
When I was in Richmond, Virginia last fall (wandering from bar to bar in Northern Virginia and the Shenandoah) I stopped at Hollywood Cemetery. A number of graves had both United States and Confederate flags recently placed on them. They were those little flags youll get for parades, with flagpoles about 8 inches long and the flag probably three by four inches at most. The flags were lying on the ground at the graves, and in each case the US flag had a snapped pole. I found that to be an emotionally charged image.
While going through a book on the Confederacy for a book I'm writing, I ran across a picture of a picture of a bridge in Bridgeport, Tennessee, that had had both ends cleanly destroyed. It was an intact bridge that you couldnt use to cross over from either end, because it didnt have either end.
When the Internet Ray-Tracing Competition announced that the March/April 1999 theme would be History, I chose that as an opportunity to design this image, which I later used as the basis for the back of It Isnt Murder If Theyre Yankees, the reason I was wandering from bar to bar in Richmond, Charlottesville, and the rest of the Valley.
Jerry Stratton© 2000 Jerry Stratton |
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Soon-to-be dissidents in Hong Kong should be armed with better than axes, hammers, pokers, or a useless piece of paper inscribed with forgotten rights. If China is honest in its claims that it will not infringe Hong Kong rights, such firearms would gather dust beneath the floorboards and behind the walls of Hong Kong apartments. If, on the other hand, Chinese police begin knocking house to house, the next Alexander Solzhenitsyn might not pale in terror at every bang of the downstairs door. --Mimsy Were the Borogoves |