I haven’t read much of Gertrude Stein, but I often think of her brilliantly eccentric essay on punctuation[0], and especially her musings on the nature of the semicolon, whose crux is:
“They are more powerful more imposing more pretentious than a comma but they are a comma all the same. They really have within them deeply within them fundamentally within them the comma nature.”
Fun fact: my wife and I stayed in the Gertrude Stein room the American Club in Kohler, WI, and is the only reason I know who she is and clicked on this post. I'll have to listen to the podcast episode mentioned in a previous comment.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/Zwssf91DhQQu7kGX8
I haven’t read much of Gertrude Stein, but I often think of her brilliantly eccentric essay on punctuation[0], and especially her musings on the nature of the semicolon, whose crux is:
“They are more powerful more imposing more pretentious than a comma but they are a comma all the same. They really have within them deeply within them fundamentally within them the comma nature.”
[0] https://www.writing.upenn.edu/epc/authors/goldsmith/works/st...
Fun fact: my wife and I stayed in the Gertrude Stein room the American Club in Kohler, WI, and is the only reason I know who she is and clicked on this post. I'll have to listen to the podcast episode mentioned in a previous comment. https://photos.app.goo.gl/Zwssf91DhQQu7kGX8
Subject featured in a recent (hilarious, insightful) episode of Legacy podcast. Highly recommended.
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