08-05-2011, 11:22 AM
Actually thinking about it, following as it does the first line, that does make sense.
It seems I tend to labour under the belief that all sentences must be complete thoughts, but after jotting down such a sentence I see they don't.
I wrote a series of clauses - "Light falls on a stone, the sea withdraws, a sparrow alights on a branch" - as a single sentence to prove you wrong, but just proved myself wrong
It seems I tend to labour under the belief that all sentences must be complete thoughts, but after jotting down such a sentence I see they don't.
I wrote a series of clauses - "Light falls on a stone, the sea withdraws, a sparrow alights on a branch" - as a single sentence to prove you wrong, but just proved myself wrong
"We believe that we invent symbols. The truth is that they invent us; we are their creatures, shaped by their hard, defining edges." - Gene Wolfe

