To be clear, I don't think the coffin is at all related to Richard or to the mysterious woman. Never really did.
To Explain:
There is a book that was assigned to most people my age in the States at some point, called the Robber Bridegroom by Eudora Welty. Southern author, quite good. Anyway. About few chapters into the book, this sentence appears.
"He followed along
up the Natchez Trace, keeping his eye out for
the dress, and once he thought he saw it floating
on the creek, but it was only the lily pads, and
once he thought he saw it flying in the sky, but
then he heard a distant moo, and it was only the
old flying cow of Mobile going by."
That's right. Flying cow of Mobile (which is in Alabama by the way). Now this cow never appears again in the story, and is bizarre even by the standards of the Eudora Welty. It has nothing to do with the narrated events. Yet there it sits. Flies. Whatever. In all it's avian/bovine glory.
Now for the life of me I can't tell you what happened in the book after this sentence, because it caused a traffic accident in my head. I only even read the rest of the book to find out more about this flying cow, only to be disappointed.
The coffin is my flying cow from Mobile. I know it has nothing to do with the events under discussion, but it caused a five car pileup in my head. For no apparent reason, I am stuck on the mystery of the possibly empty coffin.
To Explain:
There is a book that was assigned to most people my age in the States at some point, called the Robber Bridegroom by Eudora Welty. Southern author, quite good. Anyway. About few chapters into the book, this sentence appears.
"He followed along
up the Natchez Trace, keeping his eye out for
the dress, and once he thought he saw it floating
on the creek, but it was only the lily pads, and
once he thought he saw it flying in the sky, but
then he heard a distant moo, and it was only the
old flying cow of Mobile going by."
That's right. Flying cow of Mobile (which is in Alabama by the way). Now this cow never appears again in the story, and is bizarre even by the standards of the Eudora Welty. It has nothing to do with the narrated events. Yet there it sits. Flies. Whatever. In all it's avian/bovine glory.
Now for the life of me I can't tell you what happened in the book after this sentence, because it caused a traffic accident in my head. I only even read the rest of the book to find out more about this flying cow, only to be disappointed.
The coffin is my flying cow from Mobile. I know it has nothing to do with the events under discussion, but it caused a five car pileup in my head. For no apparent reason, I am stuck on the mystery of the possibly empty coffin.
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