Showing posts with label jellyfish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jellyfish. Show all posts

14 Dec 2024

Reflections on a Jellyfish Cloud


Detail from a photo by Matthew Bettleheim
 
 
I. 
 
I'm not sure that I'd go so far as to describe virgae as my favourite meteorological phenomenon, but, like the American writer Ben Lerner, I'd certainly place these dry storms amongst the most fascinating of weather events [1] ...
 
 
II. 
 
In brief, a virga is a wispy streak of precipitation seen trailing from the underside of a cloud, but which evaporates - the technical term is sublimates - before reaching the ground as rain, due to compressional heating, thus failing to bridge the gap between heaven and earth. 
 
In other words, virgae are liminal events that occur betwixt and between; i.e., in that transitional zone that is neither here nor there; the realm from which jellyfish [2] and other entities that cannot easily be placed into a single category of existence have their being; the virtual space, in which everyday expectations are frustrated and anything seems possible. 
 
 
Notes
 
[1] See Ben Lerner, The Hatred of Poetry (Fitzcarraldo Editions, 2020), pp. 99-100. 
      I have twice published posts on this book: once in October 2016 - click here - and once in July 2021 - click here.
 
[2] Jellyfish are astonishing things; composed of 95% water and lacking most of the major organs associated with animal life - such as brains, bones, hearts, and lungs - they have been drifting through the world's oceans for hundreds of millions of years and some species may effectively be immortal.
      Interestingly, virga clouds are often referred to as jellyfish clouds, based on their appearance; tentacle-like structures trailing from a more substantial body.
 

6 Jul 2022

A Brief Comment on Boris Johnson and the Conservative Party


 
Boris Johnson is merely a gigantic jellyfish, wallowing in the shallows before invariably being washed up, exhausted, on the shores of defeat.* 
 
If those within the Conservative Party who continue to lend him their support only knew how disastrous their loyalty will prove to be, they would be appalled. Fortunately, they are too stupid, too reckless, or too corrupt to care.    
 
 
*Note: I am not the first to have noticed the uncanny resemblance between the UK Prime Minister and this gelatinous free-swimming marine animal. In an article in The Spectator written ten years ago, Isabel Hardman expressed her belief that Johnson was, in fact, a "particularly powerful blond jellyfish" capable of delivering a nasty sting to those who get in his way. 
      It's worth noting also that, in 2013, Johnson called opposition members of the London Assembly great supine protoplasmic invertebrate jellies, which is ironic, if nothing else.