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Illustration and Story By Sandshoe
A conceit of mine was once to establish great fame and riches on the strength of an iconic tale about a University professor with a rich inner life and loose grip on reality, obsessing with a search for a truth. As I doodled and coloured, he developed his anima and I acknowledge he lives in my head. Regardless I wondered how fond I could grow of an owner builder who chooses ivory for a grand design…
Once upon a time there was a professor of philosophy who lived in an ivory tower that he built himself, to keep himself warm in winter, cool in summer, dry when it rained, to stop the wind from blowing away his papers, the snow from melting in puddles around his feet. The professor’s mother, Abdhalla Rajhas, was a professor on some other once upon a time and his father, Katersha Rahjas-Heppleblume, was the son of the famous Castethene and Roga Heppleblume (the latter not so famous, but considered a very loyal and polite person). And as you can see they were a smart lot and it is no wonder the professor was smart too.
It was a beautiful ivory tower of course and The Tourists came to see it from miles around.
There was only one thing the professor would not let ANYBODY do. NOBODY was allowed to touch the professor’s ivory tower. NOBODY BUT NOBODY and the professor painted signs to tell EVERYBODY exactly that.
NOBODY BUT NOBODY is to touch my ivory tower he painted, again and again and again…and again. And put the signs outside, clustered like flowers in a flowerbed. Some real estate agents mistaking the signs for “For Sale” notices from a distance, being real estate agents did not hesitate to read them properly in their haste to be first up the path and were never heard of again…but were the only apparent casualties suspect of meeting disappearance by their own hands, goodness me. The signs were easy to read. They might just as well have read “Stand Clear”. The professor told the milko it was nice of her to suggest “Piss Off” would save paint and pondered over his cereal with dairy that morning. He converted to soy.
One day the professor built a fence around the edge of his property, to keep the agents out, the tourists on the verge. The professor found it necessary to adopt a disguise to collect his newspapers in the morning. People wanted the professor to stand beside his front gate and pose for photographs. Local dignitaries wanted to shake the professor’s hand-they said “because of your contributions” – which was reference the professor did not understand because he owned the tower, lock, stock and every barrel of vino.
The telephone rang a lot. Reporters from as far away as other once upon a times talked about ‘public accountability’ (among other things) which embarrassed the professor because he was a very shy and private person, someone called Bill said he always wanted to meet ‘a real nut’ (which made the professor feel quite angry when he thought about it), and pertinently every charity in the land wanted the professor to either give money or ask other people for it.
It was not before long the professor was thin (whereas he was fat), withdrew from his teaching duties at the nearby Institute of Philosophical Conundrums (which left some of the less gifted students in quandaries) and decided to pull up stakes. Where to go? What to do?
The professor (although not really a professor anymore) sold his ivory tower (for an undisclosed sum), packed his toothbrush (with other useful things like the left over plastic carrier for a carton of milk), settled his final soy milk and newspaper accounts, and went bush. No-one was more surprised than the professor’s mother. Poor Abdhalla naturally wondered where she’d gone wrong. Was it because her son was an only child born to parents of mixed beliefs who divorced in their son’s formative years yet with nary a concern for consulting the I Ching? Not that Professor Rahjas was all that poor speaking candidly about the relativities of the universe. And again speaking relatively single children in her once upon a time prospered (relatively ie measured alongside everything else given salient truth there is more of everything there ever will be).
He met a soul mate. The professor had all along dreamed of truest love, seen this enact out in fond imaginings, mooned through the window of his ivory tower when the sky clear, the stars out and bright, the moon at its finest silver. He wrote a proposal his lover come away with him to anywhere in a once upon a time they could find to call their own, signed it ‘Your neck is like an ivory tower’ and attributed it: Song of Solomon 7:4.
And the undisclosed sum of money from the sale of the professor’s ivory tower easily set the couple up in a mud brick home the professor really did build himself, to keep himself and his lover warm in winter, cool in summer, dry when it rained, to stop the wind from blowing away their papers, the snow from melting in puddles around their feet.
They lived happily ever after.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWrqtJTEmBk&feature=related
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‘Shoe, over at Crikey I developed some sort of minor fame as a person given to perpetually live off-topic. Having introduced this off-topic comment, I feel free to admire your achingly beautiful avatar. Gorgeous image, reminiscent of a girl I fell in love with once. It lasted two weeks – in the real world and so far – a lifetime in my memory.
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Can’t get into the comment box below.
I don’t really get this piece. My local university is made of mud. I’ve never seen a university which looks likes an ivory tower. The professors and staff I’ve known at universities all have open doors. When they are not there they are out in the bush or the country gathering information.
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Vivienne, my University was designed by the very famous Finnish architect, Alvar Aalto, I never thought it anything special, but we used to get heaps of foreign archtecture students visiting it. Originally it was meant only for teacher training, but 1966 it became University of Jyvaskyla.
shoe, I too had a little bit trouble with your story, I took it as a fairy tale, will read it more carefully.. 🙂
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I will look for your University’s architect online and admire his fame, helvi. Interesting how we have seen the status of these educational institutions formalised to properly portray in a number of cases the relative value of them originally to Universities. Growing up I was puzzled about my older cousins having qualifications in metallurgy, but they always said they had never been to University. Yes, helvi it’s a once upon a time… a fairy tale.
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Doesn’t it feel like a lifetime, Emmjay. The rapture of love and the once of it, reminiscing.
I am 29 in this photo (33 years gone) and the appearance of a tooth missing is digital mischief because it is cut from a group photo and/or maybe caused by a smudge on the photograph. When I looked recently through the possible avatars for a change of presentation, I stopped on this image intrigued by its containment. Curious how we review what a photo of ourselves means to us or seems. Light of experience. I saw it is a beautiful image communicating something special about an event, the young woman, situation, the group… Taken out of context it is a Mona Lisa I think. I appreciate, no, admire, love the feedback, Emmjay.
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Hello Vivienne, how lucky you are to have a local university and it sounds lovely. I visited my friend where she was working at the Central Queensland University campus in Rockhampton. It has a beautiful garden. I took a hundred photos plus.
Thank you for reading my story Viv. Tho it’s not about a University, but the eccentricity of an individual professor whose skills and talent were such, enterprise, he attracted fame/notoriety. He built a tower inlaid with ivory tiles. Imagine it. Stupendous achievement regardless tough on the elephants.
The professor was lonely all along in his once upon a time where he built his tower.
Maybe our scholar of the classics, astyages, pretty please, may be able to provide some discussion regards the meanings of ‘ivory tower’ and ‘your neck is like an ivory tower’ from the Song of Solomon. I did hope for it having become intrigued with the adoption we have made of the term ivory tower to suggest someone is in the clouds or removed from reality.
Going bush can mean/imply that someone goes ‘feral’. Yes, where I grew up on the grounds of an agricultural institution the environment was peopled with visiting professors of one sort or another observing and collecting in the literal bush and you recall that. Now universities are spread around countrysides physically and by long distance learning, how different our societal scenery is from view of location and as well the identity of academic pursuit. So many natural scientists numbers of them are unemployed.
My personal thesis is someone must have a strong support team to cope sometimes when you are a smart academic and as well in the public eye. But in any case, the story hasn’t worked for you Viv. Thank you for your strong interest. That is amazing. I woud like to be a student at that university where you live.
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My close family is full of academics but they are all doers. Thanks for the thanks.
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The idea grew out of a kernel supplied me by a prisoner who told me he wrote letters out of an imaginative world as if he lived in a number of exotic locations including captive in a tower, and a correspondent who didn’t know he was in prison (although the prisoner had supposed he did know) wrote to all their mutual friends out of concern for his sanity. The prisoner was a high profile personality. He supposed everybody knew he was literally in prison.
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My story is only a fairy tale that grew out of thinking about an ivory tower being a beautiful thing. What this hapless or heroic professor who built one did or didn’t do as an academic can only be guessed at, so often the case with doctorates without intimate knowledge of the study pursued. It’s always tickled my fancy there is an implicit assumption once an academic reaches a certain level that everybody who reaches that level is the same. There are doers and non-doers I guess, although I’m not sure what non-doers achieve to win their colours. Therein is a conundrum.
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Lovely vids and music from Lehan. Thank you, Lehan. Geat gifts. 🙂
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You’re very welcome Shoe
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A lovely story ‘Shoe… thank you!
🙂
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I thought you might like it asty. It’s lovely that you do. Thank you.
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I ‘spect it’s ’cause I’ve known an ivory tower or two… and more than one or two professors who lived in ’em… I also know of at least one who escaped the ivory tower but who was then obliged to dispense with all his magic powers and to live in the real world as a mere mortal; a fate not too dissimilar to that of Tantalus; yet there are some who say Tantalus was a lucky man… 😉
I think these two music vids are the best choice of music to date from Lehan… getting back to a decade I can understand…
🙂
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Inspired by barrels of vino. 🙂
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Weren’t we all?
🙂
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On top of the world. 🙂
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