Sunday, June 27, 2010

The Impressionist

If the subject is somehow impressed upon, does it grammatically follow that the object is the impression or the impressionist? Or maybe neither of these, but actually the Impresser. Whatever the proper conjugation, or maybe the meaning intended, I am not sure if the consequence belongs better linked to the affect of the subject of the effect of the verb. Perhaps, then, one might be simultaneously effected as a result of the affect, all the while affected: so having been quite impressed upon, locked in reciprocal consequence.

But, it is not so much a discussion of the properties of words but content of thought that is so weighted; a simple meditation of how one allows the self to be impressed upon at all, really. An unrequited, incomplete something. A chimera of some intangible object of thinking.


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