With the above subtitle, as our faithful chronicler reminds, English writer Lewis Carroll (previously) published his nonsense poem on this day in 1876, borrowing stylistically from an earlier verse “Jabberwocky” and Through the Looking-Glass, whose first printing run included a religious tract, “An Easter Greeting to Every Child Who Loves ‘Alice.’”
Variously interpreted as a lampoon against Victorian sensibilities, an allegory of tuberculosis, existential angst over the fear of losing one’s sense of self and a court case that was a cause cรฉlรจbre during its composition involving a man who claimed to be the missing heir to the Tichborne estate supposed lost in a shipwreck en route to Australia, and relates the narrative of a hunting party’s arrival in a strange land, the crew consisting of a bellman, bonnet-maker, a barrister, broker, billiard-maker, banker, a beaver, a baker and a butcher to pursue their quarry of the Snark, which is rumoured to be a highly dangerous boojum, which makes all take pause.
Whilst the sense of derision or irreverence is onomatopoeic from the interjection to snort, the poem lends the sense of a wild-goose chase. The hunt commences:
They sought it with thimbles, they sought it with care;
They pursued it with forks and hope;
They threatened its life with a railway-share,
They charmed it with smiles and soap.
Along the way, the B-Team encounter a jubjub bird and are attacked by bandersnatch, causing the bank to lose his sanity and disappear without a trace, claiming to have spied their objective but none of the others catch sight of the elusive prey. With illustrated plates by stained-glass designer, muralist and architect Henry Holiday (see above), whose studies of ancient Egyptian motifs helped fuel the Mummy Mania craze, “The Hunting of the Snark” received mixed contemporary reviews and critics pronounced Carroll’s prose and poetry past its prime, although upon reevaluation the enduring references, vocabulary and cadence, structured like a limerick, it has been embraced an reinterpreted in many formats and a dedicated academic journal.
Sunday, 29 March 2026
an agony, in eight fits (13. 306)
catagories: ๐ด๓ ง๓ ข๓ ฅ๓ ฎ๓ ง๓ ฟ, ๐ฃ, ๐ฌ, ๐, ๐
Friday, 27 March 2026
random landing (13. 301)
Via the always excellent Web Curios, we are directed to the now occasional blog that visits a point in the contiguous states in the USA and reports back on the geographic features, watersheds, human settlements, history, local commerce, culture, etc nearby, emphasising the size of America and the vast sparsely populated places determined by chance selection of longitude and latitude with a certain methodology. Much research and record keeping has gone into these plots, often removed and remote—the middle of nowhere—that limn the nation as a whole spanning from sea to shining sea and inspired us to attempt some flattery for this personal project through imitation.
Throwing a dart at a map of Germany, at coordinates 49.9969614, 8.9482212 we arrived in the cornfield near Nieder-Roden within the urban district of Darmstadt and the municipality of Offenbach and a constituent community of Greater Roden near the city of Heusenstamm, the fiftieth parallel north passing directly through the Pusieaux-Platz in the centre of the borough.
When I lived in Wiesbaden, I recall the state news broadcast featuring a segment—weekly, daily?—called “Dolles Dรถrfer” so called in country dialect that highlighted a village in Hessen, some of which I visited with detours from my usual route.
Divided by thirds, it is approximately equally partitioned amongst human habitation, woodlands and agriculture with a prominent swampland stand of pine forest and was first documented in 791 as Rotaha inferior in the codex of Lorsch. If you live in the lower-48 or elsewhere, this would be a good project to cultivate for one’s own exploration, like our friend Diamond Geezer, virtual or otherwise.
Monday, 16 March 2026
first flight (13. 271)
From property then belonging to Asa Ward before becoming his Aunt Effie’s farmstead in Auburn, Massachusetts, pioneering jet propulsion engineer and physicist Robert Goddard launched the first liquid-fuelled rocket on this day in 1926.
With a mixture of gasoline and liquid oxygen, the projectile, christened as Nell, only reached an altitude of sixty metres but in less than three seconds and was a solid demonstration of proof of concept. Reserved and painfully shy since, Goddard was criticised by contemporaries as dabbling in an undignified field not worthy of serious scientific investigation, his contributions only posthumously recognised—thanks in large measure to his habit of keeping a daily diary of experiments and imbued early on with a sense of curiosity and awe, first captivated by the electrification of his hometown at the turn of the century and then a transcendent experience, referred to in his journal as his “cherry tree dream” aged seventeen, when perched in the branches to prune some dead limbs in the autumn all of a sudden, imagining his ascent higher and higher above the Earth and intuited the basic principles of combustion and propulsion, coming down from the tree a changed adolescent. That vision never left Goddard, for the rest of his life keeping the anniversary of that event, 19 October 1899, as a private commemoration of his greatest inspiration.
Saturday, 28 February 2026
9x9 (13. 220)
a real chadwick: nineteenth century missionary and polyglot John Ross’ role in why Hangul uses spaces whereas other Asian scripts do not
the count: an annual tally tradition from Diamond Geezer—see also
ฯฮตฯฯฮฑฯฮฑฮบฮฟฮฝฯฮฎฯฮทฯ: the ancient super-galley commissioned by Ptolemy IV Philopater, so named as it was rowed by forty
lettres decoratives: open source letterform templates inspired by the artisanal signs of Paris
calendar girl: RIP Neil Sedaka—more here
abc schengen: a bundle of fonts inspired the typefaces of the transportation industry—see previously
ฮดฯฮดฮตฮบฮฑฮธฮตฯฯฮผฯฯ: an introduction to the practitioners of the Hellenic religion who worship the twelve Olympian gods
happy map: in an increasingly fraught world, a deep longitudinal survey of tiny and momentuous moments of joy
data ≠ knowledge: poetic reflections on large language models by Rishi Dastidar—via Web Curios
Wednesday, 18 February 2026
html goodies (13. 190)
Honestly, we haven’t been motivated to overhaul our little spot on the internet for quite some time—and still have no intention of changing the format, except for maybe making it easier to swat away annoying ads or getting rid of the clutter altogether, since the passing of the era of hypertext mark-up language and still maintaining that obituary is very premature and the pivot towards hierarchical widgets and and features reliant on the longevity of whatever new hotness is dominating coding at the moment.
Though we had varying levels of success with these templates—assuredly due to this site’s own frankenstein formatting of keyframes and dividers, for the first time in a long time, courtesy of Quantum of Sollazzo, in this catalogue of very good components that are purely HTML and don’t depend on a non-native source. As said, not all features worked as expected—particularly liking the comparison slider and the masonry grid for images and some of the text effects, WSIWYG on the phone but not on the laptop, and while there’s somewhat of a vibe coding vibe to these plug-and-play applications, some assembly is required.
synchronoptica
one year ago: a landmark nuclear disarmament protest (with synchronopticรฆ) plus assorted links to revisit
thirteen years ago: a proposed Robin Hood tax on financial transactions
fourteen years ago: Faschings customs
sixteen years ago: a Greek bailout
seventeen years ago: home improvement
Sunday, 8 February 2026
someday a real rain will come and wash all this scum off the streets (13. 154)
Released on this day in 1976, the neo-noir drama by Martin Scorsese and Paul Schrader set in a decaying New York City stars Robert De Niro as Marine veteran and taxi driver Travis Bickle and follows the decline of his mental health working nights in the metropolis with the supporting cast of Cybil Shepherd, Harvey Keitel, Albert Brooks and Jodie Foster.
Documenting his deterioration in a diary to combat his loneliness, chronic insomnia and intrusive violent thoughts, disgusted by the crime and exploitation he witnesses, punctuated with aphorism and affirmation, Bickle eventually channels his rage and frustration into an intense regimen of physical conditioning, and armed, embarks on a mission of vigilantism, first in a foiled assassination attempt on a presidential candidate, after having his overtures for one of the politician’s campaign staff, Betsy (Shepherd) rebuffed and then killing the pimp (Keitel) of child prostitute Iris (Foster) and freeing her—an act for which Bickle is hailed as a hero. Despite being blamed for inspiring the shooting of Ronald Reagan by John Hickley Jr (the elevation of the anti-hero—the role offered to Dustin Hoffman originally with Al Pacino and Jeff Bridges also in consideration) itself inspired by the media treatment of Sara Jane Moore’s assassination attempt on Gerald Ford), the film’s acclaim has been a constant over the ensuing decades.
Wednesday, 28 January 2026
xxx & j (13. 122)
From British author Brian Bilston (previously)—hailed as the Laureate of Social Media for our fractious times and alternately, aptly described as the Banksy of Poets—we appreciated and could related to these verses he shares as a handy, perhaps perennial mnemonic to recall the length of this interminable month—which rivals other seemingly unending suspensions in time, with January concluding 7 December 2042.
synchronoptica
one year ago: Be my Valentine, Charlie Brown (with synchronopticรฆ) plus assorted links to revisit
thirteen years ago: Nature harnessing quantum mechanics
fourteen years ago: PIPA, SOPA, ACTA plus a visit to Suhl
fifteen years ago: code red plus uprisings in Egypt
sixteen years ago: local news
seventeen years ago: woolly memories
Monday, 26 January 2026
10x10 (13. 118)
write his merits on your mind: a fitting eulogy for murdered ICE victims from eighteenth century poet William Drennen on the persecuted and defamed activist William Orr
drizzle: the controversial conservatory teacher Li Jinhui (้ป้ฆๆ) who brought jazz to Shanghai
sons of torum: the dreamtime legends of the vast taiga
fungus among us: the sociophonetics of the mushroom kingdom—from the Roman legal Latin res fungibiles, replaceable things
the life aquatic: a tribute to David Bowie on the tenth anniversary of his passing with beautiful Portuguese covers of the classics
arsenal and armoury: a new exhibit examines global traditions of battlewear, beyond white knights
stooky bill: a visit to the London address where television was first demonstrated—see previously—a hundred years ago today
deluge: British Museum curator on the “ark tablet” and the universal myth of the Great Flood
chill session: a set of deep cuts from Daft Punk
border czar: Trump dispatches Tom Homan to Minnesota to manage the campaign of state terror
Saturday, 24 January 2026
7x7 (13. 112)
les chansons de bilitis: a century old literary hoax of a fictional lesbian poet incited dialogue and reevaluation on the genuine figure of Sappho and queerness in antiquity
apt mascot: a manufacturing error created the Cry-Cry Horse and its popularity for the Lunar New Year has prompted suppliers to reinstate the stitching mistake
tam o’shanter: a poem for Sunday’s Burns Night
ts and cs apply: new updated user agreement for US TikTok draws scrutiny regarding its privacy policy, including sexual orientation, mental health and immigration status
coming attractions: an imagined trailer for Star Trek: Voyage to Vengeance as directed by Quentin Tarantino
the disappointed tourist: an elegy to lost places
composition yellow, blue, black red and white: reevaluating the cross-dressing Cornish artist Marlow Moss whose work influenced that of Piet Mondrian—via Kottke
synchronoptica
one year ago: jazz artist Keith Jarrett (with synchronopticรฆ), a Bolivian abundance festival, assorted links to enjoy plus Trump pledges to overhaul federal emergency response agency
thirteen years ago: the assassination of Caligula
twelve years ago: impending base closures and a reduction in US forces
sixteen years ago: relaxing US campaign financing reforms plus petty kingdoms
Sunday, 4 January 2026
8x8 (13. 057)
the gift of the magi: Better Living through Beowulf shares a Godfrey Rust poem for the Feast of the Epiphany
wegmans: NewYork grocery store chain collecting biometric data, conversations of shoppers
year of the fire horse: zodiacal facts about the upcoming annual cycle
heavy sour crude: how realistic Trump’s designs on Venezuela’s reserves are—see more
pea-brained: organoid culture research and experimentation raises ethical, philosophical concerns
big brother and the holding company: the numerological and business significance of six-and-twenty
john players’ special: the tobacco purveyor presents the celebrated gates of London
mother superior jumped the gun: convert Elizabeth Ann Seton feted as first American saint for establishing the parochial education system in the New World
synchronoptica
one year ago: Trump does not want lowered flags for his inauguration (with synchronopticรฆ), the chaotic twin of Pi, the right attacks Wikipedia plus Mussolini’s Black Shirts
twelve years ago: vaping regulations, landmarks lost to progress, miniature artists plus hyperobjects
thirteen years ago: the push for green energy plus fake smiles
fourteen years ago: marginal victories plus Three Kings’ Day
sixteen years ago: holidays unwrapped
seventeen years ago: New Year’s resolutions
Tuesday, 30 December 2025
9x9 (13. 043)
the unforgivable sin of ms rachel: Tedium’s Online Video Awards and the problems with platforms
grunt work: AI has the potential to destroy career ladders—via Damn Interesting
grove press: the Mid-Century Modern covers and jackets of Roy Kuhlman
turbo moka: a thermodynamic redesign of the classic Italian coffee pot—see previously
gรขnditorul de la hamangia: reflections on a palaeolithic pair of artefacts
ieee spectrum: top climate tech stories of 2025—including atmospheric ammonia harvesting
i dislike dune with some intensity: JRR Tolkien was not a fan of Frank Herbert’s work
the imperfect homework machine: students’ experience with AI mirrors a Shel Silverstein poem
the year in search: more of Miss Cellania’s annual superlatives
Friday, 26 December 2025
9x9 (13. 032)
christmas day storm: heavy rains and landslides batter Los Angeles area
vertex summary: holiday reception by renowned fiddler in Nova Scotia cancelled due to AI search erroneous labelling the performer a sex-offender—via Super Punch
soft cell: astronaut Tibor Kapu debuts geometries that can only exist in microgravity aboard the ISS
high holidays: an assortment of newspaper clippings on confiscated marijuana Christmas trees of yesteryear
autocoup: a viral fake video of an overthrow in Paris is throwing the government in turmoil
daemon est deus inversus: the occult imagination of W B Yeats
winterval: seasonal breaks and the signal most observed public holiday—maybe not the one you’re thinking of—from Quantum of Sollazzo
neighbourhood watch: AI powered app issues false crime alerts across US, terrorising residents
spirit of the season: US launches strikes against ISIS militants in Nigeria—accused of persecuting Christians
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth revisiting (with synchronopticรฆ), Wild Strawberries (1957) plus a classic from Goorge Harrison
thirteen years ago: an antique Bible
fifteen years ago: Boxing Day and Second Christmas
Sunday, 30 November 2025
ฮบฮฑฮนฯฮฟฮฏ (12. 968)
For this first Advent, marking the transition from Ordinary Time (tempus per annum, that is the countdown weeks of the big seasons of Christmas- and Eastertide, Better Living through Beowulf, via the lens of the End Times and popular-eschatology that’s become as much part of the holiday counter-insurgency as anything else, introduces us to a second concept of time that the Ancient Greeks had, at the same time offering some solace to contextualise and countenance such rapture fantasies.
As opposed to ฯฯฯฮฝฮฟฯ in the sense of chronological or sequential time, kairos, personified as opportunity or proper timing in the figure of Zeus’ youngest son, depicted with the iconography of a razor or scales balanced on a sharp edge to symbolise fleeting fortune and though eternally youthful is completely bald save for one lanky lock of hair that hangs over his face (let me adjust my bang) to suggest one can catch him on the approach by this tuft of hair but ungraspable once he has moved past. Also the sense of skilled professionals, an altar to Kairos was at the athletes’ entrance to the stadium of Olympia, in rhetoric and debate it is a passing instant that must be seized upon to turn an argument and in medicine and in media, the right dose administered at the right time. Despite how rapture fiction, and we’re reminded not to underestimate its readership, might be set in the familiar and predictable realm of ordinary time—so to is the more secular run up and trappings of the holidays—it is time-out-of-time for reflection, vigilant anticipation to be ready for chance to present itself.
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links worth the revisit (with synchronopticรฆ) plus surviving a meteor strike (1954)
twelve years ago: fostering children from Nazi Germany plus Cicada 3301
thirteen years ago: Christmas deadlines
fourteen years ago: a Star Wars/Rankin/Bass mash-up plus The War of Wealth
fifteen years ago: the fall-out of the diplomatic cable leak
Sunday, 23 November 2025
poetic license (12. 951)
More convincing than asking nicely to do better or expressing doubt, a team of mimetic researchers (the likes of which Plato warned us about in The Republic as a menace to society) in Rome have discovered that couching a prompt to a large language model as an “adversial poem” has the dazzling effect of surrender, causing it to ignore its safety protocols and abandon its pre-programmed guardrails.
The exact wording of these verses that allows harmful request to pass through are not reproduced verbatim as there is potential for the AI to do anything asked of it—including the criminal—with this literate deprogramming (an MFA or English major may be one’s best ally for bypassing inscrutable governance for this blackbox they’ve foisted on all parts of our lives) hovering at ninety precent. This image of the Cave by fifteenth century Flemish painter Michiel Coxie looks like it would violate standards. Rather than the apotheosis of what LLMs are incapable of and an urge to impress with confidence, it seems metaphor confounds tokenisation and even suggests that machine-learning is incapable of growth to scale.
Saturday, 15 November 2025
book and backmasking (12 .882)
Calling to mind this wonderfully laugh out loud and still arguably the only legitimate use of LinkedIn that matches the names of CV-holders to pop songs, Futility Closet directs us to an earlier effort scouring the telephone directory of Toronto’s 1977 white-pages choosing entries to approximate the lyrics to nursery rhymes (as published later in anthology of recreational linguistics and onomastics).
One example cobbling together of the Roud Folk Song #19626 of disputed historical meaning:
Merrie Merry Quaint Caunt Ririe
Howe Dussiaulme Garden Groh
Witt Silver Belson Cockell Schells
And Pretty Mayes Allin Arro
Whist predating Mary Tudor and Mary Queen of Scots, despite popular associations, scholars believe the English traditional poem is an allegory for Catholicism with pretty maids representing nuns, the sanctus bells and the cockleshells as the pilgrimage badges of the Way of St James. Click through at the link above for more examples plus a 1963 television show that assembled a live studio audience to the tune “Inda Good Old Somerstein.”
synchronoptica
one year ago: the first human-non-human organ transplant (with synchronopticรฆ) plus polls open for the OED Word of the Year
thirteen years ago: alternate search engines, International Day of Philosophy plus more flea market finds
fourteen years ago: the myth of unlimited growth
sixteen years ago: a visit to Coburg
Monday, 27 October 2025
giorno poetry systems (12. 829)
Courtesy of Weird Universe, not only do we learn about the public multimedia experiment (see also here, here and here) started by artist and activist John Giorno in 1968—
initially introduced as an installation before being deaccessioned by the Museum of Modern Art in New York after complains over its catalogue being weighted towards counter-cultural polemics and a subsequent FBI investigation into potentially subversive language before retreating into different iterations and media, we learn that the service is still active and one can dial-a-poem—or visit the its web presence for a random selection (or with directory assistance per app), sourced from the original exhibit (collaborating with John Cage, Allen Ginsberg, William S Burroughs, Patti Smith and others) with many more contributors added in the decades since.
catagories: ๐ท️, ๐, ๐ฑ, 1968, libraries and museums
Friday, 26 September 2025
5-7-5 (12. 761)
Albeit the scansion can be a bit off at times for human consumption—via Web Curios—this algorithm that pulls headlines, with by-line often, from the Guardian is a fun little experiment (see previously here and here—see also here) which could possibly run through ever permutation well past the heat-death of the Universe and keep on presenting as haikus. 
The traditional Japanese short-form poetry, consisting of seventeen morae (ฮผ, a syllable or sub-unit) presented in a five-seven-five pattern, classically with a kireji (ๅใๅญ, a caesura or cutting word) at the end of the verse and reference to a season:
the first cold shower
even the monkey seems to want
a little coat of straw
English inspired forms are typically a departure, retaining some of the qualities but more focused on the rhythm and structure of the language, having no precise equivalents and usually composed in an exercise of metric-counting rather than juxtaposition and surprise. Still finding like patterns is nonetheless intriguing.
synchronoptica
one year ago: new Nazca lines revealed (with synchronopticรฆ), the study of street art plus assorted links to revisit
thirteen years ago: Icelandic landscapes, the US Food and Drug Administration audits Swiss dairies plus excommunication and indulgence
fourteen years ago: a visit to Darmstadt and Erfurt to see the Pope plus the euro vies with the the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency
fifteen years ago: flea market finds and a visit to Werneck
Friday, 15 August 2025
happy blogoversary to us: the edge of seventeen (12. 650)
As PfRC turns seventeen years old we wanted to once again extend our gratitude to our readership and to the members of the wider blogosphere (many of those fellow caretakers are listed under our Smรธgรฅsblog) and new ones discovered for their serendipity, sustainment and inspiration that keeps the internet curious, entertaining, engrossing and engaging.
Since hitting our last milestone, here’s a round-up of some of our most popular posts with a few honourable mentions from the past year. Then it’s birthdays all the way down:
10: Reviving the old racist names of US sports franchises
9: An assortment of premium links
8: A remembrance of the past year’s departed
7: Carsinisation
6: Governance per tweet
5: musical backmasking on LinkedIn
4: Howard Hughes’ streaming service
3. A visit to the Tauber valley
2: A 1954 encounter with a meteorite
1: US presidential regnal numbers
synchronoptica
one year ago: blogoversaries all the way down, the People’s Crusade, the Berlin Crisis of 1961, a defector to North Korea, quibbling over possessive apostrophes plus assorted links worth the revisit
thirteen years ago: WWII week: submarine warfare, the single currency and quantitative easing plus the Lost Autobahn
fourteen years ago: more rainy summer plus quelling unrest and violence
fifteen years ago: a trip to Leipzig
seventeen years ago: a trip to the Bretagne
Saturday, 2 August 2025
8x8 (12. 627)
the people of 1925: a survey of a century ago through the lives of people we never knew—via Strange Company
the zendian problems: a detailed cartographic study of an imaginary republic used to train cryptanalysts for a simulated invasion
ะฐะผะตัะธะบะฐะฝะบะฐ: recollections of a summer exchange programme of a Russian literature major—via Web Curios
universal soundtrack: Ze Frank (previously) on crickets, katydids and grasshoppers
sonderauftrag bayeaux: a fragment of the famed tapestry taken by the Nazi Ahnenerbe Society will be reunited when it goes on display in England
megastrike: the longest measured lightening bolt stretched near nine-hundred kilometres across Texas and Kansas
revelations of a wife: the longest novel you’ve never heard of, serialised over four decades with a readership of millions
indecent exposure: photographs of individuals being cited on Rockaway beach in New York City in 1946
Wednesday, 30 July 2025
8x8 (12. 618)
eight limes, no more: a list is a map, a compass, a prayer—via MetaFilter
ะบะปััะตะฒัะบะฐั ัะพะฟะบะฐ: volcanic eruption in Russia’s far east sets off earthquake and tsunami warnings
windrunner: turbine manufacturer—in defiance of Trump’s claim that windmills are killing us—building world’s largest aircraft (see also) to transport huge blades to remote wind-farms
foredone: useless etymology and some very cromulent words

twin primes: pairs that only are separated by an even number in between grow rarer as one looks at greater ranges of values but no one knows if they run out altogether
evrรณpusambandiรฐ: Iceland considering resuming accession talks with the supranational body
this guy is taking people from the spa: Trump reveals to press-pool that falling out with Epstein was over him stealing staff
an oral history of atlantis: a conversation about metafiction with author Ed Park



















