
Idaho 1909
Mrs. Shotbang with her four children she delivered herself. Husband broke his foot early this spring. About time baby was to be born they ran short of coal and bed clothing, Mrs. Shotbang had to take care of the newly-born baby and the rest of the family, cutting fence posts for fuel. The family almost froze; no mattresses on the beds this past winter, only quilts over the hard springs.Russel Lee
Un missionnaire du moyen age raconte qu'il avait trouvele point ou le ciel et la Terre se touchentIllus. in: L'atmosphere; meteorologie populaire / Camille Flammarion.
nimptopsical [nim-tops-ih-kul]Also:
drunk. This word is one of more than 200 synonyms for ‘drunk’ compiled by Benjamin Franklin; some of the others included cherry-merry, lappy, and “been too free with Sir Richard.”
myomancy [mye-uh-man-see]: divination by the movements of mice. Modern scientists probably study the movements of mice as much or more than the ancient myomancers did, and for ends that are not dissimilarErin's Weird and Wonderful Word of the Day
snollygoster [snah-lee-gahs-ter]: a dishonest politician
spanghew [spang-hyoo]; to cause a frog or toad to fly into the air.
chamade [shuh-mahd]: a signal inviting someone to a parley (usually a drumbeat or a trumpet sounding). Now perhaps useful to those who carry beepers. "Sorry, have to go, it's a chamade."
Vofuhreffekt [vor-fyur-ef-ket]: a German word, literally 'presentation effect' which describes a problem, usually with a computer, that doesn't happen when other people try to replicate it (such as, say, the Help Desk guy you called for).
among those present are, in the front row from left: Elsie May Bell, Annie Sullivan, Helen Keller, and Marion "Daisy" Bell-
He often slept on the floor
outside Lincoln's bedroom door,
wrapped in a blanket and armed to the teeth.
Betty Powers, ex-slave, Ft. Worth Texas September 14, 1937previous citation here, here
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Patsy Moses, ex-slave, Waco Texas November 15, 1937
also here
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Ellen Polk, ex-slave
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Virginia Newman, ex-slave, Beaumont Texas June 11, 1937
flesh-eating sheep sailed over the fence between dreams and the day
Unveiled Mysteries describes an encounter with St. Germain (see also The Comte de Saint Germain), here described as an Ascended Master, virtually a God, and able to manipulate the fabric of reality. Ballard describes a series of astral trips in time and space with St. Germain, to lost civilizations in South America and the Sahara, as well as well-stocked bunkers of the ancients in the Grand Tetons, Yellowstone, and Mount Shasta. Ballard and St. Germain revisit past lives as citizens of Atlantis and Mu, and they turn out to be relatives. A final chapter mentions encounters with entities from Venus, a theme of later UFO cargo-cults of the 1950s. Connoisseurs of this genre will appreciate Unveiled Mysteries. The book is written in a breathless style with a more than liberal amount of em-dashes, Inappropriate Capitalization, and melodramatic plot-points which resemble golden-age pulp sci-fi. There are incoherent, surreal rants which would not be out of place at a Church of the Subgenius rally.
The book has obvious similarities with A Dweller on Two Planets, including passages which were probably lifted directly. And much of Ballard's metaphysics, history of lost continents, 'Great White Brotherhood' spiel, and so on, is derivative from Theosophy. However, according to some of Ballard's ex-disciples, plagiarism was probably the least of his spiritual shenanigans.
John Dalrymple, 1st Earl of Stair who, as Scottish Secretary, gave the orders for the infamous Massacre of Glencoe in 1692 in which the Campbells killed 38 members of the Macdonald of Glencoe clan as they slept.embonpoint
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Glencoe
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Mischief, magic. Monet's hand enters the paint and the painting.
Claude Monet Painting by the Edge of a Wood, 1885
John Singer Sargent
Summers in the Country: Giverny
Americans in Paris
Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Domesticated 3most of the images would seem to be photoshopped, which she isn't real explicit about in her artist's statement.
Amy Stein
seems to fit with this at baristainterior of William Reifschneider's "balloon shop"
Streator, Illinois ca. 1907-1920
"During an earlier project when I was making cuddly toys from pigskin, I came up with the idea to make something out of my own skin. At first it scared me, but I could not get it out of my head and eventually I had to do it."Joanneke Meester
The miser's feastJames Gillray
...a miser seated at a table eating a meager meal; Death stands off to the right as an emaciated and naked manservant holding in his right hand a tray with a bone on it and behind him, in his left hand, the dart of death; Famine, a withered hag, naked to the waist which funnels to a point, wearing a large hat and fashionable skirt, stands at the open door through which enter a fashionably dressed prostitute and another woman carrying stolen articles to leave with the miser. Padlocked chests and cupboards, moneybags, and plastered-over windows (for tax savings purposes) attest to the avarice and miserliness of the occupant
SIN, DEATH, and the DEVIL. vide Milton.-
FRENCH LIBERTY/BRITISH SLAVERY
Scientific researches! - New discoveries in pneumaticks!
It was in the year 1885 that a remarkably singular occurrence in my history happened in St. Louis. In the church at San Francisco the pastor, Henry A. Sawtelle, J. S. Ring, a deacon, and I were very close friends. Mr. Ring had passed on some years previous at San Francisco, and we had an etching taken from a photograph and enlarged to almost life size. This likeness hung over the sitting-room sofa in our chamber, and on my return from the office about six o'clock, as I was resting on the sofa directly under this likeness of Mr. Ring, I went off into a partial doze, when I heard a voice plainly and distinctly utter these words: “We three will soon meet again.” The voice roused me and I immediately told Mrs. Bemis what I had heard, with the remark, “Something is going to happen.” The next day we were apprised of the death of Henry A. Sawtelle, and the hour of his passing away was identical with the time that the voice came to me. Since then long years have elapsed, but no reunion has occurred of the three. The memory of that voice, which I did not immediately recognize, has never been forgotten. The day will come when this meeting will take place, be it a longer or a shorter time before fulfillment. I do not attempt to explain this phenomenon but only mention it as a fact.CHAPTER VI
Tim Sullivan shoe beneficiaries
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Classroom at the Indian Industrial School, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, showing teacher observing students reading
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Walt Whitman
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William Zeckendorf sits behind desk in his "cylindrical office" in New York City 1952
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Man from Planet X
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Elvis Presley, taking oath in court, following altercation with Ed Hopper and Aubrey Brown (on left)
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White House kitchen between ca. 1891-93
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Sanitation Department workers, Sal Tusa and John Ceffalia, weeding growth of marijuana in a lot on Cozine Avenue near Miller Avenue [Brooklyn] Jul 31, 1958
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Charles Atlas, half-length portrait, shirtless, facing front
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Two Hunter College students covering their faces with books, at police headquarters after they were picked up on narcotics 1968
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Dolce far nientes in parlor
Mary True reclining and reading
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Eliza Grace Symonds Bell seated on velocipede in the garden at Milton Cottage, near Edinburgh, Scotland ca. 1859
...the qualification of a voter is, having enjoyed a woman in the open air within that district: the candidates are commonly fellows of low humour, who dress themselves up in a ridiculous manner. As this brings a prodigious concourse of people to Wandsworth, the publicans of that place jointly contribute to the expence, which is sometimes considerable.garret election
Man, woman and dog with Royal Military College in background
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Portrait of a woman, likely Violet
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A woman sitting
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A woman and a small boy sitting on a fence
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Woman seated with kittens
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Portrait of woman wearing a fur-trimmed coat and fur hat
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Woman tying her apron
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Woman standing in field of dandelions gone to seed
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Unidentified woman standing in orchard
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Woman standing on shore beside a boat
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A woman outside a building
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Woman posed by a creek with a sailboat in the background
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Portrait of a woman
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A man in a rowboat talks to a woman on the rocky shore
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A woman standing in the woods
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Woman driving a horse-drawn binder
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Soldier talking with a woman
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Woman receiving keys to new Chevrolet Toronto, April 1947
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Woman talking with police officer in Toronto
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Woman cleaning her guns
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A woman and a man conducting a CBC broadcast from a car
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Portrait of a woman and spinning wheel
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Woman registering for a program
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Three men and a woman, possibly immigrants arriving at Quebec, at Gross Pointe
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A woman standing in the crowd at a meeting of the Ontario Labour/Communist group March 27, 1948
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Robertson Davies and a woman with the Dominion Drama Festival Plaque
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Unidentified woman lighting a soldier's cigarette
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Woman on a bicycle at the Canadian Cycling Manufacturer's (C.C.M.) Bicycle Museum
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Street scene showing front of H. Dalton's Shaving Parlor and a residence with a man and woman standing outside Giants then too
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Young woman seated at a piano in a parlour
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Miss Green and another woman seated near a piano, Oak Leaf
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Miss Green and another woman, Oak Leaf
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Portrait of a woman and her dog
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Back view of a Native woman in traditional dress
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Portrait of an Aboriginal woman with her baby on her back
-A night-time bonfire at the Winnipeg Snowshoe Club
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Unidentified woman smoking a cigar
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Young woman smoking bear meat Deer Lake, Ontario June, 1956
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Native woman at Sandy Lake
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Janet Woppumnaweskum, Metis woman, Rupert's House
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Portrait of a woman and a man. The man is seated at a harpsichord. One of them is the Old Stafford music teacher
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Philip Mathew plays the fiddle at Fort Severn
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Woman fishing
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Premier Leslie Frost in native head-dress with his wife and a native woman
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Woman at Fort Severn mending a gill net
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Man playing fiddle for his family outside a hut, Moosonee
-Man and woman in tobacco field
A turn-of-the-century confidence man named George C. Parker actually sold the Brooklyn Bridge more than once. According to Carl Sifakis, who tells his story in "Hoaxes and Scams: A Compendium of Deceptions, Ruses and Swindles," Parker - who was also adept at selling the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Statue of Liberty and Grant's Tomb - produced impressive forged documents to prove that he was the bridge's owner, then convinced his buyers that they could make a fortune by controlling access to the roadway. "Several times," Mr. Sifakis wrote, "Parker's victims had to be rousted from the bridge by police when they tried to erect toll barriers."For You, Half Price
Johnson was determined to become world champion. He took a major step toward the title by knocking out former champion Bob Fitzsimmons in the 2nd round on July 17, 1907. Tommy Burns, who had won the championship the previous year, went on a tour of England and France. Johnson followed him.Johnson was, unbeknownst to me til just now, the subject of a film by Ken Burns - Unforgivable Blackness.
He finally caught Burns in Australia, where a promoter named Hugh D. "Huge Deal" McIntosh put up a guarantee of $30,000 for a Burns-Johnson match. Burns accepted. McIntosh refereed the fight, which took place on December 26, 1908--"Boxing Day" in Australia.
The 6-foot-1, 200-pound Johnson had a large advantage in reach over Burns, who was the shortest heavyweight champion ever at only 5-foot-7. Johnson gave Burns a thorough battering before a police inspector stepped into the ring to stop the fight in the 14th round.
When Johnson returned to the United States, a search began for a "Great White Hope" who could win the title from him. Former champion James J. Jeffries was finally persuaded to come out of retirement, but he was out of shape and Johnson toyed with him before knocking him out in the 15th round on July 4, 1910, at Carson City, NV. The victory sparked race riots across the country, in which nineteen people were killed.
Johnson's second wife committed suicide in September of 1912 and he married a young white woman three months later. That was the last straw for white authorities. Johnson was sentenced to a year in prison for violating the Mann Act, which forbade transportation of a woman across state lines for immoral purposes.
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Jack Johnson went to get on board-
the cap'n said "Jack,
we don't haul no coal"
fare thee Titanic, fare thee well
say midnight on the sea
and the band playin' "Nearer My God To Thee"
fare thee Titanic, fare thee well
Spread lifeboats all around
save the women and the children
let the men go down
fare thee Titanic, fare thee well.
I saw her from the cornerThe essence of diplomacy, even in the primeval south of Berry's mid 20th c. Memphis Tennessee, has always been discretion - the oblique gesture, the calmly uttered phrase, reserve.
when she turned and doubled back
An started walkin' toward a
coffee-colored cadillac
I's pushin' through the crowd
tryna get to where she's at
Cam-paign shoutin'
like a southern diplomat
Troglodytes or cave dwellers of extreme southern Tunisia. The interior of the Sheik's cave at Matmata showing his bed, jars for olive oil, the couscous covers and his lamp and gun.was a lot like what it was like inside these
Bird's-eye view of Medenine photographed from minaret of mosque showing the odd cave-like dwellings of the inhabitants which serve two purposes; first as homes; secondly as safe deposit vaults for their goods and chattels during the months that these semi-nomadic people roam in the Arab country between here and the MediterraneanF. Soler, photographer
1923-
- She helps to establish the European branch of the American Red Cross correspondence exchange between the children of Europe and The United States
1924
- She has her first photo essay printed, on how chic French dogs dress
THEY MUST GO!THEY WILL GO! THEY DO GO!
THE BALL. THE HOP. THE DANCE. IT IS ALL THE SAME.
THE WRAPS ARE THERE
They will be answered then
Men will not dance by themselves
Samples of Fruit Found on the Tree of Dancing:
VERDICT.
“It used to be a piece of good advice to all young writers to avoid alliteration; and the advice was sound, in so far as it prevented daubing. None the less for that, was it abominable nonsense, and the mere raving of those blindest of the blind who will not see. The beauty of the contents of a phrase, or of a sentence, depends implicitly upon alliteration and upon assonance.”Robert Louis Stevenson
She was in the restaurant I was working at and she ordered toast! (i guess she was on a diet) she had a cigerette in her hand and as i walked away she stuck the toast in her pants!
Toward the end of 1965, Brand and Ramón Sender Barayón, a composer of electronic music and a friend of USCO's Michael Callahan, thought up the Trips Festival as a way to bring the burgeoning scene together. Together, they found promoter Bill Graham (then a member of the San Francisco Mime Troupe) and hired the Longshoreman's Hall in San Francisco for three nights: Friday, January 21, through Sunday, January 23. By this time, the federal government had outlawed LSD, so posters promised an Acid Test—a full-blown psychedelic experience—without LSD.Turner writes "According to Tom Wolfe, it was also the start of the Haight-Ashbury era", deflecting the onus for having said that, but getting the line out there anyway.
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How NOT to wear your hair when you work in a war plant.
Naming the StarsPoetry 180...and in the mistJoyce Sutphen
of that later telling the bell tolling
now will be a symbol, or, at least,
a sign of something long since...
...far from their homeland in the Wallowa Valley...Chief Joseph's surrender to General Nelson A Miles October 5, 1877
The Deceased Wife’s Sister Act may seem no more than a legislative curiosity today. Yet while it remained on the statute books it was the focus of intense, even obsessive, interest as Parliament continually renewed the well-rehearsed arguments for and against its repeal. By the end of the nineteenth century its notoriety made it an easy butt for satire: “And he shall prick that annual blister,/ Marriage with deceased wife’s sister”, promises the Queen of the Fairies in Gilbert and Sullivan’s Iolanthe. Like Monty Python’s dead parrot, the Deceased Wife’s Sister Act had become humorous through incessant repetition. Yet although it was increasingly ridiculed the Act’s strange hold over the Victorian imagination cannot be denied.Sarah Brown, University of Cambridge
The Deceased Wife's Sister's Marriage Act 1907 was a statute passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom.wikipedia
Previously, it was forbidden for a man to marry the sister of his deceased wife. This prohibition derived from a doctrine of Canon Law whereby those who were connected by marriage were regarded as being related to each other in a way which made marriage between them improper. This doctrine was reflected in the Table of kindred and affinity in the British Book of Common Prayer. Prohibition of marriage between certain degrees of kindred outlawed what is known as incest; prohibition between degrees of relationship by marriage (affinity) as opposed to blood (consanguinity) seems to have reflected an analogous taboo. At least one novel, Felicia Skene's The Inheritance of Evil; Or, the Consequences of Marrying a Deceased Wife's Sister addressed the topic in polemic fictional form.
It was discretely added. What the mayor of Warsaw and his cohort altered there is substantially more important to the city than a poster by a local artist.Desperately Longing for Something OriginalRafal Oblinski
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A white scarf was discretely added over an artist's depiction of a mermaid with an exposed breast on a poster advertising the 2006 Miss World contest, after officials in Warsaw's conservative administration deemed it too suggestive, the artist's agent said Wednesday.
CNews
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The people of Warsaw are proud of their symbol, which appears in many art forms, as the one on the left from the weekly magazine "Tygodnik Ilustrowany" in 1900. But however presented, the mermaid is always shown with sword in hand to indicate the fighting spirit of the citizens. Indeed, the people of Warsaw rebelled several times in the 19th.century against the Russian occupiers of the time.The Little Upriser
In recent years, this spirit manifested itself in the continual struggle against the Nazis during World War II, culminating in the disastrous uprising of 1944 as a result of which the city was almost totally destroyed, and tens of thousands died. The maritime theme was also evident in the stylized PW symbol in the shape of an anchor that was scratched, painted, chalked on buildings, vehicles, signposts, throughout the five years of occupation.
The PW stood for Polska Walczaca, "Poland Fights."
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Among the lesser-known legends is the one written by Maria Krüger entitled "The Noble Griffin and the Beautiful Mermaid." According to the legend, the security of the medieval city of Warsaw was guarded by a manly and noble Griffin. When he once took a journey with the river boatmen to the Baltic, he met a beautiful Mermaid. They fell deeply in love and the Mermaid swam with them back to Warsaw. From then on, they both watched over the townspeople.
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Oracle at DelphiTai-Shan Schierenberg
Road to Damascus
"Billions of dollars are spent on advertising in this country. Advertising companies hire the very brightest, wittiest young people to write for them. Not one single sentence of it is worth repeating. Why? Because it wasn't meant. It was all written, not because the writer felt something and then said it (if you feel a thing the more simply you say it the better, the more effectively), but because he tried to impress and inveigle people, convince them something is very fine about which he himself does not really care a button."Brenda Ueland, If You Want to Write
"...a device you carry that, when switched on, tells a satellite exactly where you are every few seconds.""A world of laptops and jet planes" as against "A world of cars and cell phones"
Momus
Wired
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Click Opera
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"In “Absolute Friends” (2003), the sore spot became le Carré’s fury at the American and British intervention in Iraq."That's a resound from Updike's cite of Lowell's poem “July in Washington” - the stiff spokes of this wheel / touch the sore spots of the earth - which technically would make Iraq the sore spot, not Le Carre's anger at American and British intervention.