goo blog サービス終了のお知らせ 

文明のターンテーブルThe Turntable of Civilization

日本の時間、世界の時間。
The time of Japan, the time of the world

"Today Last year"

2013年05月21日 20時58分49秒 | 日記
"Today Last year"
from "The timetable of Galaxy Train" 2012/5/21

There are " the important thing, the grandfathers are valuable in the family " and a place to be writing of in the shrine and the Buddhist temple.
It is placing on the entrance as if the thing is a raison d'etre but it is.
Akutagawa thinks that this will be the low or corrupted religion of the level.
Saying in the first place, are not one with the level which can be called religion if saying severely
When it should be calling all so the religion which had a biggest influence on the religion or the human race with high level, Akutagawa thinks.
of " love your neighbor "
The religion only of the family and the grandfathers and so on may judge, saying it is religion for the one to improve an evil or the self-deception of the hoodlum.
The reason why Akutagawa loves Kitano-tenmangu
Shuuichi Katou said that the big genius on the Japanese history was two of Sugawarano Michizane and Kuukai.
Sugawarano Michizane was made the penalty of the banishment to an island by the minister who envied his genius and died there.
He left the flagrant song which expressed the feelings to want to return to the city.
It was like his curse and the city in the capital attacked by the number of the plagues and the misfortune.
Only it is a great intellect person to the style which Shuuichi Katou said and will have been a virtue person.
It is because it is the one which the dynasty politics built to soothe or to shrive his intellect and virtue to him.
It is because there are Sugawarano Michizane's intellect and virtue greatness in there.




2012/5/19,at Murou-ji(C)Akutagawa Kenji

from "The timetable of Galaxy Train" 2012/5/21

2013年05月21日 19時45分53秒 | 日記
"Today Last year"
from "The timetable of Galaxy Train" 2012/5/21

Today to sleep with the bird and to wake up with the bird, but to boil only the latter and to have been completed
Will it be because it heard an annular eclipse, an annular eclipse many times last night?
By the way, it is when waiting for 5/19, the return to have visited Muro-ji to the end, the bus that only one comes to 1 hour.
It formed a line and it was waiting for it but there was husband and wife who seems to be the same generation with Akutagawa in front of Akutagawa.
The gesture that the husband touches the upper arm of the wife in the immediateness of Akutagawa
but the ordinariness was one with the kind which can be seen like the casual gesture
Akutagawa could not have seen so.
Especially, are recent, " being how many times in the pleasure and the sadness " which occurred to the ONE'S mind suddenly, should it say that it is?
The thing will have touched Akutagawa.
It is the Muro-ji last picture.
Like the understanding, the subscriber will be because Akutagawa was the life which chose Oosaka which is the mecca of the business as the place of the life, " There is not a business which stands up by the family "" the beginning of the family is a total stranger ".
In other words, Akutagawa elucidated a syllogism, " the total stranger is the most important ".



2012/5/19,at MUrou-ji。(C)Akutagawa Kenji。

Hunter S. Thompson 2

2013年05月21日 10時33分03秒 | 日記
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Military service

Thompson completed basic training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, and transferred to Scott Air Force Base in Belleville, Illinois to study electronics. He applied to become an aviator, but was rejected by the Air Force's aviation-cadet program. In 1956, he transferred to Eglin Air Force Base near Fort Walton Beach, Florida. While serving at Eglin, he took evening classes at Florida State University.[13] At Eglin, he landed his first professional writing job as sports editor of the The Command Courier by lying about his job experience. In this capacity, he covered the Eglin Eagles, a football team that included future professional players Bart Starr, Max McGee and Zeke Bratkowski. Thompson traveled with the team around the US, covering its games. In early 1957, he wrote a sports column for The Playground News, a local newspaper in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. He could not use his name on the column because the Air Force did not allow airmen to hold other jobs.[7]

Thompson was discharged from the Air Force in June 1958 as an Airman First Class, having been recommended for an early honorable discharge by his commanding officer. "In summary, this airman, although talented, will not be guided by policy", Col. William S. Evans, chief of information services wrote to the Eglin personnel office. "Sometimes his rebel and superior attitude seems to rub off on other airmen staff members."[14]

Early journalism career

After the Air Force, he worked as sports editor for a newspaper in Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania[15] before relocating to New York City. There he attended the Columbia University School of General Studies part-time on the G.I. Bill, taking classes in creative writing.[16] During this time he worked briefly for Time, as a copy boy for $51 a week. While working, he used a typewriter to copy F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms in order to learn about the writing styles of the authors. In 1959, Time fired him for insubordination.[16] Later that year, he worked as a reporter for The Middletown Daily Record in Middletown, New York. He was fired from this job after damaging an office candy machine and arguing with the owner of a local restaurant who happened to be an advertiser with the paper.[16]

In 1960, Thompson moved to San Juan, Puerto Rico, to take a job with the sporting magazine El Sportivo, which folded soon after his arrival. Thompson applied for a job with the Puerto Rican English language daily The San Juan Star, but its managing editor, future novelist William J. Kennedy, turned him down. Nonetheless, the two became friends and after the demise of El Sportivo, Thompson worked as a stringer for the New York Herald Tribune and a few stateside papers on Caribbean issues with Kennedy working as his editor.[17][18] After returning to the States, Hunter hitchhiked across the United States along U.S. Hwy 40, eventually ending up in Big Sur, California working as a security guard and caretaker at the Big Sur hot springs for an eight-month period in 1961, just before it became the Esalen Institute. While there, he was able to publish his first magazine feature in the nationally distributed Rogue magazine on the artisan and bohemian culture of Big Sur. Thompson had had a rocky tenure as caretaker of the hot springs, and the unwanted publicity generated from the article finally got him fired. During this period, Thompson wrote two novels, Prince Jellyfish and The Rum Diary, and submitted many short stories to publishers with little success. The Rum Diary, which fictionalized Thompson's experiences in Puerto Rico, was eventually published in 1998, long after Thompson had become famous.

From May 1962 to May 1963, Thompson traveled to South America as a correspondent for a Dow Jones-owned weekly newspaper, the National Observer. In Brazil, he spent several months working also as a reporter on the Brazil Herald, the country's only English-language daily, published in Rio de Janeiro. His longtime girlfriend Sandra Dawn Conklin (aka Sandy Conklin Thompson, now Sondi Wright) later joined him in Rio. Thompson and Conklin were married on May 19, 1963, shortly after they returned to the United States. They briefly relocated to Aspen, Colorado, and had one son, Juan Fitzgerald Thompson, born March 23, 1964. The couple conceived five more times together. Three of the pregnancies were miscarried, and the other two pregnancies produced infants who died shortly after birth. Hunter and Sandy divorced in 1980 but remained close friends until Thompson's death.

In 1964, the Thompson family then moved to Glen Ellen, California, where Thompson continued to write for the National Observer on an array of domestic subjects, including a story about his 1964 visit to Ketchum, Idaho, in order to investigate the reasons for Ernest Hemingway's suicide.[19] While working on the story, Thompson symbolically stole a pair of elk antlers hanging above the front door of Hemingway's cabin. Thompson severed his ties with the Observer after his editor refused to print his review of Tom Wolfe's 1965 essay collection The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby,[20] and he moved to San Francisco, immersing himself in the drug and hippie culture that was taking root in the area. About this time, he began writing for the Berkeley underground paper The Spyder.