-
24 votes
-
Solar’s future is insanely cheap
11 votes -
Analysis of treatment with hydroxychloroquine for 368 patients in US veterans hospitals shows more deaths, no benefit
24 votes -
BoJack Horseman and Henrik Ibsen: Prestige television’s greatest trick
8 votes -
Digital Foundry Retro: Final Fantasy 7 - A JRPG epic analysed across the generations
3 votes -
New analysis recommends less reliance on ventilators to treat coronavirus patients
5 votes -
Anatomy of a DOOM Eternal fight
3 votes -
A breakdown and comparison of the animation in the original opening cutscene of Final Fantasy VII and the new version in the remake
5 votes -
Metal Gear Solid 2 retrospective: Be careful what you wish for
5 votes -
"Invisible" sound design in Breath of the Wild
9 votes -
Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Tech analysis and breakdown
6 votes -
Greenland's melting ice raised global sea level by 2.2mm in two months – analysis of satellite data reveals astounding loss of 600bn tons of ice last summer
7 votes -
Why Sweden's negative interest rate experiment is a failure
5 votes -
How Bernie Sanders answers a question
23 votes -
Casino Royale — How action reveals character
4 votes -
Sergei Eisinstein: Disney Fan
3 votes -
Director Rian Johnson breaks down a scene from Knives Out
7 votes -
The Lighthouse – A short visual analysis
9 votes -
"The Fae in the Bottle" by the Reverend William Holland (as constructed by GPT-2 Simple, additionally finetuned by the works of the Brothers Grimm)
Special thanks to Max Woolf and Project Gutenburg for resources, and the Brothers Grimm for such inspiring material. The Fae in a Bottle By Reverend William Howland "Dear brother, thou seest the...
Special thanks to Max Woolf and Project Gutenburg for resources, and the Brothers Grimm for such inspiring material.
The Fae in a Bottle
By Reverend William Howland
"Dear brother, thou seest the water
crystallizing, go and show it to the merchant. I will make him a
little bottle of water of the same kind; put it in a corner, and
not open it too quickly, until the reflection shall let him see it."The merchant, who was standing behind the glass, said, "If that is
the case, I do not see why the name of the fountain should be
changed." "Why not?" asked the merchant. "Because my name is
Dummling." "Dummling, what is that?" "Is a rare and wonderful
name; I do not know how it is to have it." "If you do not see why
the name of the fountain should be changed," said the merchant, "I
will pay you three thalers." "There! now I see what is in my head;
I will pay you thaler, but you must wait until I come back."Then he disappeared behind the glass. The poor man was forced to go back
on his begging; he had no more money but the three thalers which the
merchant had given him. He had long ago left the village, and wandered far
off, and when he came back, his brother had forgotten him, and thought,
"Why should I travel farther? I have not seen my brother." Then he came to
the town where his brother was again living. "Dear brother," said the
brother, "how are you? How are you getting on?" "Oh," said the brother,
"not well.""Then just come and eat thy bread."
"That would be very good," said the brother, and went away.
He walked a long time, and came to a great forest. Then he said to his brother,
"Go and bring me with you to-morrow morning." "Nay," said the brother, "I
can't go. I have heard so many lies and stolen things from my brother,
and they have not served me very well, I see very well that they will
do me no harm." Then he went to the gallows, and told them that there
was a poor shivering, peering there from the window. "If you let me in,"
said the brother, "I will do you a favour. In grey hairs you can see
a piece of a horse's heart." So he went into the forest, and saw there
how a greyhound which was his neighbour, was dead. Then he was sad,
and made himself known to the brother. "Dear brother," said he,
"how are you getting on? What hast thou been saying there about
a piece of horse's heart?" "Ah," said the brother, "how can I say that
on the gallows, when I have not a drop of blood on me!" Then he gave him
the greyhound's heart, and had it put in his own. The brother felt for a
while in his pocket, and then he said, "I have a small bottle of wine,
and if thou art inclined to drink, thou shalt find the courage
to hold thy tongue." "To what use is the bottle put," said the
brother, "but to some end I should like to have a sip?" "To win the
Rosen Cup," said the brother with great joy. "To me that is enough,"
said the hare. "To thee alone, it is the most valuable thing that
the world possesses," said the brother. "To me, it is my most valuable
thing." "To me, it is my most valuable possession," said the hare. Then
he turned himself around and went to the gallows. "To-day it was
announced that the very gallows were to be, and to-morrow they were
to be," said the brother. "I do not know to which I should place myself,"
he replied, "but, to-morrow it will be to-morrow, and to-morrow
I will go." Then he was led to the gallows, and was once more there
in the place where he had formerly been. He again said to the greyhound,
"I wish you were still standing there." "To-day it was announced that the
very gallows were to be, and to-morrow they were to be." "I do not know to which I
should place myself," said the hare. "To-morrow it will be to-morrow, and
to-morrow I will go." Then he turned himself round and went to the gallows,
and was once more there in the place where he had formerly been."To-day it was announced that the very gall
(E/N: The story stops here abruptly, as the author ran out available memory. I wouldn't like to enforce my interpretation of the story upon it, so I'm leaving it as written.)
6 votes -
The Prince of Egypt - A forgotten masterpiece
9 votes -
Tony Adams analyzed audio spectrograms corresponding to more than 8,200 pitches from the Astros
7 votes -
Misteramazing doesn't understand music theory
7 votes -
Here’s what the oft-cited R0 number tells us about the new outbreak—and what it doesn’t
3 votes -
2020 Vision: The Witcher 2 - RED engine analysis and performance on modern PC hardware
4 votes -
How Star Wars was saved in the edit
12 votes -
AirPods Pro Bluetooth audio latency analysis
7 votes -
A detailed walkthrough of the process to determine the location shown in photographs released by Europol to help investigate child sexual abuse
14 votes -
Technical analysis of the trailer for Senua's Saga: Hellblade 2 on the next-gen Xbox
3 votes -
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare claims to walk an impossible line—it’s a story about torture and imperialism, and yet the writers say it's "not political," and "doesn't have a perspective."
13 votes -
Elizabeth
5 votes -
What key is Sweet Home Alabama in?
6 votes -
The Last of Us — The art of video game storytelling
5 votes -
Why Hayao Miyazaki's animation feels alive
9 votes -
Google Stadia - 4K image quality analysis and latency tests
11 votes -
Pokémon Sword/Shield: Graphics analysis and comparison
10 votes -
The real fake cameras of Toy Story 4
8 votes -
The most gender-switched names in US history
9 votes -
Scientist who discredited meat guidelines didn’t report past food industry ties
8 votes -
World of Warcraft Classic and what we left behind
7 votes -
Darkwood
4 votes -
In the spread offense era, can Wisconsin rush its way to the playoff?
7 votes -
The curious case of a weapon in Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory that sounded so good players thought it was overpowered
11 votes -
Why is there cardboard in Dracula?
5 votes -
In praise of Hook, a flawed classic
5 votes -
What do you think the first sentence of this poem means? | Fiddler Jones by Edgar Lee Masters
THE EARTH keeps some vibration going There in your heart, and that is you. And if the people find you can fiddle, Why, fiddle you must, for all your life. What do you see, a harvest of clover? Or...
THE EARTH keeps some vibration going
There in your heart, and that is you.
And if the people find you can fiddle,
Why, fiddle you must, for all your life.
What do you see, a harvest of clover?
Or a meadow to walk through to the river?
The wind’s in the corn; you rub your hands
For beeves hereafter ready for market;
Or else you hear the rustle of skirts
Like the girls when dancing at Little Grove.
To Cooney Potter a pillar of dust
Or whirling leaves meant ruinous drouth;
They looked to me like Red-Head Sammy
Stepping it off, to “Toor-a-Loor.”
How could I till my forty acres
Not to speak of getting more,
With a medley of horns, bassoons and piccolos
Stirred in my brain by crows and robins
And the creak of a wind-mill—only these?
And I never started to plow in my life
That some one did not stop in the road
And take me away to a dance or picnic.
I ended up with forty acres;
I ended up with a broken fiddle—
And a broken laugh, and a thousand memories,
And not a single regret.I've always loved this poem. To me, it's about a man, loved by many, that recognizes his responsibilities, but can't help but forgo them to go and have fun with friends and loved ones (in short, anyways). The first line, however, has always intrigued me, and I can never land on a meaning for it. I think it's basically saying that in your heart is your true character (your soul), and that will never change. Or maybe it's saying that everyone has that "vibration" in their heart that yearns for enjoyment. What do you think?
4 votes -
We measured pop music’s falsetto obsession
7 votes -
Agora
6 votes -
There is no such thing as acting alone: Behind the 'lone-actor strategy.'
10 votes -
Josh Hader’s fastball is baseball’s most mysterious pitch
12 votes -
Glory to Papers Please: A Critical Analysis
6 votes