Doesn't Jean say she was in a white room or white crown before she comes to and says "Hank" Couldn't she have been with Angels...tying into Austens run with the demons and Angels. "I fear this has gone beyond..." Xavier just the NXM title. And if Beast says he's been around for a long time it has been argued Phoenix has always been there as well. Devil/God what if Jean is to be God and the Beast the Beast literally out of Revelations. Also in the Bible the world is supposed to end by fire and be judged by a gaze from Christ and men will damn themselves. Reminds of Jean and her looking into Emma or allowing Bishop to look into her or asking if Charles was ready to be judged, thats what I got from that issue with the spoons when he approached the fire. Jean cannot lie.

Quote:
"Sublime" refers to an aesthetic value in which the primary factor is the presence or suggestion of transcendent vastness or greatness, as of power, heroism, extent in space or time. It differs from greatness or grandeur in that these are as such capable of being completely grasped or measured. By contrast, the sublime, while in one aspect apprehended and grasped as a whole, is felt as transcending our normal standards of measurement or achievement. Two elements are emphasized in varying degree by different writers, and probably varying in different observers: (1) a certain baffling of our faculty with feeling of limitation akin to awe and veneration; (2) a stimulation of our abilities and elevation of the self in sympathy with its object.

The element of magnitude in beauty was noted by Aristotle, and given by him a prominent place in tragedy. But the earliest extant determination of the sublime as a distinct conception is in the treatise ascribed to Longinus, but now supposed to be of earlier date (first century C.E.). In modern philosophy, it was given special prominence by Edmund Burke in his Essay on the Sublime and Beautiful (1756) and Henry Home in his Elements of Criticism who sought a psychological and physiological explanation. According to Burke, it is caused by a "mode of terror or pain," and is contrasted with the beautiful (rather than being part of the beautiful). Kant also distinguished it as a separate category form beauty, making it apply properly only to the mind, not to the object, and giving it a peculiar moral effect in opposing "the interests of sense." He distinguished a mathematical sublime of extension in space or time, and a dynamic of power. Most subsequent writers on aesthetics tend to bring the sublime within the beautiful in the broader sense insofar as its aesthetic quality is closely related to that of beauty.




Did anyone catch that part about Math/Henry and Beuty dynamic Power/Jean

Quote:
sublime [sə'blam]
adjective
1 of high moral, aesthetic, intellectual, or spiritual value; noble; exalted

2 inspiring deep veneration, awe, or uplifting emotion because of its beauty, nobility, grandeur, or immensity

3 unparalleled; supreme
example: a sublime compliment

4 (poetic)
of proud bearing or aspect

5 (archaic)
raised up
noun
the sublime
6 something that is sublime

7 the ultimate degree or perfect example
example: the sublime of folly
verb
8 [transitive] to make higher or purer

9 to change or cause to change directly from a solid to a vapour or gas without first melting
example: to sublime iodine
example: many mercury salts sublime when heated

10 to undergo or cause to undergo this process followed by a reverse change directly from a vapour to a solid
example: to sublime iodine onto glass



I have to go to class but I think you can see where I'm headed with this, write more later unless someone else is thinking the same:)
Void

its your love affair
on a quiet sunday afternoon
and your speedy pills
you should know im into you
why would you not try to be?
why would you not try to see?




its about your blue hair
i want to stay the night with you
you got the beamiest face
car turns right im into you
right from wrong is not quite seen
right from wrong is it everything?

Howie Day