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Arcadia, Cambridge, Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Coming Up for Air, Eden, First World War, George Orwell, Gog Magog Hills, JM Barrie, Kenneth Grahame, music, Nick Drake, paganism, Peter Pan, Pink Floyd, Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Syd Barrett, William Blake, Wind in the Willows
Arcadia, Cambridge, Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Coming Up for Air, Eden, First World War, George Orwell, Gog Magog Hills, JM Barrie, Kenneth Grahame, music, Nick Drake, paganism, Peter Pan, Pink Floyd, Piper at the Gates of Dawn, Syd Barrett, William Blake, Wind in the Willows
2014-10-24
2018-03-19
Oracle the Fourth: From the Head of a Mouse
Please return to Cambridge, to the Fitzwilliam Museum, with your smartphone (follow the directions as described at the
start of my first post), but instead of entering the museum, walk north along Trumpington Street, in or out of the gutter,
the choice is yours. When you reach Downing Street on your right, walk down it until you reach the Museum of Archaeology
and Anthropology entrance, also on your right. On the ground floor gallery of the Museum make your way to another large
Roman stone sarcophagus at the left side of the room. It contains the skeleton of an old woman, with a shrew and a mouse
who had been buried with her, and whose last meal was the woman’s anklebone, which is visibly gnawed.
Oracle the Fourth will issue from this, object 1952.445.A-C.
Please concentrate your gaze on the skull of the mouse, on the far right of the top row of bone fragments presented on
the little piece of card inside the coffin. Focus on the end of its snout where the mouth would have been. Then ask it a
question, any question, as long as you hope the answer to it will help you to face life itself. On your phone-device,
press the Play arrow on the audio file below. The mouse skull snout, if you look closely enough, and if you go along with
my playful fancy, will utter its oraculations, which will make their way through your headphones into your head.