ellauri029.html on line 38: Jan Blomstedt rakastaa keinotekoista ja sievää jaottelua ja luokittelua. Koska me emme sellaista rakasta, voimme jakaa Das Janin tuotannon kolmeen lohkoon ennen sen päälleastumista: 1) Blomstedtin "parodista ja itsetiedostavaa fiktiota" voimme kuzua tiedostamattomaxi izeparodiaxi (näitä räpellyxiä löytyy mm Punkakatemiasta sekä Synteesistä 3/1984-1&2/1985); 2) esseen ja sepitteen raja-aitoja yliastuvat yritelmät käyvät hänen kriitikittömän tyylitajuttomuutensa osoituxesta ja 3) Blomstedtin normaalin esseegenren tuotteet ovat onttoudessaan ja lukkiutuneisuudessaan vain latteaa ja i-k-ä-v-y-s-t-y-t-t-ä-v-ä-ä luettavaa. Samaa voidaan sanoa myös hänen 'ironiastaan'. Blomjanin fiktion ja esseen raja-aitojen kaataminen todistaa vain sen, että hän on onneton raja-aitojen kaataja (hän kaatuu tuleen makaamaan aidan alle ja ryömii riman alize). Mutta nää oon vaan kuriositeetteja siinä Jan Blomstedtissa joka Roland Barthesin torso mukanaan harhailee pitkästyneenä pitkin maailmaa ja hyräilee: I bore myself to sleep at night / I bore myself in bright daylight / I'm bored / I'm the chairman of the bored. Markku Envall on väittänyt, että on vaikea kuvitella Blomstedtia innostuneena. E.Saarinen ja J.Blomsted on koominen pari, jotain Mikin ja Hessun tapaista.
ellauri048.html on line 827: Between the dark and the daylight, Pimeän ja päivänvalon väliseen
ellauri051.html on line 971: 385 Does the daylight astonish? does the early redstart twittering through the woods? 385 Hämmästyttääkö päivänvalo? alkaako varhainen punaaloitus Twitterissä metsässä?
ellauri095.html on line 68: dom of daylight's dauphin, dapple-dawn-drawn Falcon, in his riding rinkokunnan prinssin, Millennium Falconilla razastavan,
ellauri095.html on line 550: Compare Gerard Manley Hopkins’s version of an attempted rescue with the account in the London Times, one of the sources he used for The Wreck of the Deutschland. According to the Times, “One brave sailor, who was safe in the rigging went down to try to save a child or woman who was drowning on deck. He was secured by a rope to the rigging, but a wave dashed him against the bulwark, and when daylight dawned his headless body, detained by the rope, was swinging to and fro with the waves.” Hopkins wrote:
ellauri141.html on line 533: The spoof book of late Horace (it refers to contemporary politicians such as Lloyd George, gas masks, land girls, daylight saving, spiritualism, canteens and so on) which came out in 1920, was inspired by a long tradition in English literature and by Kipling’s early imitation odes and Charles Graves’s Hawarden Horace (1894) and More Hawarden Horace (1896, with a delightful introduction by T. E. Page), where felicitous modernising English versions of the Odes (and an Epode) are put in the mouth of Gladstone (251) . A[lfred] D[enis] Godley, for one, had often imagined Greek and Roman authors as still alive and commenting on nineteenth- and twentieth-century Oxford and England. (252) Kipling delighted in humorous verse. In 1917 he had enjoyed Maurice Baring’s Translations (found in a commonplace book) (253) .
ellauri143.html on line 841: A crow will conquer owl in broad daylight;

ellauri156.html on line 761: lay with your wives in broad daylight, openly, before all Israel, and under the sun.
ellauri171.html on line 651: But the men would not listen to him. So the man seized his concubine and brought her out to them; and they raped her and abused her all night until morning, then let her go at the approach of dawn. As the day began to dawn, the woman came and fell down at the doorway of the man’s house where her master was, until full daylight. Judges 19:25-26 (NASB)
ellauri219.html on line 952: Police were called when neighbors reported a woman having sex with her pit bull in her backyard in broad daylight. When they arrived, they found Kara Vandereyk “naked and on the ground” engaged in a sexual act with the dog. Upon their approach, she greeted them with a “hi,” and proceeded to hump the dog sexually.
xxx/ellauri057.html on line 1376: J. W. Tuura oli naimisissa Kerttu Emilia Simolinin (sukunimi vuodesta 1906 alkaen Hirvelä; 1887–1919) kanssa vuosina 1909–1919. Heillä oli neljä lasta. Kääntäjänä toiminut Kerttu Tuura suomensi muun muassa Jack Londonin romaanit Klondyken kuningas (alk. Burning daylight) ja Onnen suosikki sekä Octave Feuilletin kirjan Nuoren naisen päiväkirja. Tuura meni toisen kerran naimisiin 1921 Sanni Heleniuksen kanssa. Isänmaa tarvizee kaikki isot munat.
xxx/ellauri251.html on line 1511: ⁠As midnight, and the night as daylight hours.
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