Message from @spotonlevel

Discord ID: 620363838696587313


2019-09-08 20:36:51 UTC  

Aww no more games

2019-09-08 20:39:04 UTC  

hello...

2019-09-08 20:39:21 UTC  

Do u guys use bath bombs?

2019-09-08 20:40:04 UTC  

not like I take bath

2019-09-08 20:41:29 UTC  

My favorite bath bomb is the toaster

2019-09-08 20:41:44 UTC  

It’s rlly electrifying

2019-09-08 20:41:57 UTC  

puns...

2019-09-08 20:51:33 UTC  

How did I not know u existed

2019-09-08 20:57:23 UTC  

>TVR

2019-09-08 20:57:30 UTC  

2019-09-08 20:57:46 UTC  

Romanian supremacy

2019-09-08 20:58:26 UTC  

The Lark Ascending
Poem
The Lark Ascending is a poem of 122 lines by the English poet George Meredith about the song of the skylark. Siegfried Sassoon called it matchless of its kind, "a sustained lyric which never for a moment falls short of the effect aimed at, soars up and up with the song it imitates, and unites inspired spontaneity with a demonstration of effortless technical ingenuity... one has only to read the poem a few times to become aware of its perfection".

2019-09-08 20:58:55 UTC  

The Lark Ascending, tone poem by English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, first performed in London on June 14, 1921. The piece was scored for solo violin and piano in 1914 and revised by the composer for solo violin and orchestra in 1920.

Vaughan Williams composed The Lark Ascending in 1914, in the early days of World War I, when a pastoral scene of a singing bird on the wing seemed far removed from reality. The war so occupied public attention that the premiere of The Lark Ascending was delayed seven years, until the violinist Marie Hall, for whom the piece had been written, gave the first performance of the orchestral version.

2019-09-08 20:59:13 UTC  

Vaughan Williams supplements the title’s image of a bird ascending skyward by prefacing the score with excerpts from the George Meredith poem that served as his inspiration:

He rises and begins to round,
He drops the silver chain of sound,
Of many links without a break,
In chirrup, whistle, slur and shake…


For singing till his heaven fills,
’Tis love of earth that he instils,
And ever winging up and up,
Our valley is his golden cup,
And he the wine which overflows
To lift us with him as he goes…


Till lost on his aërial rings
In light, and then the fancy sings.


Vaughan Williams’s The Lark Ascending is a gentle, introspective work. The solo violin flutters and soars, evoking the lark of Meredith’s poem. The winds and supporting strings float peacefully beneath the solo part in long and languid lines.

2019-09-08 21:15:32 UTC  

@Jesusistheonlyway Soil liquefaction, also called earthquake liquefaction, ground failure or loss of strength that causes otherwise solid soil to behave temporarily as a viscous liquid. The phenomenon occurs in water-saturated unconsolidated soils affected by seismic S waves (secondary waves), which cause ground vibrations during earthquakes. Although earthquake shock is the best known cause of liquefaction, certain construction practices, including blasting and soil compaction and vibroflotation (which uses a vibrating probe to change the grain structure of the surrounding soil), produce this phenomenon intentionally. Poorly drained fine-grained soils such as sandy, silty, and gravelly soils are the most susceptible to liquefaction.

Granular soils are made up of a mix of soil and pore spaces. When earthquake shock occurs in waterlogged soils, the water-filled pore spaces collapse, which decreases the overall volume of the soil. This process increases the water pressure between individual soil grains, and the grains can then move freely in the watery matrix. This substantially lowers the soil’s resistance to shear stress and causes the mass of soil to take on the characteristics of a liquid. In its liquefied state, soil deforms easily, and heavy objects such as structures can be damaged from the sudden loss of support from below.

2019-09-08 21:16:33 UTC  

Can u guys do this at the <#538929818834698260> room

2019-09-08 21:16:53 UTC  

nawp

2019-09-08 21:27:46 UTC  

@Citizen Z I have a question

2019-09-08 21:28:13 UTC  

hes not online rn

2019-09-08 21:28:17 UTC  

Oh lol

2019-09-08 21:37:44 UTC  
2019-09-08 21:38:57 UTC  

Not much you ?

2019-09-08 21:46:31 UTC  

l2

2019-09-08 21:46:34 UTC  

L2

2019-09-08 21:52:06 UTC  

!mute @MEE6

2019-09-08 21:52:07 UTC  

2019-09-08 21:53:53 UTC  

Spam R1

2019-09-08 21:53:58 UTC  

There was a better bot at some point

2019-09-08 21:54:06 UTC  

Called the yeti

2019-09-08 21:54:20 UTC  

It was a good bot

2019-09-08 21:54:26 UTC  

Why was I muted