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The innocent weather that clouds the sun at the start of the poem has turned into moral stain, in which the sun itself (and by implication the friend) plays its part. [19] Only when the end of the line is reached does it become apparent that the poet's comparison of his friend as 'my sun' has become a pun and slur, describing him "as 'a son of ...
The Solar Anus (French: L'anus solaire) is a short surrealist text by the French writer Georges Bataille, written in 1927 and published with drawings by André Masson in 1931.
Story of the Eye (French: Histoire de l'œil) is a 1928 novella written by Georges Bataille as Lord Auch (literally, Lord "to the shithouse" — "auch" being short for "aux chiottes", slang for telling somebody off by sending him to the toilet), that details the increasingly bizarre sexual perversions of a pair of teenage lovers, including an early depiction of omorashi fetishism in Western ...
George, however, sides with Warwick and marries Isabel believing Warwick will put him on the throne. However, when it is clear that Warwick can't make George king, Warwick marries Anne to the Lancastrian heir and pledges support to Henry VI of England. Richard develops into a brave and able commander, and he helps Edward take back his throne.
The Eclipse has been remarked upon for its overt sexual symbolism. [2] [3] Christine Cornea posits that the film's primary theme, the clash of scientific logic with sexual desire, was also evident in Méliès' earlier films A Trip to the Moon and The Impossible Voyage, and would become a prominent in many subsequent science-fiction films.
The story begins with the suffering of a boy oracle, or medium, about to be sealed alive into a pyramid chamber for three days so that he may "astral-travel" to the realms of the gods and plead for the waters of the Nile to rise, bringing life-giving silt to the farmlands.
George Marshall: Screenplay by: Horace McCoy: Based on: Valley of the Sun 1940 serial story in The Saturday Evening Post by Clarence Budington Kelland: Starring: Lucille Ball: Cinematography: Harry J. Wild: Edited by: Desmond Marquette: Music by: Paul Sawtell
The Birth and Death of the Sun is a popular science book by theoretical physicist and cosmologist George Gamow, first published in 1940, exploring atomic chemistry, stellar evolution, and cosmology. [1] The book is illustrated by Gamow. It was revised in 1952.