptred sway” from Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice

Knight wants Loong backIn Act IV, Scene I of The Merchant of Venice, Portia says to Shylock these lines (rendered in blank verses) The quality of mercy is not strained It droppers as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest: …. His scepter shows the force of temporal power, The attribute t...

0
Q: Is it just the style of Shakespeare or is there something more in it?

Knight wants Loong backThe plays of Shakespeare resembles the play of other playwright like those of Bernhard Shaw, John Galsworthy, Stanley Houghton, Norman McKinnel in many aspects, like those number of characters, events, and sometimes length also. But the dialogues of Shaw, Galsworthy and others are in simple prose...

0
Q: Meaning of “Life is a prism of my light” in Sarojini Naidu’s poem “The Soul’s Prayer”

Knight wants Loong backSarojini Naidu was an Indian poetess and by chance I came upon one of her poems which was titled “The Soul’s Prayer”. The last stanza of the poems goes like this I, bending from sevenfold height Will teach thee of My quickening grace, Life is a prism of My light, And death the shadow of my face ...

0
Q: Was character of Eugene De Rastignac in Balzac’s Father Goriot inspired by Maximillian Robespierre?

Knight wants Loong backMaximillian Robespierre was one of the revolutionary of French Revolution of 1789, he was a lawyer (by profession) from Arras. Eugene De Rastignac was also moved to Madame Vaquer’s house in order to study Law. Maximillian Robespirre had sisters and a younger brother, so did Balzac’s Rastignac had...

0
Q: What Eliot really meant when he said “I would suggest that none of the plays of Shakespeare has a meaning”?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading a Grammar book in which the discussion was going on about whether to treat “none” as singular or plural, then the book gave this quote by T.S. Eliot I would suggest that none of the plays of Shakespeare has a meaning. And observed that Eliot regarded “none” as singular. But the qu...

0
Q: What is meant by a “chance word” in this quote?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading a book on advanced English Grammar and among the various ones this one caught my eye A chance word or sigh are just as much evidence as a speech or a murder. — E.M. Forster What a “chance word” could mean? The whole quote is almost incomprehensible because I do not know the contex...

 
3:15 PM
0
Q: Why did early men take up poetry after gaining wisdom?

Knight wants Loong backWe all know that humans evolved (if we were to follow Darwin) to the present anatomy some hundreds of thousands of years ago. Men invented fire, began hunting, some 10,000 BC ago (movie is my source) they started sowing seeds for their food. But when their knowledge began to take shape, their wis...

0
Q: Understanding the opening line of P.G. Wodehouse

Knight wants Loong backI’m a big fan of P.G. Wodehouse, his novels have a very different way of humoring the readers and the narrative style is almost awesome. But his vocabulary and especially the conversational part of his books are quite uneasy to comprehend. It could be because he used many colloquial phrases of UK...

0
Q: What does “out of the room like a streak” mean?

Knight wants Loong backIn the novel Thank You, Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse, Bertie was telling Jeeves that he saw J. Washburn Stoker and his daughter Pauline along with Sir Roderick Glossop. To this Jeeves asked him if he entered into conversation with them but Bertie replies Who, me? No, Jeeves. I was out of the room li...

0
Q: Why Oscar Wilde had artists as his characters in his literary works?

Knight wants Loong backOne of the main characters of transcendental novel “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, Basil Hallward was a painter. One of the characters (can be called main) in his tory “The Model Millionaire”, Alan Trevor was an artist. It must be noted here that by artist I’m specifically referring to those who d...

0
Q: The depiction of slavery in Shakespeare’s The Tempest

Knight wants Loong backIn Shakespeare’s play The Tempest Prospero’s slave Caliban is depicted in a humorous manner. He is described by Prospero to her daughter Miranda as the one who always speaks ill. But there is something in his cursing, Shakespeare makes him to say You taught me language, and my profit on ’t
Is I ...

0
Q: Why “ ’Tis ” and “ ’Twas” were so common in archaic literature?

Knight wants Loong backIn archaic literature, like those of Shakespeare, Milton, and even very old ones like those of Herodotus, ’tis and ’twas seems very common, how removing a single i could help them? In the case of Shakespeare sometimes it helps him to maintain the iambic pentameter, but he uses it the dialogues of...

0
Q: Was metrical feet decided by the native English speakers?

Knight wants Loong backThe metrical feet like Iamb, Trochee and others are based on the sound made when someone utters those words, for example a trochee is a two-syllable metrical pattern in which a stressed syllable is followed by an unstressed syllable, e.g. :- “Garden”, “highway”. An Iamb which is the most common m...

0
Q: Why do we say “write ay quote and sign by Mark Twain’s name and no one would object”?

Knight wants Loong backOnce I was writing a “Oreface” for my friend’s college assignment book, I wanted to make it attractive so I thought of some quote related to prefaces of books. I consulted on an online forum and someone there said Write anything you like, mark it Mark Twain’s name and no one would object. You m...

 
I a matter of hours, the number of unanswered question has gone up from 1047 to 1077. We have work to do, folks! At your keyboards!
 
3:41 PM
1
Q: In what way was Joseph Conrad influenced by Antoni Malczewski?

Knight wants Loong backAntoni Malczewski was a Polish romantic poet, known for his only work, “a narrative poem of dire pessimism, Maria (1825). Wikipedia writes Maria was also influential on later Polish poets, especially Adam Mickiewicz, and on writer Joseph Conrad. As Conrad was not a romantic writer I’m unable to...

0
Q: What does “Honor the Light Brigade” mean?

Knight wants Loong backAlfred Lord Tennyson’s poem “The Charge of the Light Brigade” last stanza is When can their glory fade? Oh, the wild charge they made! All the world wondered. Honor the charge they made! Honor the Light Brigade - Noble six hundred! Brigade means army, what would “Light Brigade” refer to? As the...

0
Q: Who was Sue’s mother?

Knight wants Loong backJude was in his Aunt’s room, he was a little heavy with his head due to Arabella’s leaving, and on a table he found a photo of a beautiful little girl. Upon inquiring with his Aunt, he came to know that she was his cousin, Susanna Bridehead. We know only this much that Sue’ father and mother had ...

0
Q: When Little Father Time was actually born?

Knight wants Loong backLittle Father Time was son of Jude Fawley and Arabella Donn in the novel Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy. When Jude went to Donn’s for the first time, he met with Arabella on the first floor of the house. Arabella’s friends suggested her to compel Jude to marry her by getting pregnant. Arabella’...

0
Q: Why there are quotes before every part in Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure?

Knight wants Loong backJude the Obscure was one of the most controversial novel of Thomas Hardy and people even that far as calling it “Jude the Obscene”. It’s quite a complex novel, we cannot simply say what actually caused the problems in Jude’s life, I don't like to call them problems but rather God’s doom, the seem...

0
Q: How was Jude obscure in Thomas Hardy’s Jude the Obscure?

Knight wants Loong backI have recently completed the novel Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy and as always the tile left me baffling. In the whole novel it was Sue who seems (if one just uses his own viewpoint and judges her on the basis of society he lives in) to be obscure, Jude was fine plain man with all those chara...

0
Q: Did John Milton ever mention Martin Luther directly or indirectly?

Knight wants Loong backMartin Luther’s auspicious life on earth began in 1483 A.D. and he got salvation in the year 1546 A.D. John Milton’s scared life began in 1608 and he went to God’s abode in the year 1674 A.D. As far as I know, Mr. Luther’s ideas were very much accepted and celebrated, as of evangelists themselves...

0
Q: Understanding the lines from Shakespeare’s Hamlet

Knight wants Loong backHere is a dialogue from Shakespeare’s one of the most celebrated and adopted play Hamlet Give thy thoughts no tongue, Nor any unproportion’d thought his act. Be thou familiar; but by no mean vulgar. The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul, with hopes of steel; B...

0
Q: Can formal essays be considered as a literature in strict sense?

Knight wants Loong backFrancis Bacon wrote formal essays and Joseph Addison wrote periodical essays (Periodical essays mean those essays that are written to be published in a periodical publication).The style of the periodical essays is different from that of the formal essays of Bacon and Moantaigne, which are almost ...

0
Q: Who can be credited to be the starter of comedian ghost stories?

Knight wants Loong backAlthough, Pliny the Younger is regarded as the starter of ghost stories but I think these stories went under 360 degrees turn during 19th century when Charles Dickens or Oscar Wilde started to writing humorous ghost stories. Charles Dickens’ many stories are quite humorous (it may or may not invo...

0
Q: Justification of the title of “Far from the madding crowd” by Thomas Hardy

Knight wants Loong backEver since I began reading Thomas Hardy the thing that quite struck me is his titles for his works. In the novel Far from the madding crowd (usually called his first major literary success), Gabriel Oak (the main male character, I shouldn’t say it as the novel is too complex to say who is main an...

0
Q: Meaning and source of this quote by Ezra Pound

Knight wants Loong backI was reading a book and there appears something like this A reader or auditor is at liberty to remain passive. — Ezra Pound I want to understand the full meaning of this quote and want to know its source (the book or poem or essay where it has been said by Pound). My try at the meaning is: A r...

0
Q: How Macbeth involved dramatic irony?

Knight wants Loong backIn a school book it is written Dramatic Irony or Irony of situation: It involves a situation in a play or story in which the audience knows the reality which the speaker or character is ignorant of. Shakespeare’s tragedies, Macbeth and Hamlet abound in scenes which provide good examples of dra...

0
Q: What does “inward eye” mean?

Knight wants Loong backWilliam Wordsworth’s poem Daffodils reads like this For oft, when on my couch I lie, In vacant or in pensive mood, They flash upon that inward eye which is bliss of solitude. I suspect that soul is called as “inward eye”. What he meant by “inward eye”?

0
Q: How blank verse is “closest to the natural rhythms of English speech”?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading a book and in that it was written Shakespeare has used this poetic form (the blank verse) skillfully in his dramas because it is closest to the natural rhythms of English speech, and can be adopted to various levels of discourse. A simple google search showed me that blank verse c...

0
Q: Looking for the source of the quote by Bernhard Shaw

Knight wants Loong backA while ago I got this quote on an online social platform Humans have progressed so much, now they can even fly like a bird in the sky. The only thing remaining for the humans is to live with each other like humans. And this quote was signed as Bernhard Shaw. I’m not claiming the verbatim, but ...

0
Q: Can Edgar Allan Poe’s Alone be analyzed in the light of Existential Loneliness?

Knight wants Loong backThe very first lines From childhood’s hour I have not been As others were—I have not seen As others saw—I could not bring My passions from a common spring— seems to suggest the very symptom of Existential Loneliness Existential loneliness is the result of a broader separation related to the na...

0
Q: What could be the reason for Tennyson to write The Brook as being told by brook in the first person?

Knight wants Loong backIn the poem The Brook, Tennyson speaks about the journey of a small brook which later joins a mighty river. In this poem we come across the journey of the brook till it merges in a bigger river. The poem is narrated in the first person by the small brook I come from haunts of coot and hern, I ma...

0
Q: Is this line from Shelley’s A Lament an allusion to his Skylark?

Knight wants Loong backThe poem A Lament by P.B. Shelley goes like this O world! O Life! O Time! On whose last steps I climb, Trembling at that where I stood before; When will return the glory of your prime? No more, —O never more! Out of the day and night A joy has taken flight; Fresh spring, and summer, and winter h...

0
Q: Is it possible to draw a philosophical character analysis of Monsieur Loisel?

Knight wants Loong backMathilde was a young, charming woman and beautiful at an extent which was unaffordable by a clerk family. She was married to Monsieur Loisel who was also a clerk of Ministry of Public Instructions. M. Loyal was quite satisfactory with his life, this was proved when he was having his soul and said...

 
4:06 PM
0
Q: What philosophy of life is suggested by these lines of Maupassant?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading “The Diamond Necklace” by Guy de Maupassant. It is a story about the irony of the fate in the life of a. woman who in order to show her off as a ‘lady’ borrows a diamond necklace and in the end, after long tribulations, finds that it was artificial. However, the very first lines of ...

0
Q: Who was James Elia?

Knight wants Loong backIn the essay, which stimulates the living feelings in the reader, “Dream Children:A Reverie” by Charles Lamb, the last few lines by the children read I found myself quietly seated in my bachelor arm-chair where I had fallen asleep, with the faithful Bridget unchanged by my side - but John L (or ...

0
Q: Why Charles Lamb preserved the real name of his lover?

Knight wants Loong backIn a fine essay named “Dream Children: A Reverie” Charles Lamb has hypnotized the reader and has left an everlasting impression on both mind and heart of the reader. Although, the essay is personal and written when Lamb was 44 years old then also his love hor his lover seems ever-fish and vigorou...

0
Q: Why Charles Lamb has written his brother’s name as John L—-?

Knight wants Loong backIn the 9th paragraph (according to the version I’m reading) of Charles’ Lamb’s essay “Dream Children: A Reverie” it is written I told how, though their great-grandmother Field loved all her grand-children, yet in an especial manner she might be said to love their uncle, John L —- Why ‘Lamb’ is ...

0
Q: Understanding the second paragraph of Charles Lamb’s essay: “Dream Children: A Reverie”

Knight wants Loong backThe first paragraph of the essay is quite comprehensible, he is telling the children about the nature of children and a brief introduction of his grandmother and of Blakesware House. However, the second paragraph of the essay seems very out of blue, it goes like this Certain it is that the whole...

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Q: How does Charles Lamb’s working in East India Company affect his writing themes?

Knight wants Loong backCharles Lamb is famous as the Prince of English essayists. After studying for seven years at Christ’s Hospital, where he earned the friendship of Coleridge, Lamb obtained clerkship in South Sea House. But soon he left his job and joined the East India Company. Lamb’s life span was from 1775 unto ...

0
Q: Identify five instances in the text "A Modest Proposal" where Swift exhibits his misanthropic attitude towards humanity and explain how

RobertIdentify five instances in the text "A Modest Proposal" where Swift exhibits his misanthropic attitude towards humanity and explain how. "A Modest Proposal" by Jonathan Swift

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Q: What does “style of an invocation” means?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading “Hymns from the Vedas”, book of selected translations from the Vedas by Dr. Abinash Chandra Bose, a noted Oriental Scholar. The particular hymn I was reading has been to the seer Atharva and occurs as Hymn 52 in book VII of the Atharva Veda. For that particular hymn a commentary was...

0
Q: Why do readers don’t like Vronsky in the early part of the novel?

Knight wants Loong backAnna Karenina, the first novel of Count Leo Tolstoy is about the life of Anna (mainly) and her lover Vronsky (I know it is not possible to say what the novel is about but for this particular discussion we can assume that the novel is about Anna and Vronsky). In the earlier parts of novel (earlier...

0
Q: Did the publication of The Waste Land change modern English Literature?

Knight wants Loong backIf we talk about the one literary production which could be argued to have affected the literature of 20th-century the most, I am sure The Waste Land will be considered by many critics, scholars and students. Did The Waste Land really change English literature of the 20th century? If yes, then how?

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Q: Why is Romantic poetry considered more of heart and sentimental?

Knight wants Loong backFriends, there is a general tendency that scholars and critics, even the readers, consider the Romantic age poetry (of Wordsworth, Keats, Shelley, Byron and others) more sentimental, emotive and out of the heart. Is it justified? Can we classify all the romantic poets so simply?

 
me, this morning:
"wow that's a lot of questions- huh, I could answer a few"
"I'll take a break from homework for an hour or so to write a Lit answer"
"wait how is that not homework..."
"shush, brain"
 
4:28 PM
And I thought, le't just pop over to Lit SE for a few minutes to see whether there's an interesting new question I could answer. Five hours later, I'm still here.
On the upside:
 
0
Q: Poetry of Alexander Pope - was he a 2nd rank poet?

Knight wants Loong backI have read this on many occasions that Alexander Pope was a second rank poet. How far do you agree with this claim? Many intellectuals and commentators even disagree when it comes to recognising Pope as a poet. I am a little perplexed about it. I would love the views of members on this.

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Q: What is the central philosophy of song ‘Fragile’ by Sting?

Knight wants Loong backSting is a celebrated writer of England, the song ‘Fragile’ by him was released in 1988. It’s an English song but it was sung in Spanish and Portuguese too. Wikipedia gives only this much information about the description of the song: The song is a tribute to Ben Linder, an American civil engine...

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Q: What’s the central meaning of song “Moonlight Kissed”?

Knight wants Loong backPoets of the Fall is a Finnish musical band who mainly releases the philosophical romantic songs. The song “Moonlight Kissed” was released on YouTube on 22nd September 2017. The song is marvelous and admirable both vocally and lyrically. However, I don’t get the central meaning of the song. Accor...

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Q: What is the meaning of these opening lines of Poets of the Fall’s song “Moonlight Kissed”?

Knight wants Loong backPoets of the Fall released their charismatic song “Moonlight Kissed” on 22nd September 2017 along with a video. The voice of Marko was angelic and the lyrics surpassed every lyrics of lyricists. However, the very first line of the song I see shadow and light stroking the mist is quite poetic an...

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Q: Meaning of “So can you name your demon? Understanding its scheming”

Knight wants Loong backPoets of the Fall have this wonderful song named “Illusion and dreams” and in the last verse they sing So can you name your demon? Understanding its scheming I raise my glass and say “Here’s to you” Those are some strange lines regarding the whole theme of the song. What they mean and how are t...

0
Q: Understanding the meaning of these lines within the context of the song

Knight wants Loong backThe song, “Illusion and Dreams” by Poets of the Fall, have this line in the second verse A stone will not need you to guess if, you’re still going to drown. What is the meaning of above lines in the context of the song?

0
Q: How Paul and Sergius knew Bluntschli?

Knight wants Loong backIn Act II of the play Arms and the man by Bernhard Shaw, when Paul saw Bluntschli through th elibrary window he at once asked him to stay with him and Sergius, who also seem to be acquainted with Bluntschli. How they knew him?

0
Q: How the opening lines of Frost’s poem “After Apple-Picking” have biblical reference?

Knight wants Loong back‘After Apple-Picking’, collected in North of Boston is a well-known poem on man’s encounter with natural world, probing the dilemma of his existence. The first two lines of the poem are My long two-pointed ladder’s sticking through a tree Towards heaven still, How do those lines have biblical r...

0
Q: Anyone know Alfred Hitchcock stories?

Knight wants Loong backI’m hoping someone will be able to tell me the name of a Alfred Hitchcock story I read part of a long long time ago. It was about a guy who would see movement out of the corner of his eye, but when he looked there was nothing there. Spoiler alert: It tuned out he was seeing creatures. I don’t rem...

0
Q: Meaning of some of the phrase in Grapes of Wrath

Knight wants Loong backI've started reading Grapes of Wrath and I've run into some old-time phrases that I'm not sure of the meaning. I suppose these must date from the 1920s-1940s. My dogs was pooped out. From context I take it to mean his feet are tired from walking, but I'm curious as to the origin of this phrase....

0
Q: Clarifying a line from “The Shadow Over Innsmouth”

Knight wants Loong backI’m having a lot of trouble comprehending one particular line from The Shadow Over Innsmouth: But at last I am going to defy the ban on speech about this thing. Results, I am certain, are so thorough that no public harm save a shock of repulsion could ever accrue from a hinting of what was found...

0
Q: Why didn’t Sergius kiss Louka?

Knight wants Loong backWhen Raina went upstairs, Sergius started flirting with the maid, Louka. When Sergius was just about to kiss her, she said (no verbatim claimed) that Raina might be doing the same thing behind him what he is doing behind her. After hearing that, Sergius at once got changed and didn’t kiss Louka. ...

0
Q: Why Louka didn’t inform anyone when she saw the pistol in Raina’s room?

Knight wants Loong backRaina was informed that there will be shootings on the street and she should close every doors and windows. She left the main balcony window unlocked and suddenly came in a Serbian/Swiss soldier (Bluntschli). In fact he was seen by the Bulgarin/Russian soldiers and they came in Raina’s room searc...

0
Q: Was Anton Chekhov the earliest to use stream-of-consciousness technique in his works?

Knight wants Loong backAnton Chekhov was a famous Russian short story writer and dramatist. Early in his career, he mastered the form of the one-act play and produced several masterpieces of this genre. I remember I borrowed a book from one of my friends (it was a miscellaneous book of proses and poetries) and in that ...

0
Q: How can pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts to the mind?

Knight wants Loong back“Lines Written in the Early Spring” is English Romantic poet William Wordsworth’s meditation on the harmony of nature and on humanity’s failure to follow nature’s peaceful example. However, in the very first stanza, these lines occur In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts t...

 
And that's one answer! More than I usually do in a day. Maybe I can even squeeze another in now...
 
Great.
Question to native speakers of English: does the word "questionrhoea" exist? ;-)
Basically something similar to logorrhoea, but then about questions.
 
@Knight: Could you take note of the edits that people are making to your questions, and try to anticipate them, please? The key points are (1) try to put the author or work into the title of the question, to help people looking at a list of questions; (2) you can format poetry into lines by putting two spaces at the end of a line to force a line break; (3) questions about poetry should be tagged with ; (4) if you quote a short extract from a work, consider linking to the whole work
 
Pings don't work if someone hasn't been in chat recently
 
4:44 PM
@KnightwantsLoongback Could you please consider Gareth Rees's advice (see above) when you post new questions? That may save us some editing work.
 
Can mods ping someone who hasn't been in chat?
 
That was a superping. Mod powers :-D
 
Super Secret Mod Powers!
I've somehow, sometime in the last minute or so, swapped my " and @ keys. Only the Shift-ed versions. This is going to make typing quotes no fun
 
0
Q: Comprehending “how but in custom and ceremony are innocence and beauty born”

Knight wants Loong back“A Prayer for My Daughter” is a poem written by W.B. Yeats on the birth of his daughter. The main theme of the poem is contrasting his daughter’s future with the life of Maud Gonna, his lover. In the last stanza these lines occur How but in custom and in ceremony Are innocence and beauty born? ...

0
Q: Was it because of drunkenness only that Michael Henrichard sold his wife?

Knight wants Loong backIn the novel The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas HArdy, Michael Henrichard auctioned his wife in a bar and sold her to a sailor named Newson for five guineas along with his infant daughter. As far as critics are concerned, Henrichard sold his wife because ehe got drunk and lost his control over h...

0
Q: How can brows get clouded?

Knight wants Loong backIn the novel ‘The Sword and the Distaff” by William Gilmore Simms and Joseph De Maistre, this line occurs The brow of Colonel Moncrieff clouded as he read. As far as I know it is the eyes that do get cloudy, but how the brows? What’s the meaning behind that?

0
Q: Did Robert Frost stop to see the beauty of woods or for some philosophical thinking?

Knight wants Loong backRobert Frost stopped by a wood on a snowy evening and thought whose woods they were, he thought he knew, the owner lives in his village. Then in the poem he talks about how the woods look with snow on them and their dark color. Then suddenly he remembered that he had miles to go before he could g...

0
Q: Who is “close bosom-friend of the maturing sun”?

Knight wants Loong backJohn Keats, in Ode to Autumn, writes Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness, Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun. Who is close bosom-friend of the maturing sun?

0
Q: What’s the meaning of this verse from Mahabharata?

Knight wants Loong backThe following is the verse from Mahabharata’s Anusasanaparva Here there is nothing save a wheel turning only one way. I have this feeling that the above verse tells about a very deep spiritual concept of Hinduism. I remember reading something about spirituality that wheel represents this whole ...

1
Q: What did Keats mean by “it is not without a feeling of regret that I make it public” in his preface to "Endymion"?

Knight wants Loong backJohn Keats, in the Preface to Endymion, wrote: Knowing within myself the manner in which this poem has been produced, it is not without a feeling of regret that I make it public. Why did he express regret in the very first lines of the book? What was the reason for his regret?

0
Q: Why Gabriel took it as a sign that Bathsheba loved him?

Knight wants Loong backThe context is the novel Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy. Gabriel Oak was saintly. Bathsheba Everdene was beauty. One day Gabriel, a good shepherd, saw a beautiful girl coming in his village and he couldn’t know when he was engulfed by love for her. Another day, Gabriel got himself unk...

0
Q: Why Sue wanted to go back to Phillotson?

Knight wants Loong backIn the novel Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy, Sue was broken after the death of her children. She went to their graves and wept even on the insistence of Jude to go back to the lodge. Jude was broken too but he understood that he had to care for Sue. However, after these events Jude thought that...

0
Q: Why Thomas Hardy set up his novels in cities of imaginary names?

Knight wants Loong backJude Fawley was living in Marygreen and went to Chirstminster, Christminster was a place of wisdom for him and due to some other details we infer that Hardy’s Chrisminster was intact Oxford. Far From the Madding Crowd is set is Wessex, an imaginary city in Southwest England. The Mayor of Casterbr...

0
Q: How it affects the poem “Gerontion” when ELiot narrates/writes it in the first person?

Knight wants Loong backThe poem ‘Gerontion’ by T.S. Eliot is about an old man and his life. The very first lines if the poem, viz Here I am, an old man in a dry month, Being read to by a boy, waiting for rain. , shows clearly that the narrator of the poem is the old man himself. In some of the well-known poems of TS...

0
Q: What could “who will allows his honesty the benefit of the doubt” mean?

Knight wants Loong backI was reading A.G. Gardiner’s On Umbrella Morals and in the second paragraph occurs these lines In fact he is a thoroughly honest man who allows his honesty the benefit of the doubt. I want the explanation of the above lines.

0
Q: Why John Keats was called as a poet “who was kill’d off by one critique”?

Knight wants Loong backIn Canto XI of Lord Byron’s magnificent work Don Juan, romantic poet Keats is mentioned as a poet who was kill’d off by one critique. Why he was referred to like that? And which critique was it?

0
Q: What is the central summary of Der Erlkönig?

Knight wants Loong backI was hearing Frank Schubert’s musical concert of Der Erlkönig , and the music was perfect. The lyrics were quote plain and simple, but why is it so famous? I read the poem, heard Schubert and to me it seems to be meant for children but that contradicts my thoughts that such a fine piece of music...

0
Q: Meaning of “a very splendid specimen of the wife of a mountain farmer”

Knight wants Loong backBernhard Shaw in the Act I of his play “Arms and the man” give this introduction of Catherine Catherine Petkoff, a woman over forty, imperiously energetic with magnificent black hair and eyes, who might be a very splendid specimen of the wife of a mountain farmer, but is determined to be a Viens...

0
Q: What’s the meaning of these lines spoken Bluntschli?

Knight wants Loong backIn Act III of the play “Arms and the man” everyone gets to know each other’s doings. Louka got engaged to Sergius, and Catherine agreed with Bluntschli’s and Raina’s relationship. But then Bluntschli spoke these lines Why, look at our ages! I’m thirty four. I don’t suppose the young lady is much...

0
Q: Justifying the title of Shaw’s play “Arms and the man”

Knight wants Loong backBernhard Shaw’s very subtle play “Arms and the man” have a title which needs some attention. Wikipedia says that it is a reference to Virgil’s work, but why the reference? What similarity do they have? The title seems quite consistent if it is seen through the events of play: the play involves di...

 
my goodness, when will it end?
I feel like I'm trying to empty the sea with a leaky cup, and I'll have to away for homework soon at that
 
4:59 PM
At least there's a few of us with leaky cups.
I just closed two of them as duplicates, remembering that they've been asked before here.
 
These are questions that have been saved up for several months and that are now submitted en masse. The stream will eventually dry up but I have no idea when.
 
I'm answering a that I found by Googling the first few words of the quote with the author name.
oh, sorry. that may have been a bit mean
 
DIE 95 FRAGEN
 
???
 
5:24 PM
1
Q: Beings hunted for fuel who say "Toot Toot" to each other

Word ThiefI remember a short story but can't remember the name of the story or author. It is about alien/robotic beings that have been hunted to the edge of extinction because they are an exceptional fuel source. Fairly certain the hunters are us (humans), thoguh they hardly appear in the story. However t...

0
Q: Why Louka despised Raina from very beginning of the play?

Knight wants Loong backLook, Raina’s maid, had somewhat bitter feelings for her mistress Raina, why? From the first Act the dialogues of Louka do show her resentment (although it is subtle) for her. It’s my personal observation that in the whole play Raina never treated Louka badly unless she started it. I want to know...

0
Q: How “The Second Coming” forms the background for “A Prayer for My Daughter”?

Knight wants Loong backWilliam Butler Yeats was one of those poets who passed through the transcendental stages of love, resentment, hatred and love again. I was reading his poem “A Prayer for My Daughter” and as a fanatic reader and admirer of emotionalism I felt extreme acquaintance with dark and bright human nature....

 
At least we have seven new questions for @Fabjaja :-) (not counting duplicates)
 
Two answers. That's all I can do today
 
5:44 PM
No worries, I've not been here before - usually I hang in Puzzling. Figured I would start dropping in to say hi :)
 
I also tried to recruit them to the effort to answer the flood of questions, but if you don't feel safe doing so that's fine
 
On a different note, finished Inkspell today, and will probably get to Inkdeath this week.
 
@Mithical Ooh!
@Mithical I checked, there's no translation of the sequels after the first volume Tintenherz, so I won't be reading those unless I learn German. On the plus side, Cornelia Funke writes nice straightforward easy to understand prose, sort of like many (but not all) of Asimov's SF, so these sorts of books are exactly the right sort of motivation to eventually push me to learn enough German to read them.
 
I mean... they're in English as well, if you're willing to read in English. I don't read German either :P
 
@bobble UK versus US keyboard layout?
 
5:53 PM
I dunno. I've stolen my dad's Chromebook for the day as my computer is out of battery and the charger is broken
 
I'm sure the library here as the German editions of Tintenherz but the library is closed due to Covid-19 pandemic, which you may have heard of.
 
@Tsundoku The libraries just opened just enough here so I can get some books. They're still mostly closed sadly.
 
35 messages moved to Trashcan
@Sciborg I hope you will :-) Sorry again for the upset today.
 
I'll go to a library, probably two of them, the next week, and pick up some books. I have this weekend to figure out which ones exactly.
I definitely need an edition of Os Lusíadas.
 
@Randal'Thor No worries! Bit of a funny time to join the chat as a transmasculine gay man I suppose :p
 
6:03 PM
Jesus
So many questions
 
So far 9 of today's big Q-flood have answers: one, two, three by Tsundoku, one by Laurel, one, two by me, [...]
[...] one, two by bobble, one by Gareth.
 
HOLY SHIT WHY ARE THERE SO MANY TAGS
 
I'm beating Gareth? D:
 
In case people are literally missing the answers among so many posts on the front page :-)
 
Understandable, at this point
 
6:05 PM
A question needs upvoted answers to move off the Unanswered list.
 
Not that I'm calling for blind upvotes (I haven't even upvoted most of those answers myself), just a general FYI.
 
@Tsundoku I think I have enough new tags to be able to get my badge now... I might also genuinely need some help
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Helo!
 
Helo to you too :)
 
6:06 PM
I also wonder if this one might be opinion-based?
 
Rand, are there anyways to mod-delete the tags that have zero questions early?
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Have at them! :-D
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr They'll be gone after a day anyway.
was created today, I'm not sure if it's gone now?
Yep, no questions left.
 
I think it could probably be better rephrased as "What were the reasons for the intial creation of poetry?" which might have some scholarly articles about it
 
Hopefully
How does one write SO many questions in SO little time
 
6:08 PM
1 hour ago, by Tsundoku
These are questions that have been saved up for several months and that are now submitted en masse. The stream will eventually dry up but I have no idea when.
 
Ugh, that's really annoying
Ugh, I also have to go through the tags and figure out which ones are duplicates
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr At least they're not all about the same book/author this time :-)
 
@Randal'Thor Yeah, but I wish I wasn't DELGUED with a bunch of new tags within like 5 hours
 
Why couldn't they have asked their questions when each came up, instead of saving them for a giant flood all at once?
 
It'll spike our unanswered stats for a bit, but hopefully our answersmiths will get to work in their forges and everyone can gain from it.
 
6:10 PM
Would probably increase the number of answers and votes
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr You don't have to do them all at once.
 
At least I'll have new tags to keep me busy for a while
@Randal'Thor I don't have to, but I like to grind out my new tags all at once usually
@Tsundoku @Randal'Thor Y'all better keep your "suggested edits" tab open, it's going to be very busy today
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Just as some people like to grind out their new questions all at once? ;-)
 
We currently have "1,131 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers".
 
First, let me delete all the tags that violate our tagging principal
 
6:12 PM
@Tsundoku It was around 1050 earlier today.
 
1047 when came to the site this morning. Just wanted to have a quick look and then go shopping...
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Why?
 
"I need a paraphrase"? I find that to be rather very open-ended
 
How so? Any paraphrase would be constrained by the meaning of the actual sentence.
 
6:14 PM
Hm, I don't know
 
Eh, that's some people's way of asking questions.
 
0
Q: Relation of Milton and Keats ideas in their poetry

SolomonI discovered something quite interesting today in John Milton's Paradise Lost. Here is John Milton...(this is the Archangel Raphael relating to Adam and Eve the creation of the world) (Paradise Lost, Book 7: Lines 438-440) the Swan with Arched neck Between her white wings mantling proudly, Rowes ...

 
Okay, I'm just really annoyed that this user spammed a bunch of new questions with a whole bunch of tags that need to be deleted because they don't fit our tagging standards
Actually, do you mind if I just post all of them in here? I don't exactly know how it should be re-tagged, I just know some tags don't belong
 
6:18 PM
^^ not sure if this is appropriate for dupe-closing even though they're questions abut completely different passages/works
 
I'm going to take a second to just scream out my frustration real quick. I'll be right back
If you're going to just dump questions, why can't you at least tag them correctly? Gah!
Okay, I'm done ranting. I'll get started on writing excerpts
 
I have written seven answers today. I think I'm entitled to a break now. See you later!
 
Please, do take a break
 
Meanwhile, this question has branched out to the HNQ list.
 
@Randal'Thor I'll vote to close as dupe
 
6:29 PM
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Can't, the max tag length is 35 characters.
 
Ah, makes sense
 
You call yourself a tagmeister and don't even know the max tag length? :-P
 
Still learning :P
 
I pray for your sanity today, North
 
Thank you
So many duplicate tags and inappropriate tagging >:(
 
I'm continuing to edit their questions (mostly for tagging) and am half-expecting to get some revenge downvotes on my questions
 
Hopefully not
But if you do, then, hopefully, the system catches them
The thing is, you can't even downvote too many of these questions because system is going to be like "spam downvoting", when in actuality, it's just because they put like 100+ questions
this question still needs retagging, but I'm not sure how. Definitely needs , but do we tag it as ?
 
(Note to other answerers: I'm calling dibs on the Light Brigade question, since it's at a level even I can answer)
 
6:49 PM
Also, can we change "oriental scholar" to something else in that question? That's kind of... an offensive term
 
Eesh, didn't see that one.
 
Oh, we need to get rid of
That's a genre tag, and you guys know how much I dislike genre tags now
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr That'd be part of the general project of getting rid of genre tags, if that ever goes ahead.
(I seem to remember we had a meta consensus on it and then sort of broke down on figuring out what's a genre tag and what isn't.)
 
I can remove the comedy tags from all the questions right now so it'll just disappear. Hold up
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr It is?
 
6:55 PM
@Randal'Thor To my knowledge, "oriental" is a racial slur, referring to people of East Asian descent (me), no?
 
"oriental" is the offensive bit
 
I thought it just means eastern.
 
It can, but it can also be used as a racial slur
 
It's one of those words that was historically used in a way that wasn't considered necessarily offensive, but is outdated and offensive in current times with a more expanded view of the world.
 
It kind of depends on the context
 
6:57 PM
FWIW, the person being referred to was Indian, as is the OP as far as I know.
 
Oriental studies is the academic field of study that embraces Near Eastern and Far Eastern societies and cultures, languages, peoples, history and archaeology; in recent years the subject has often been turned into the newer terms of Middle Eastern studies and Asian studies. Traditional Oriental studies in Europe is today generally focused on the discipline of Islamic studies, while the study of China, especially traditional China, is often called Sinology. The study of East Asia in general, especially in the United States, is often called East Asian studies. European study of the region formerly...
 
So context would suggest not a slur.
That's not taking into account the other context, of course ...
 
Anyhow, do we tag it as ?
 
In general it's a similar situation to a recent Puzzling puzzle that used the word "racist" in a chess puzzle. The word itself can be used in a non-offensive context and isn't necessarily inflammatory on its own, but the specific use in that case was iffy and it was probably safer to edit in a less uncomfortable word.
 
Or do we call it or ?
 
7:01 PM
@PrinceNorthLæraðr I don't know enough about that topic to advise. Maybe @verbose or @Tsundoku would know more.
 
If I write one more answer, I'll have doubled my count in a single day
Today is making me feel less guilty about having more questions than answers, since I feel I'm contributing some
 
Oh my God bobble is going to outrep me
 
Currently a 123 rep difference between us
I need 13 upvotes
you hear me, people?
 
do you hear me, ye Gods of SE?
 
Guys, I need more upvotes on old posts
 
7:10 PM
> Have you looked in a dictionary?
Beautiful comment
 
Not gonna lie, upvoted the comment purely because it made me laugh
 
This also looks questionably opinion-based, but I'm no Shakespearean expert
Maybe the dialogue is different because... Shakespeare lived in a different time?
 
Couldn't be. Not possible.
 
Ooooooh, a question I can answer!!!
0
Q: What is the central summary of Der Erlkönig?

Knight wants Loong backI was hearing Frank Schubert’s musical concert of Der Erlkönig , and the music was perfect. The lyrics were quote plain and simple, but why is it so famous? I read the poem, heard Schubert and to me it seems to be meant for children but that contradicts my thoughts that such a fine piece of music...

 
7:14 PM
a chain of events: sees this question, googles "inward eye", top result is this
> What does william worthsword mean by inward eye in the poem the daffodils?
 
Well, that explains a lot
 
I actually sang Der Elrkonig last semester for my choir project
 
> Top posts (116)
 
(someone else answer the question I linked above, please. I think the google result has the answer but I'm not sure how to write it up well)
 
7:37 PM
First question I've answered in a while
Looks like my music theory knowledge is coming in clutch
 
Four answers. I've doubled my count!
 
IT'S BEEN DONE!!!! @Tsundoku!!!
Are you proud of me?
 
Hopefully those last two answers of mine get at least one upvote to kick their questions off Unanswered. hint hint nudge nudge
 
rolls eyes
 
The entire front page, even with the expanded version that signed-in users get, is covered by this one user's questions. There's maybe 1 or 2 by others
 
7:45 PM
Yup
 
Seems a bit unfair :/
 
North, without you recruiting me over here there would be 7 more Unanswered questions. Are you a happy tree now?
(not counting the interview answer because there's another upvoted answer there)
 
Oh wait
if you factor in the fact that I've asked questions, I am a net +1 Unanswered
oh noes
must answer another question
 
@bobble it's okay, I'm pretty sure I have a much bigger net Unanswered impact :p
 
8:56 PM
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Congratulations, Prince Edit Dooku!
 
Thank you!
 
@bobble Isn't that lost in the mists of oral tradition anyway?
You could ask it for specific more recent forms of poetry of course.
@PrinceNorthLæraðr What's wrong with new tags? It's better to see new authors than twenty more Shakespeare questions.
 
@b_jonas I just don't want them all at once, I get stressed
 
The volume rather than the diversity of the questions was the headache here.
 
9:17 PM
@bobble Done.
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr You can't expect every user to know how we want to use tags. Let them post the questions, and if we don't like the tags, we fix them. We have to do that even if they don't post them all at the same time. The newly created tags will be garbage-collected anyway, unless someone creates tag descriptions or tag wikis for them, and those are tied to a privilege.
 
@b_jonas Right, but they've been around here for a decent amount of time
I would think that would at least ask or something before asking a bunch of questions? Esepcially given their frequency in chat?
 
Plus Literature is hard to tag in first place.
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Don't take it personally, you don't have to be the one to fix the tags.
 
Still, as the person who has to write all these wiki tags, you can see why I'm a bit annoyed. Even if I'm being a tad unreasonable.
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr On the plus side, it brings you close to a badge you're aiming for :-)
 
9:21 PM
One step closer :P
I'm going to do front page tomorrow, so that all the deleted tags can go away and it'll look cleaner
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr (1) You shouldn't write wiki for tags that shouldn't exist, and (2) you don't have to write all tag wikis.
 
@b_jonas Well, yes, I am aware of 1. It just looks annoying. And for 2, I know I don't have to, but I just want to. Just let me be frustrated, darn it b_jonas! :P
 
Ok, be frustrated if you want.
2
 
Don't worry, North, i support you :p
 
Is this opinion-based?
 
9:35 PM
I'm not sure, as I lack the necessary background
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Grats :-)
 
thanks!
@Randal'Thor Well, I'm no expert in Shakespeare, but I think it's less opinion-based and more too broad
 
@Randal'Thor "Style" and "similarity in their dialogues" are so vague that I don't see how this can be answered without writing a book-length study.
 
Like what part of "dialogue" similarity are they talking about
^
@Tsundoku My point exactly
 
I wonder if any of the questions will HNQ
 
9:39 PM
@bobble Maybe? It's not that hard to HNQ in Lit
 
user14111 makes a good point too: the question compares Shakespeare with a bunch of authors from a completely different era of literature.
 
@Randal'Thor Yeah
 
@bobble Probably; several of them have been answered pretty quickly.
 
@Tsundoku I've voted to close both for needing "detail and clarity"
 
9:40 PM
Let's see how the review queues handle them.
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr The tag has been merged with the older one.
 
@Tsundoku Perfect
Ugh, how do I downvote some of the posts without the bot think I'm spam downvoting? Some of their questions are okay, some of them are insightful, but some of them are just low-quality, but there are so many questions
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Take your time, don't go through and consider them all at once.
 
@Randal'Thor Ah, okay
Dannnggg we are at 9.9 questions per day
 
Now if only that would last ;-)
 
9:47 PM
I know :(
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr I added . I don't know enough about the Vedas; they may actually each need a separate tag.
 
How about... 95 questions a day?
2
 
@Mithical No thanks.
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr What verse is is definitely a literature question. It just looks rather elementary, as the famous detective would say.
 
@Tsundoku Yeah, I'm not sure about how or what to tag
 
9:49 PM
I removed [hymn] and [style] and added [meaning]
 
@bobble Okay, nice
 
That'd be on par with some of the biggest sites in the network, and we don't have as many mods or high-rep users as them :-P
 
I think I have a stash of 15 questions. I guess now is not a good day to post them? ;-)
 
I am trying to become a high-rep user!
 
@Tsundoku Oh, like each Vedic text?
@bobble So am I :P
 
9:51 PM
107 rep difference now
 
I thought there was a limit of like 50 questions a month or something like that, so I don't even know how 95 or whatever was possible in the first place.
 
Some of the limits go away if you have enough rep
 
@Mithical Probably doesn't apply to sufficiently high-rep users.
 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr Right: , , etc.
 
This user even has enough rep to create new tags, much to @Prince's dismay.
 
9:53 PM
> Users with < 10k rep trip CAPTCHA* if more than once per 60 seconds, or within 5 seconds of starting new post
 
@Tsundoku Dang
 
> On Stack Overflow, Super User, Server Fault and Mathematics (not active on all other sites)

maximum of 6 questions per day
maximum of 50 questions per 30 days, on a rolling basis (50 questions in past 720 hours before current time).
maybe that's where you have the 50/month limit from
all quotes from here
 
Ah.
 
Seems like that sort of rate limit would be more important on small sites, because we can get overwhelmed more easily
 
10:00 PM
Our QPD is aleady at 9.9 and it's going to rise even more in the next few days.
 
Maybe we'll graduate this month from hitting 10 QPD :-)
 
0
Q: What is the meaning of "broads" in Hemingway's short story Fifty Grand?

Darling DDHere's the context: The three of us, Jack Brennan, Soldier Bartlett, and I were in Hanley’s. There were a couple of broads sitting at the next table to us. They had been drinking. “What do you mean, kike?” one of the broads says. “What do you mean, kike, you big Irish bum?” “Sure,” Jack says. “Th...

 
@PrinceNorthLæraðr "Oriental" is also used in the description of the book The Call of the Vedas (An Anthology of Hymns) on the website "Exotic India": "In addition to the aid from oriental scholarship, his personal contact with both the traditional and the revivalist schools of the Vedic religion, ..."
And there is Edward Said's famous book Orientalism, but I would not use that as evidence that "oriental" isn't a racial slur, since it is about the European view of the East during a period when racism was the default.
 
10:19 PM
Tip for @KnightwantsLoongback : There is a socractic badge: "Ask a well-received question on 100 separate days, and maintain a positive question record." So if you ask only one question per day, it takes fewer questions to get the Socratic badge, since only one upvoted question per day is counted towards the badge.
 

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