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03:04
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Q: What historical reference is Stevenson making with "shouting in the streets"?

Peter ShorIn The Master of Ballantrae, in the section “The Master's Wanderings”, Stevenson writes: and I dare say these plaudits had their effect on Master Teach in the cabin, as we have seen of late days how shouting in the streets may trouble even the minds of legislators. The book was written between ...

0
Q: In Frontier Wolf, what is the importance of the swordsmith's daughter?

DLoscIn Rosemary Sutcliff's novel Frontier Wolf, tensions rise between the Romans and the Votadini after Connla, younger brother of the Votadini chieftain Cunorix, steals the Roman Praepositus's horse. Cunorix is very angry at his brother, but Connla is unrepentant: "The Chieftain said he wished to b...

 
3 hours later…
06:02
16
Q: Short story where the protagonist’s brain has a switch between two selves

CorwinMacleodLooking for a short story where the protagonist’s brain has a switch between two selves, identical. He flips the switch a few times and notices no difference. Until near the end of the story when he flips it and loses control to the other self, who he’s been suppressing without knowing. And who...

Isn't that Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde? speaking of RLS
@Bookworm I'm working on an answer (though Mr Rees will prolly beat me to it, unless his attendance at the coronation keeps him too occupied. It's fine if he gets in there first, 'tain't a race). But how did you like Emma, @Mithical? Inquiring minds wanna know. I loved the novel, but I know people who don't like it all that much.
haven't finished it yet, about halfway through
oh.
I hope you're enjoying it, then! it's a great read.
I dunno why I'm so fond of three Victorian novels, all by girls. Emma, Middlemarch, and Wuthering Heights. It's been some time since I re-read that last one (it is not a fun read) so maybe my opinion of it will change on my next re-read. Certainly I like Jane Eyre a good bit less than I used to.
I mean Middlemarch really is in a class by itself
only one not very interesting q (no answers) about it on the site, alas.
06:27
of the other two qs re: George E., one has a decent if somewhat underbaked answer, and the other has been answered by Gareth, irreproachable and illuminating as always. There are some great answerers here (Rand, Tsundoku, Matt, Spagirl, Clara, the list goes on) but Gareth is the only one who nearly always makes me think, "I wish I'd written that."
06:39
The rest, I think, "wow, great answer" and move on with my life.
@GarethRees I'm not entirely sure I agree. I think this is receipt v 2, sense 3:
To mark (an amount or bill) as having been paid. Also *figurative*
The example cited for the figurative use:
She receipted Portia's remark with an upward jerk of the chin.
From Elizabeth Bowen's Death of Heart (1938)
Anyhoo, here's how I think that sense pertains. We look the past in the face. Transport or Delight acknowledges our look. That is to say, our having looked the past in the face is acknowledged or marked by Transport or Delight.
So yeah, "us" is still the direct object, but the verb is not receive sense 4 or receipt 1 sense 3 in my reading. But we're splitting hairs here.
@GarethRees could you vtc then? I think so far the q has gotten downvotes but only two close votes
07:07
@Bookworm I'm trying to remember a quotation now, along the lines of "All progress in the world is due to blokes trying to impress their birds".
07:33
@verbose It's one vote away from being closed now. I do agree with Gareth that this is worth a meta post, to have a clear justification for closing such a question.
@Randal'Thor yep I agree with that idea too
@ClaraDiazSanchez Congrats on 5k reputation (the highest rep-based privilege level here) and entering the top 20 users :-)
@Randal'Thor @ClaraDiazSanchez 🎉
hope your flight was good, Randolph. Literally fleeing town ahead of the coronation, eh
or maybe i should write my own answer elaborating that instead of asking OA to! someday — verbose 1 hour ago
what
07:37
Looking forward to a verbose answer there :-) The existing answer does make some good points but I never accepted it, feeling like there might be more to be said.
m yeah well it's been a few since I read marner, will've to review etc.
@verbose Yep, I got an exit-row seat, so no view but lots of legroom, made it more comfortable to kip on the plane.
People at airport check-in desks often give me exit-row seats when they see my height.
I've never managed to sleep on a plane. Even when I flew from Frisco to Auckland, which was like 18+ hours in the air, I couldn't manage more than a very light doze.
@Randal'Thor Do tell.
@verbose Same here, I read it for English Lit GCSE, but I think it's my only exposure to George Eliot.
oh man you should read Middlemarch. Everyone should. I'm also fond of Daniel Deronda and The Mill on the Floss
2
07:41
@verbose Like Mr Wednesday in American Gods, I'm blessed with the talent of being able to sleep anywhere, anytime.
Did you find any aucks in Auckland? Or only orcs?
@verbose I have added my close vote to the ChatGPT identification question
@Randal'Thor That's fantastic. I can sleep in any comfortable position at any time (except when I have a cough), but I can't get comfortable on a plane. Or when I have a cough, as I do at the moment. It's not COVID (I'm testing regularly) but it's a reaction to a COVID exposure. That is to say, my immune system killed the virus before it took hold, but the immune system effects linger.
@GarethRees thanks, you're a champ
@Randal'Thor Mostly Geordies. Hilarity ensued. I asked if there was an equivalent to the Oyster card, and my very very Newcastle on Tyne host said, "Yes, you want an op card."
I said, Op?
he reiterated, Op, nodding sagely.
I said, "oh pee, op?!"
He looked at me like I was an idiot and spelt (or spelled) it out:
HAITCH oh pee, op.
@verbose That's one way to read it, but for me it's not strong enough in context: looking back at the past can provoke vivid emotions, so I want a sense of "receipt" that's stronger than "acknowledge", so that the first stanza is more similar in intensity to the second, where the Past is an artillery gunner
I loved Craig, but honestly, I had the hardest time understanding his accent.
@GarethRees well I know better than to argue with you
That said, Auckland has to be one of the most beautiful cities in the world. NZ pampers the eye. Everything is so gorgeous, it's hard to know where to focus your rapt attention.
I've not been to Auckland, only Dunedin and around.
07:51
It's also endearing. Like, Kiwis actually think of Auckland (pop. 100,000) as a major metropolis. One enthusiastic denizen said to me, in tones of wonder, "We even have a gay bar!"
@Randal'Thor ah. I stayed on the North Island. Someday.
@verbose Hm? Auckland pop 1.5 million according to a quick Google search, and ISTR it has like 1/3 of the NZ population.
@Randal'Thor I know it's not that tiny. I was joking. But I grew up in Bombay (pop. some 20+ million) and live in the San Francisco Bay Area.
@verbose I concur -- Middlemarch is one of the great Engish novels. But since its main theme is marriage, it might mean more to readers with experience of matrimony.
@verbose Ah OK.
So my idea of what counts as a large city and a gay-friendly place are somewhat out of sync with the experience of most kiwis, I guess
@GarethRees oh interesting. I read it for my masters, back when pigs spoke rhyme and monkeys chewed tobacco. I was in my early 20s. I didn't get married till my late 30s, but I fell promiscuously in love with Middlemarch at first read.
07:55
@verbose That reminds me of another (true) story about a guy who went asking around for a gay bar in Damascus, probably around 1980. Not the best idea.
He was young and foolish enough to go around Damascus openly asking "where's the gay bar", but quick-witted enough to respond, when the police questioned him, "oh, I heard that's where the other European people hang out" rather than outing himself as gay.
@Randal'Thor Gracias! So I have no more worlds to conquer... :(
I was predisposed to liking Eliot though. I mean, I read The Mill on the Floss for my bachelor's, and didn't like it at first read—I thought the plot was preposterous. Which it is. But since it was a set text, I was forced to re-read it, and pretty soon into the second reading, I realized, "you know what, this writer is really, really brainy and I should benefit from that instead of resenting having to read this book again." And I ended up liking it a lot.
Then someone I trust talked up Middlemarch to me, so when I had to read it, I absolutely was floored by its intelligence, its marvelous construction, and its compassion.
Its insight.
And @GarethRees there are so few happy marriages in that book. The Garths (Caleb and ... oh dear, I've forgotten her name). James Brooke and Celia. The Cadwalladers. All pretty much on the periphery. The central marriages are miserable.
@Randal'Thor yikes. That couldn't have ended well. Damascus is the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world, yes? Or is that Aleppo?
oh well, good night, sweet ladies, I'm off to bed.
@ClaraDiazSanchez 10k rep? Top 15 users?
@verbose I think there's a few cities that claim that honour, but Damascus is one of them at least.
Goodnight!
 
2 hours later…
09:56
1
Q: Of what people, of what liquor-agency does Thoreau speak in this paragraph from "The Last Days of John Brown"?

John SmithIn The Last Days of John Brown, Thoreau writes: All through the excitement occasioned by his remarkable attempt and subsequent behavior, the Massachusetts Legislature, not taking any steps for the defence of her citizens who were likely to be carried to Virginia as witnesses and exposed to the v...

 
3 hours later…
12:56
2
Q: What aspects of quantum mechanics occur in "Treacle Walker"?

Clara Diaz SanchezTreacle Walker is a (very) short novel by Alan Garner, the author of many classic works of children's fantasy. Published in 2021, it reached the shortlist of the 2022 Booker Prize. The Booker Prizes website describes the book as: Joe Coppock, a boy with poor vision, lives alone. His inner world ...

 
8 hours later…
20:30
@MattThrower Thanks for posting an answer to my "quantum mechanics" question. There are some parts that I really like, and I think shed light on Garner's intention. There are some other parts I'm less happy about - I guess a PhD in physics makes me more fussy than most about terminology.
20:49
@Bookworm HNQ. But how does treacle walker keep his feet from sticking fast, is what I wanna know.
21:02
@GarethRees I'm unable to parse the following parenthesis in this answer:
 since we only have eighteen or nineteen of Euripides’ ninety-plus plays and elevent of Aristophanes’ forty
I looked up elevent in the OED but got nothing
oh wait is that a typo for eleven
yes it is, nvm
@ClaraDiazSanchez I can imagine. I'd love to know how it could be improved. My background is biology & chemistry so my knowledge of quantum effects is limited to their results (i.e. the shape of orbitals) rather than any of the theory plus some pop science reading. It's a subject I'm very curious about so would appreciate hearing your suggestions.
21:27
@verbose There's also a "Howwever" in that answer. I feel as though I make a lot of typos but maybe it's just that I write a lot of words
@GarethRees I guess my eye glazed over that one. I wish I'd spotted it, as I corrected the "elevent" typo (because I found it genuinely confusing) and it'd've been nice to catch the other one too. One consolation is that "howwever" is readily recognizable as a typo whereas "elevent" at least to me seemed plausible as a technical term
21:41
@MattThrower biology and chemistry? I thought you were a computer scientist who wrote gaming blogs and read Literature™ for fun. What are you, some kind of polymath or sth?
22:29
@verbose at 18 I had a choice between English literature or biochemistry at university and chose the latter. Went on to do a doctorate in biology but ballsed it up, then taught myself to program as a way to get into an IT career. It was the middle.lf the dotcom boom & places were so desperate for programmers that lack of qualifications wasn't an issue.
I picked up the journalism almost by chance after blogging about my hobby for years just for fun. Q Now I'm back at the point where I want to can my day job and do the literature degree after all :)
So I think to be classed as a polymath you actually have to be good in all the fields you study. I'm just a dabbler :)
23:19
Turning to IT after ballsing up a doctorate seems painfully familiar to me, I wonder why.
I miss @Tsundoku. Would that he return soon! Come back, Strobby, all is forgiven
23:45
@MattThrower I'd prefer to say "classical physics" rather than "normal physics", and I'd avoid mentioning superluminal communication in the context of entanglement (even though you cleverly tiptoed around actually saying whether they were connected).
In fact the examples are really examples of superposition rather than entanglement as such, which is indeed a genuinely quantum effect anyway. The box that was full of jugs and plates, and then collapsed down to one jug when Joe made a measurement is a nice example.
I actually wonder whether Garner really intended to reference QM though. Rovelli's quote is from his book on pondering the nature of time, and there is a lot of classical physics there (entropy, relativity, and so on), apart from QM.

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