Paul Schütze
(01 May 1958 - )
Male Person - London
Works (114)
Composed
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First Prologue.
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The dial is only visible by starlight.
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Every day at noon the sun shines through these apertures for the space of about a minute.
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The image of the sun indicates the sun's position as it passes through a hole in the concurve surface.
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There is a brass pointer fitted with sights and pivoted to the centre of the circle by which altitude observations are made.
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The chamber is no longer accessible to visitors.
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Access to any part of the engine is by steps which offer vantage points for various readings.
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Suspended in the hum of history.
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Originally cross wires stretched across each hemisphere, East to West and North to South.
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The ramped stair to the North of the two drums vanishes at thirty-two feet.
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These steps enable the observer to see all aspects of the brass calibration below.
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There is a huge calibrated sundial on each of its sides.
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This chamber is filled with garden tools and broken furniture.
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The mosaic of starlight slips back like the lid of an opening eye.
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This engine is primarily a calculator, though altitudes may be observed using the sighting bar fitted to the back.
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It is inscribed with concentric circles, at the centre of which lies a pointer.
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The calibrated parts are raised on three-foot pillars.
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Another slope with stars for the reading of figures.
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This engine is now only visible in twilight.
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Here is an immense brass circle suspended vertically from stone supports.
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Two hemispheres representing the sphere of heaven comprise the two halves of this engine.
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This wall describes accurately the North/South meridian.
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The pink masonry charges the twilight with a faint sound.
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The rim of each hemisphere is a horizon divided into degrees and minutes.
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Here is a room to divide the sun like an orange.
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Sighting bars were placed in the slots within the chamber, but none remain now.
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The sound of insects here studs the night like a thousand fizzing stars.
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Access by observers to each engine is gained by an imperfection which differs from one to another.
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These structures are made in receipt of starlight.
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Seven of the eight rings indicate signs.
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Third Memory.
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Fourth Memory.
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I Have Observed And Measured For Seven Years
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I have observed and measured for seven years.
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Fifth Memory.
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There are four of these arcs, two in each chamber.
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These are instruments fuelled by shadow, and engines propelled by the sliding of the skies.
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The stars are ranged across the inner shell of a vast hollow sphere in which hung the earth.
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There are pillars at the centre of each circular wall each open to the sky.
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First Memory.
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The sky has shaped this place.
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Here I find a central iron pole with hooks facing to the North, South, East and West.
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A shadow is cast to the West before noon.
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The shadow can fall in the vacant sector of a drum.
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Days and nights are measured here, and in the measuring seem longer, suspended somehow.
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The whole brass circle can be revolved around its vertical diameter so that altitude observations can be taken of any object at any time.
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A lofty but narrow chamber is contrived in the thickness of the walls and access is gained from a door opening from the masonry platform on which the engine stands.
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A further series of steps is only visible during the vernal equinox.
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Hold the machine in the vertical plane.
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Visible portions of the celestial sphere are represented by this map which has a movable elliptic which pivots at the point representing the pole.
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To move through these structures is to set them in motion.
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The altitude of the body observed is given while observing the vertically hanging bar through the two brass rings.
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A shadow is cast to the East after noon.
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These calibrations are no longer clearly visible.
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Another flight of observation steps and the sense of quiet rotation as I ascend.
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I study the vaults of a shell in which we float.
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Twenty-seven degrees, thirty-seven seconds.
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The roofs of the enclosed drums are implied by shadows.
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The floor and walls are calibrated to read altitude and azimuth.
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These are the cool engines of celestial map-making.
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Here is the Supreme Engine.
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The sun seen through the pair of brass rings is used by the bar to indicate the time from sunrise until sunrise.
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A pointer indicates on three arms: West, North and East.
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Here was the Supreme Engine.
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The engine of amplitude has a function which is no longer known.
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This engine is a rectangular brass plate.
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Second Prologue.
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Once complete engine is formed by two differently incomplete parts which combined provide total reference.
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At one moment in the year the sun shines through a hole in the wall on to a calibrated arc.
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The stone dish is slotted with figures and shadow.
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The positions and altitudes of heavenly bodies maybe gauged with this engine.
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Some steps ascend past markings to a platform.
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The central pillars are five feet three inches in diameter.
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On the East face are inscribed two quadrants of twenty-feet radius.
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The plants will steal this engine when we have gone.
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The shadow is cast North/South at noon by an iron pin.
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A shadow is cast to the East after noon.
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These steps are worn to a ramp and lead nowhere.
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All the lead calibrations are warm to the touch.
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It is only necessary to engrave a scale of the tangents along the rim to obtain a direct reading of the declination.
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Second Memory.
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The lead calibrations are poisonous to the touch.
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This is the North pointer engine.
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All the gardens will concur. Here is the mixed engine.
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I will build other gardens, other engines.
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And the light falls on the circular arcs.
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Beneath this circle is an arc of masonry steps for the convenience of observers.
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Threads can be pegged to the centre of each quadrant and semicircle to enable observation.
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Here is a huge vertical right-angled triangle made of stone.
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These arcs are also accessible by numerous flights of stairs.
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We are closer to the sun now.
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On the West face is described a semicircle of nineteen-feet, ten-inch radius.
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Into this chamber no ray of light can find its way except through two small squares high in the South wall.
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The movement of the engines produces a scent.
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Sixth Memory.
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Pointing towards the pole an iron pin is fixed at right angles to the centre of a dial.
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Green Evil
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Sight Wave Relock
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One Armed Sun Ascending
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The Luxury of Horns
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900 Ghosts
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The Alteration
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Eliptical Twilight
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Falling Bodies Alight
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Codex Bast
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Entropic Appetites
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2 Air
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Dead Heart
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Some of the calibrations are now submerged beneath the ground and cannot be read.
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This room is a lidless drum.
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Seventh Memory.
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Near the bottom of the wall facing the South side of the eastern hemisphere there is a hole.
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There are arcs made of marble which are calibrated with inlaid lead in degrees and minutes.
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I have seen charts sent from Portugal but they are flawed and full of error.