Having ignored an indirect meme from the Pacific Gem on the grounds that it was too long (and she'd added a get-out clause), I suppose I'd better do this one. It's short. And I may never get tagged again if I don't come up with the goods... and then I'll feel lonely and unloved!
Rules:
1. Pick up the nearest book (of at least 123 pages).
2. Open the book to page 123.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the next three sentences.
5. Tag five people.
I had a little difficulty with the "nearest" book requirement.
I've been having a major sort-out, and technically, the nearest book to me at this moment is my dictionary: I find myself wanting to check things while writing my blog posts... I'm pedantic like that. Anyway, I tried using the dictionary, but got into trouble because it didn't have complete sentences...
The next book on my computer desk was the Bible. Douay-Rheims version. Problem number 1 was identifying page 123 (should I take the Old or the New Testament page 123?) I plumped for Old Testament, on the basis that it was the "proper" page 123. Problem number 2 was identifying the sentences... the Douay-Rheims version goes in for a lot of colons and semicolons, making the sentences long and convoluted, and sentence five was practically on the next page. Problem number 3 was that it was the Book of Leviticus on leprosy, and I sort of lost the will to live...
The next nearest book (How Cats Conquered the World by Heather Hacking) only had 96 pages.
In desperation, I grabbed a book from the top of the pile on the armchair behind me (these books are awaiting the construction of a bookshelf... and have been for some time.) It turned out to be The Incorruptibles by Joan Carroll Cruz. Page 123 only had three sentences on it...
Finally, The Wonder of Guadalupe by Francis Johnston put me out of my misery...
"The bronze, hazel-coloured eye of the Blessed Virgin lights up, and on the surface there shines quite distinctly the silhouette of a human bust. The head is turned threequarters towards the Virgin's right and slightly bent forward; the chest is framed and lengthened by a movement of the arms going forward as though to show something. It all happened as though, at the moment of the Image being impressed, a man who was facing the Blessed Virgin, and reflected in the cornea of her eye, had himself been photographed in this indirect way."
I'm loathe to put anyone else through this sort of torture. But if I really must, then I'll tag Leutgeb, Mark, Paulinus, Tony and Fr. Justin.
"Problem number 3 was that it was the Book of Leviticus on leprosy, and I sort of lost the will to live..."
ReplyDeleteROTFL!
I know. For such a short should-be-no-problem meme quite a few of us ran into similar difficulties!
That was a great quote. I love to see what books people have. It's the most voyeuristic thing I do. You can stay loved and wanted!
Karen
The pageant image of the Mercers was that of the Blessed Virgin, and for celebrations of the Midsummer Watch a 'Maiden chariot' was drawn through the streets in honour of Our Lady......
ReplyDeletePare 123 of Thomas More by Peter Ackroyd, 5th complete sentence
You know, you may be on to smething here!
You asked for it!
ReplyDelete"As the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart celebrates the salvific mysteries of Christ in a synthetic manner by reducing them to their found -- the Heart of Jesus, so too the memorial of the Sacred Heart of Mary is a celebration of the complex visceral relationship of Mary with her Son's work of Salvation: from the Incarnation, to his death and resurrection, to the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Following the apparitions at Fatima in 1917, devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary became very widespread. On the twenthy-fifth anniversary of the apparitions (1942) Pius XII consecrated the Church and the human race to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and extended the memorial to the entire Church" (Directory on Popular Piety and the Liturgy).
Oh Mark... you're meant to put it on your blog, along with your five chosen victims...
ReplyDelete*sighs in fond exasperation*
Done.
ReplyDeleteChose the rucksack over the bookcase or it would have been 'The complete vegetable gardener.'
'The Usborne London Sticker Book' for a 5 year old coming to stay over Easter, only has 15 pages, so was out of the running on the coffee table.