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LOUIS ARRON
Sixth-form English student, Bristol
Stuck to a map notice-board for Bristol tourists, and to
the door of the
Cabot Tower:
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‘It doesn’t matter,
it’s the flickering that gives the excitement. Being is not a steady state
but an occulting one: we are all of us a succession of stillnesses
blurring into motion with the revolving of the wheel of action, and it is
in those spaces of black between the pictures that we experience the heart
of the mystery in which we are never allowed to rest. The flickering of a
film interrupts the intolerable continuity of apparent world; subliminally
it gives us those in-between spaces of black that we crave. The eye is
hungry for this; eagerly it collaborates with the unwinding strip of
celluloid that shows it twenty-four pictures per second, making real by an
act of retinal retention the here-and-gone, the continual disappearing in
which the lovers kiss, the shots are fired, the horses gallop, rrks?’ |
- from
The Medusa Frequency, p 87


Louis is a student in
Roland Clare's
English class. Of the Cabot Tower, Roland notes that "its top, visible from my
office, flashes out something in Morse at night that I've never decoded -
probably NNVSNU TSRUNGH or something similar..."

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