The 4 horsemen are logically reduced to two and brought into closer proximity with the main body that leads or steers. Let’s call this one “Big Ear 02”. What’s he hearing through the fusion?
Category Archives: Willow Hill
00430303 (transparent meanings)
Augusta ponders blame and culpability. Looking at you, city council.
In the mind’s eye, Frank drives by the now empty lot after the disaster and thinks of his own emptiness, as in the past he came from. Growing up in Davis with an aunt he didn’t respect enough in retrospect. Didn’t take her woman power ways seriously enough. And now here he is desperately seeking the feminine in himself. Too much masculine: too many powerful, horse laden yellow cars and such.
Who to turn to in a crisis? Certainly not questionable tea dispensing Albert from Murkville. Should’ve screened him better before the hire.
Filed under **VIRTUAL OT, 0043, 0303, Bogota, collages 2d, Georgia, Google Street View, GTA, Willow Hill
And then…
… Colorado to end, an enlargement from the past. ‘Nother one.
Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, 0042, 0317, Bogota, collages 2d, Falmouth, GTA, Washington, Willow Hill
light and shadow (The Z’s)
Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, 0039, 0604, Bogota, collages 2d, Pennsylvania, Willow Hill
now
Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, 0039, 0502, Bogota, collages 2d, Colorado, Constantynople, Falmouth, Nautilus, Rank & File, Washington, Willow Hill
Aztec warrior (photo by Barry DeBoy, present)
Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, 0037, 0108, Bogota, collages 2d, New Mexico, Willow Hill
00370102
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Lynne
The novel was first staged as Edith, or The Earl’s Daughter in New York in 1861[1] and under its own name on 26 January 1863 in Brooklyn; by March of that year, “three competing versions were drawing crowds to New York theaters.”[4] The most successful version was written by Clifton W. Tayleur for actress Lucille WESTERN, who was paid $350 a night for her performance as Isabel Vane.[4] Western starred in East Lynne for the next 10 years.[4] At least nine adaptations were made in all, not including plays such as The Marriage Bells that “used a different title for the sake of some copyright protection.”[5]
As the more melodramatic aspects of the story became dated, there were several parodies and burlesques made, including East Lynne in Bugville with Pearl White (1914), Mack Sennet’s East Lynne with Variations (1917), and in 1931 the comedy East Lynne on the WESTERN Front in which British soldiers fighting in the World War I stage a burlesqued version of the story.[2]
“Westeasterners (open the book (1931))”:
Filed under **VIRTUAL SL, 0037, 0102, Bogota, collages 2d, Illinois, Louisiana, Missouri, Willow Hill


















