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Ozymandias quote
Ozymandias quote









ozymandias quote

Look upon this comment and despair! 173.245.50.164 ( talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~) The fact that the true author of this comment may never be known is reason enough to despair. The lone and level sands stretch far away." Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!'

ozymandias quote

The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed: Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, Tell that its sculptor well those passions read Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,Īnd wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command, Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Downes.Ī similar joke was used in 785: Open Mic Night Ozymandias text I met a traveller from an antique land The poem "Ozymandias" is mentioned on pages 169 and 170 of the book Recursive Desire: Rereading Epic Tradition by Jeremy M. to indicate that this goes on and on and. The title text quotes exactly one line, the 9th line or the first line of the second part of the poem, also stopping during the fourth repetition, although after just one word the fourth time, also with. Perhaps Randall did this to avoid finishing in mid word ("a trav-"). However the fourth and last line stops two syllables short, but would have continued as indicated by. The way Ponytail recites her version of the poem in the comic, each line continues to be iambic pentameters (which is the reason for the hyphenation of an-tique between 2nd and 3rd line). The fragment quoted in the comic consist of the first line and two syllables of the second line of the original poem. Also note that it was originally written in British English where it was spelled with two l's as traveller). The poem is a sonnet written in iambic pentameter, 10 syllables to a line (note that traveler should be read as trav'ler with only two syllables. If she ever finishes there would be one closing quotation mark for each quote in the recursion at the end of her sentence. So there is only the starting quotation mark (") for each quote. The quotes are not nested properly, as they never end. The fact that Ponytail is now telling Cueball the story of this recursion implies that she is yet another layer of this recursion and is herself "a traveler from an antique land."

ozymandias quote

So it is entirely possible that one day, after the fall of this civilization, the poem will fill the same role for it that the statue filled for Ozymandias' civilization, and would therefore be referenced by a traveler from an antique land who stumbled across it. However, the poem itself, like the statue it describes,can be thought of as a pinnacle of achievement for its civilization- in this case, English civilization. The poem Ozymandias is about the last vestiges of a once-great civilization that has since been lost to history. In the original poem, the text on the pedestal is itself recounted as part of the traveler's story, so there are already two levels of quotation, and the pedestal's inscription describes Ozymandias as the "king of kings", which, being itself a recursion, gives rise to the comic's joke. The title text once again plays with recursion, but instead of it being a string of travelers talking about travelers, it is a string of pedestals that are quoting pedestals. However, instead of continuing on with the poem, Ponytail is going through a recursion where the information is always being quoted from "a traveler from an antique land" who recounts what they were told by a similar traveler from another antique land. Ponytail is reciting the opening of " Ozymandias" by Percy Bysshe Shelley (see text below).

ozymandias quote

Title text: And on the pedestal these words appear: "And on the pedestal these words appear: "And on the pedestal these words appear: "And.











Ozymandias quote