(I showed this to a colleague, and he showed me his drawing of a Wordsworth poem. And a Blake poem. From our drawings, it's quite obvious why we're not teaching art.)
I like the stick figure crucifixion. Have you seen the Lego bible thing? It's GREAT!
I guess I just think of hats as travel-ish somehow? I didn't think of it as a bowler, but just a hat... hmmmm. Maybe it's Professor Jones! Yeah, and there's a hidden secret to the trunkless legs?
Ozymandias?
ReplyDeleteI drew a stick-figure crucifixion last week. I wonder whether any of the course evals will accuse me of blasphemy...
I got it too! Although I never imagined the traveler in Ozymandias wearing a bowler hat :)
ReplyDelete(Seriously, though: he's from an 'ancient land'. Shouldn't he be wearing mysterious robes or something?)
Yay you guys! You win internet kudus!
ReplyDeleteI like the stick figure crucifixion. Have you seen the Lego bible thing? It's GREAT!
I guess I just think of hats as travel-ish somehow? I didn't think of it as a bowler, but just a hat... hmmmm. Maybe it's Professor Jones! Yeah, and there's a hidden secret to the trunkless legs?
ps. He IS wearing mysterious robes! It's just hard to tell on a stick figure! You have to use your imagination :)
ReplyDeleteNot to be pathetic...well, actually, to be pathetic, nut I can't resist:
ReplyDeleteI got it.
Which is as sad as anything that's ever happened on a playground.
We need to embrace our nerdliness! This playground is all about the pleasures of learning and reading and fun!
ReplyDeleteExtra credit: find the poem itself in a public space in Joliet, Illinois.
ReplyDeleteThe robes are so mysterious that they are invisible! That's the mystery!
ReplyDelete