Lipton’s Journal/December 31, 1954/154: Difference between revisions

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Time as the sense of society. When we break out of time, when we are not regular in our habits, we have the exhilaration of fatigue or of being up all night. {{ins|''The Naked and the Dead'' (After the storm wrecked his tent—“Goldstein’s feet, the kind of merriment men know when events have ended in utter alienation.”)}}
Time as the sense of society. When we break out of time, when we are not regular in our habits, we have the exhilaration of fatigue or of being up all night. {{ins|''The Naked and the Dead'' (After the storm wrecked his tent—“Goldstein felt the kind of merriment men know when events have ended in utter alienation.”)}}


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[[Category:December 31, 1954]]
[[Category:December 31, 1954]]

Latest revision as of 13:27, 5 April 2021

Time as the sense of society. When we break out of time, when we are not regular in our habits, we have the exhilaration of fatigue or of being up all night. The Naked and the Dead (After the storm wrecked his tent—“Goldstein felt the kind of merriment men know when events have ended in utter alienation.”)