tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2629301231907528990.post819826577214484259..comments2024-03-26T18:01:57.609+00:00Comments on Inky Fool: Spengler and the Christmas TreeM.H. Forsythhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01464964455944509750noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2629301231907528990.post-48889742355314937682017-01-09T17:26:33.658+00:002017-01-09T17:26:33.658+00:00As an utter history and mythology junkie, I'm ...As an utter history and mythology junkie, I'm intrigued. Would you say the ideas you attribute to Spengler would be better discovered through reading the Decline of the West or Man and Technics? DancingBookwormhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09633584502834874715noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2629301231907528990.post-29583134148350283332016-12-30T18:04:21.562+00:002016-12-30T18:04:21.562+00:00Hello - I very much enjoyed your Christmas Cornuco...Hello - I very much enjoyed your Christmas Cornucopia and drove everyone mad on Christmas Day spouting facts about Christmas trees, calendars and everything else. "A Visit from St Nicholas" is one of my favourite poems but for very long boring reasons I am too embarrassed to go into, I did some research into it and it appears that (according to the god that is Wiki) it may have been written by Henry Livingston not Clement Clarke Moore. You didn't mention this in your book and I wondered if you had heard or researched this? Thanks!The Wouldbegoodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04173186869050077262noreply@blogger.com