"Specimens of cases, specimens of scenes or views (scenes, shows, or sights). Sometimes the specimens are in cases, in which coexistent parts are separated by intervals of space ... and sometimes they are specimens of views, in which the successive phases of a movement are separated by intervals of time ... In both instances, the law is that of fragmentation. The fragments are grains, "granulations". Selecting singular cases and minor scenes is more important than any consideration of the whole. It is in the fragments that the hidden background appears, be it celestial or demonic."
A description of the Joseph Cornell's boxes?
In fact, Deleuze on Whitman.
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Poem
o so late ocelot oscillate o soleil
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Poem
o zoo o so ozu owes who
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Poem
thin in the theremin therein
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I think I am starting a cold.
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