i think all good readers do that. so long as it doesn't lead into any other technology-traps, like endlessly wikipedia-ing stuff that really cannot be broached easily in a wikipedia article. the best non-fiction books provide glossaries and bibliographies and make you want to continue doing deep-reading. the lazy reader would just settle for a few wiki histories or synopses.
and "if" is so lame. hahaha. saying you have "poetry in your cubicle" making out you're some urbane city-worker, and you have If!!!! that's like the poem they get 12 year olds to recite here in school, in between hymns and the lord's prayer.
you'll like this. a savage satire of that old toff/tory boarding school civics world that kipling writes from (especially in that poem), was filmed at my school... it was very controversial.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheltenham_College#If....
i'd recommend pinning up some e.e. cummings in your cubicle, jay. will be right up your street. impress the co-workers.
and "if" is so lame. hahaha. saying you have "poetry in your cubicle" making out you're some urbane city-worker, and you have If!!!! that's like the poem they get 12 year olds to recite here in school, in between hymns and the lord's prayer.
you'll like this. a savage satire of that old toff/tory boarding school civics world that kipling writes from (especially in that poem), was filmed at my school... it was very controversial.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheltenham_College#If....
i'd recommend pinning up some e.e. cummings in your cubicle, jay. will be right up your street. impress the co-workers.
Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-06-05 17:01:21)