Inniswood Metro Gardens
“The earth has music for those who listen.”-George Santayana
Inniswood Metro Gardens
“The earth has music for those who listen.”-George Santayana
My Daily Diversion post from Saturday (Tree House) is featured on Toemail! If you’ve never checked out this delightful blog, what are you waiting for?

Tree House. Inniswood Metro Gardens.
“You must not ever stop being whimsical.”-Mary Oliver, Wild Geese
“Half of the harm that is done in this world is due to people who want to feel important. They don’t mean to do harm. But the harm does not interest them.”-T.S. Eliot (born on 9/26/1888)

Edgar Degas (died on 9/27/1917): The Millinery Shop, 1879/86. Art Institute of Chicago.
Venus de Milo by Edouard Vuillard, 1920.

Venus de Milo by Edouard Vuillard, 1920
Dear Scott,
Another year has gone by, and I still find you as enigmatic and problematic as ever. You, who could write such beautiful words, ruffle my feathers like few others. You, who squandered such exemplary gifts, frustrate me to the point of madness. Although I’ve never loved you, not even a bit, I have spent some wonderful time in your company. At this point in the game, I realize that I will never stop questioning you and, in questioning you, relentlessly, learn more about myself than I ever cared to know. Happy birthday, you beautiful bastard.
Yours (but not really),
Maedez

F. Scott Fitzgerald by Gordon Bryant. Shadowland, 1921.
“I don’t want to repeat my innocence. I want the pleasure of losing it again.”-This Side of Paradise, F. Scott Fitzgerald

Bookmark: Stag at Sharkey’s, 1909, by George Bellows Book: STILL, by David S. Shields
“Both of the inventors of the visual glamour, Eickemeyer and Genthe, came from the ranks of the art photographers, that cadre of aesthetically ambitious cameramen and-women who in the 1890s organized into an international community intent on fighting the slapdash amateurism of the mass of Kodak-wielding weekend shutterbugs, the routine posing and eclectic composition of the professional portrait studio, and the condescension of a fine arts critical establishment that denigrated photography as a mechanical craft.”-STILL American Silent Motion Picture Photography, by David S. Shields
…all the banned books you can find. It’s the only thing that will save the world.