Quizzes & Puzzles14 mins ago
Being curious how many
73 Answers
on here are recycled teenagers? or frequent 21-year-olds.
I'm a recycled teen and have 21 x 2 plus a bit :-)
I'm a recycled teen and have 21 x 2 plus a bit :-)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A flavour of the reports to come from gness in Ireland, merging together her bird watching, drinking, the literary fest of Sneem, Irish racing and Knock.
Pre-Report 1. (réamh-tuarascáil amháin)
"There are thirteen ways that Gness can look at a white Irish blackbird.
One is to place it on the edge of her belief system, it changes colour as it flies from one world into the next.
Another is to tease it onto the margins of a sacred text, but perhaps this way is the same as the first.
A third method is to hunt through the Sneem woods from start to finish, always two seconds away from actually seeing the bird.
A fourth is to walk backwards through the wood guided only by its melancholic song.
The fifth way is the way of impatience, the pot calling itself white, and the kettle calling itself black, until both are blue in the face.
The sixth way is nothing like the third way, although rumours of famous success rates have been circulating in County Clare.
The seventh way is to discount all reports coming in from County Clare and have a pint of black and white.
The eighth way is an adaptation of the twelfth way and is therefore always inscrutable. The eighth way and the ninth way cancel one another out.
There are ten green bottles hanging on the wall, but don’t get gness started - after all alba started this thread and she is green already.
There are eleven good reasons for abandoning a prose poem entitled Thirteen Ways of Looking at a White Blackbird, the lure of the pub a fourteenth.
Twelve are the ways of Oisin, the wanderings of Aengus, and the heavy blows of Finn; the blackbird was sacred to all three, although far from being white, and never even a doubtful grey.
The thirteenth way is the way of patience, and the only clue into the maze; this nest of words has taken many seasons to get right, but is not favoured by migrants.
White Blackbird wins by a head, Throwaway comes second, in third place is Alfred de Musset, while the last flight into Knock airport is christened 'Sloopy Always Knew Best.' "
Pre-Report 1. (réamh-tuarascáil amháin)
"There are thirteen ways that Gness can look at a white Irish blackbird.
One is to place it on the edge of her belief system, it changes colour as it flies from one world into the next.
Another is to tease it onto the margins of a sacred text, but perhaps this way is the same as the first.
A third method is to hunt through the Sneem woods from start to finish, always two seconds away from actually seeing the bird.
A fourth is to walk backwards through the wood guided only by its melancholic song.
The fifth way is the way of impatience, the pot calling itself white, and the kettle calling itself black, until both are blue in the face.
The sixth way is nothing like the third way, although rumours of famous success rates have been circulating in County Clare.
The seventh way is to discount all reports coming in from County Clare and have a pint of black and white.
The eighth way is an adaptation of the twelfth way and is therefore always inscrutable. The eighth way and the ninth way cancel one another out.
There are ten green bottles hanging on the wall, but don’t get gness started - after all alba started this thread and she is green already.
There are eleven good reasons for abandoning a prose poem entitled Thirteen Ways of Looking at a White Blackbird, the lure of the pub a fourteenth.
Twelve are the ways of Oisin, the wanderings of Aengus, and the heavy blows of Finn; the blackbird was sacred to all three, although far from being white, and never even a doubtful grey.
The thirteenth way is the way of patience, and the only clue into the maze; this nest of words has taken many seasons to get right, but is not favoured by migrants.
White Blackbird wins by a head, Throwaway comes second, in third place is Alfred de Musset, while the last flight into Knock airport is christened 'Sloopy Always Knew Best.' "