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fcuks to be given in literature
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| Jon_Snow |
| Last night I was watching Der Ring des Nibelugen, I was struck by how much Token had lifted. I don't ever recall him giving credit or acknowledgement. I don't expect authors reinvent the wheel but it seems dochey to deny significant borrowing. |
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| Halcyon+On+On |
| quote: | Originally posted by Jon_Snow
Token |
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| itsamemario |
| It's spelled douchey. |
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| idoru |
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| Jon_Snow |
:stongue:
Ironically that's what I'm doing now. |
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| infiniteJEST |
| Token enjoys Der Ring des Nibelugen, as presented by Tyler Perry. |
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| RAVElucion |
| ...wtf are you guys talking about? |
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| idoru |
| quote: | Originally posted by RAVElucion
...wtf are you guys talking about? |
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| EddieZilker |
| Even Brahms gave credit for inspiration to Handle. |
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| Ian |
| I was able to sorta understand the front page of Marca in ES the other day. I felt good, until I realised Iniesta was out for 3 games & had to change my CL dream team. |
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| Spam |
Ripped from Wiki:
| quote: | | J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy novel The Lord of the Rings (1937-1949) shares elements with Der Ring des Nibelungen; however, Tolkien himself denied that he had been inspired by Wagner's work, saying that "Both rings were round, and there the resemblance ceases." Some similarities arise because Tolkien and Wagner both drew upon the same source material for inspiration, including the Völsungasaga and the Poetic Edda. However, several researchers posit Tolkien was also indebted to Wagner for some of the latter's original concepts, such as the ring giving its owner mastery of the world, the ring's inherently evil nature, its consequent corrupting influence upon the minds and wills of its possessors, and the necessity for its destruction so that the world can be redeemed. |
Token indeed. |
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| idoru |
| quote: | Originally posted by EddieZilker
Even Brahms gave credit for inspiration to Handle. |
:stongue: |
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