I have been re-reading the quartet for the last week or so. It's amazing, you notice new things every time you read the books. This time I was struck by the fact that 33 seems to be a significant number, eg the 33 volumes of Strongbow's Levantine Sex, and other incidences are cited with 33 as the significant number. Has this number something to do with Whittemore's birth year? Or is it something to do with Christ's age at his death? Or does it have some esoteric meaning in the Koran or in Hebrew or Christian texts? Sorry that doesn't address your query Joseph, but probably Whittemore had read the Decameron, no way of knowing really. --Previous Message--
: Is anyone familiar with Gotthold Lessing's
: poem Nathan the Wise? In the poem, the main
: character, Nathan, who is a Jew, avoids
: claiming that a Moslem, Christian, or Jew is
: truest and best by telling a parable of
: three rings, in which three brothers, after
: much struggle, end living harmoniously,
: rather than at war b/c they don't know which
: was the true and original ring.
: The parable is taken from the Decameron, and
: appears in several other works, but I'm not
: sure if any contemporary writers use this
: theme...besides Whittemore of course. The
: notion of religious tolerance looms largely
: in the Quartet. The Sinai Bible sort of
: serves as the true and original ring. I love
: too that the authors were a blind man and a
: scribe, which gives EW a kind of Homeric
: quality. I wonder if at any point EW
: himself had studied or read for pleasure
: these works. Any thoughts?
:
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Message Thread a questionable connection - Joseph November 10, 2005, 2:29 pm
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