ABSTRACT

On Whit Friday, 26 May, the circle appears again. This time (Fig. 37) there are four of them, three turned into faces, like a child’s first drawing of a face, but one of them looks like a toothed mouth, and there are also four sets of features of a face without any boundary at all. I note that the toothedmouth circle can also be seen in another way, for the curve which divides the circle, which I had first seen as a grinning mouth, can also be seen as turning the bottom half of the circle into a crescent moon, which is now containing the smaller circle within its horns, almost as if trying to swallow it. I note that the way I read the drawing alternates between it being the crescent moon trying to swallow a lesser moon, and the primitive kind of face with its grinning mouth and teeth.