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"Ralph" by D.W.

Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 8:23 pm
by Dale
Large version of my new avatar.

Image

Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 9:50 pm
by scarhand
very nice!!! (is that a good likeness?)

Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 10:08 pm
by djm
Who's it supposed to be, and why do you want people to vomit?

djm

Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 10:26 pm
by Dale
djm wrote:Who's it supposed to be, and why do you want people to vomit?

djm
It's Ralph Chaplin.

I want people to vomit to cleanse the impurities from their systems.

Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 11:20 pm
by Walden
DaleWisely wrote:I want people to vomit to cleanse the impurities from their systems.
It's quicker than the sweat lodge.

Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 11:55 pm
by Cynth
Seems like quite a nice piece. The wiping off of the paint-like layers to expose the image is an interesting idea. I don't know if that is what is happening, but it's how it appears to me. Almost a trompe l'oeil effect with obvious computer work---3 images, fencing. It does set up a sort of weird conflict in my perceptions or something. I read a bit about Ralph Chaplin. I had not heard of him before. It seemed like a sort of strange, sort of sad tale---I guess what he saw when he was a child and then his disillusionment later on. But he may not have been sad at all.

I do not understand these bizarre references to vomiting.

Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2005 9:26 am
by Tyghress
http://washingtonhistory.org/wshs/colum ... 201-a1.htm

(edited to remove a phrase that might best go in another forum)

Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2005 6:42 pm
by scottielvr
Cynth wrote:I do not understand these bizarre references to vomiting.
ralph
PRONUNCIATION: rlf
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: ralphed, ralph·ing, ralphs
Slang To vomit.
ETYMOLOGY: Imitative use of the personal name Ralph.

They're such children, sometimes. <sigh>

:wink:

Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2005 7:18 pm
by Denny
djm wrote:Who's it supposed to be, and why do you want people to vomit?

djm
scottielvr wrote:
Cynth wrote:I do not understand these bizarre references to vomiting.
ralph
PRONUNCIATION: rlf
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: ralphed, ralph·ing, ralphs
Slang To vomit.
ETYMOLOGY: Imitative use of the personal name Ralph.

They're such children, sometimes. <sigh>

:wink:
That's why we love him...
for his childlike sense of humour, eh?

:lol:

Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2005 7:32 pm
by Cynth
scottielvr wrote:
Cynth wrote:I do not understand these bizarre references to vomiting.
ralph
PRONUNCIATION: rlf
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: ralphed, ralph·ing, ralphs
Slang To vomit.
ETYMOLOGY: Imitative use of the personal name Ralph.

They're such children, sometimes. <sigh>

:wink:
*sigh* I have actually heard that word used that way quite a few times. I don't seem to be able to keep more than one meaning in my head at a time :lol: . Thank you!

Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2005 7:48 pm
by jim stone
That's quite a story. It's interesting to see what happened to this guy.

In 1941 he wrote, "In our young foolishness some of us thought the Bolshevik revolution marked the birth of a free society. Instead, it started a monstrous reversion to the world's oldest form of tyranny. Free government, free labor and free enterprise in the American sense-they meant little to us until we saw them being consigned to destruction...."

Chaplin continued to serve his community and fight for workers rights, but he also joined the Sons of the American Revolution, began attending church, and often found himself shunned by former friends who saw him as a "red baiter." Yet, his views were complicated:

The communists have one thing in common with the old IWW-to both of them the labor movement was a Cause. To the less imaginative bosses of the AFL it was merely a business. Gompers gave the American labor movement a body. It took Haywood and Debs to give it a social conscience.
A low point in Chaplin's crusade against communist infiltration of labor occurred one day when he found himself drowned out by crowds expressing their dissatisfaction with his ideas by singing loud choruses of "Solidarity Forever." They had no idea he had written it.

Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2005 8:42 pm
by djm
scottielvr wrote:ralph
PRONUNCIATION: rlf
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: ralphed, ralph·ing, ralphs
Slang To vomit.
ETYMOLOGY: Imitative use of the personal name Ralph.

They're such children, sometimes. <sigh>
Something about peeing on the mat.

(ees ma chobe, monn)

djm

Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 3:32 am
by Lambchop
djm wrote:
scottielvr wrote:ralph
PRONUNCIATION: rlf
INTRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: ralphed, ralph·ing, ralphs
Slang To vomit.
ETYMOLOGY: Imitative use of the personal name Ralph.

They're such children, sometimes. <sigh>
Something about peeing on the mat.

(ees ma chobe, monn)

djm
Sigh. I had it figured out up to the end of Scottie's bit.

Deej lost me again. Can't even pronounce what he wrote . . . must be Canadian.

Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 8:59 am
by djm
The Lambchop Clarification file:

ralph => peeing on the mat => onomatopoeia => the formation of words by imitating sounds

ees ma chobe, monn => it is my lot in life to perform this duty, sir

(just wait till we get to "swizzle stick" :o )

djm

Posted: Wed Nov 09, 2005 12:41 pm
by carrie
Dale, just curious, if you don't mind telling--what in particular about Chaplin inspired you to do this very interesting and provocative "portrait"?

Carol