- published: 25 May 2015
- views: 13584
A Green Man Sculpture is a sculpture, or other representation of a face surrounded by or made from leaves. Branches or vines may sprout from the nose, mouth, nostrils or other parts of the face and these shoots may bear flowers or fruit. Commonly used as a decorative architectural ornament, Green Men are frequently found in carvings on both secular and ecclesiastical buildings. "The Green Man" is also a popular name for English public houses and various interpretations of the name appear on inn signs, which sometimes show a full figure rather than just the head.
The Green Man motif has many variations. Found in many cultures from many ages around the world, the Green Man is often related to natural vegetative deities. It is primarily interpreted as a symbol of rebirth, representing the cycle of growth each spring. Some speculate that the mythology of the Green Man developed independently in the traditions of separate ancient cultures and evolved into the wide variety of examples found throughout history.
Actors: Annie Brunson (composer), James F. Murray Jr. (actor), James F. Murray Jr. (miscellaneous crew), Gerardo Puglia (producer), Fred Pomerleau (actor), Fred Pomerleau (miscellaneous crew), Mark Bonocore (writer), Mark Bonocore (director), Amber Gaynor (miscellaneous crew), Mark Bonocore (producer), Colleen Danser (miscellaneous crew), Dan Kaminski (miscellaneous crew), David Deneen (producer), Dan Kaminski (actor), Leon Sanginiti (editor),
Plot: Drawing from ancient Celtic myth and medieval Arthurian romance, 'The Fay' is a tale of sacrificial love, as a young knight is wounded in battle, only to be rescued by the magical arts of a beautiful nymph, who saves his life but then refuses to let him go. Like a pre-Raphaelite painting come to life, 'The Fay' has almost no dialog, but relies on lush cinematography, rich production design, and a lyrical score to present a timeless fable about the joy, the power, and the pain of love.
Genres: Drama, Fantasy, Romance, Short,Actors: Pauline Hume (miscellaneous crew), John Boorman (actor), John Hurt (actor), Janet McTeer (actress), Janet McTeer (actress), Janet McTeer (actress), John Boorman (writer), John Boorman (director), Charley Boorman (actor), Kieran Corrigan (producer), Ron Davis (editor),
Genres: Drama, Short,Actors: Emile Chautard (director), Jean Del Val (actor), Lorin Raker (actor), Lorin Raker (actor), Ethel Grey Terry (actress), Emile Chautard (producer), Emile Chautard (writer), Gaston Leroux (writer), Hugo Riesenfeld (composer), George Cowl (actor), Louis R. Grisel (actor), William Walcott (actor), Edmund Elton (actor), W.H. Burton (actor), Henry S. Koser (actor),
Genres: Mystery,
This is the Green Man’s Tunnel in South Park Township, Pennsylvania. Locals believe that a man with no face used to walk through this tunnel in the middle of the night. As crazy as it sounds, it is a true story. A severely disfigured man called Raymond Robinson lived about 50 miles from here and people called him Charlie-no-face or the Green Man. As you can see this tunnel is now used to store rock salt, but if you look at these graffiti on the walls, there is more than one which talks about the Green Man. So what really happened to Raymond’s face? It turns out that in 1919 when he was barely 8 years old, he climbed up an electric pole and was struck by a live wire. Unfortunately he touched an extremely high voltage of 22,000 Volts which burnt off his entire face and he lost both of his ...
Spring won't come, the need of strife To struggle to be freed from hard ground The evening mists that creep and crawl Will drench me in dew and so drown I'm the green man The green man Sol in prime sweet summertime Casts shadows of doubt on my face A midday sun, it's caustic hues Refracting within the still lake Autumn in her flaming dress Of orange, brown, gold fallen leaves My mistress of the frigid night I worship, pray to on my knees Winter's breath of filthy snow Befrosted paths to the unknown Have my lips turned true purple? Life is coming to an end So says me, me wiccan friend Nature coming full circle I'm the green man The green man
In South Park, Pennsylvania, there is a railroad tunnel haunted by a man known as "The Green Man". Merry Christmas guys!!!! I hope Santa is really good to you this year!!! :) SUBSCRIBE!! New videos Tuesday and Friday!! FOLLOW ME!!! http://facebook.com/Brittyy44 http://twitter.com/Brittyy44 http://instagram.com/Brittyy44 BRITTYY44 MERCHANDISE!! http://customizedgirl.com/s/Brittyy44 Music: Kevin Macleod http://incompetech.com
Words and Music by Martin Donnelly, from his CD Stone and Light. Copyright 1995 Please visit www.martindonnellymusic.co.uk
The Green Man is a TV series in three parts which aired in 1990. It is an adaptation from a book, with the same title, written in 1969 by the British author Kingsley Amis Stars: Albert Finney, Linda Marlowe, Sarah Berger and Michael Hordern See playlist for details
Due to the challenges in finding members of the medical community who are willing or brave enough to join the prestigious staff at Arkham Sanitarium, once in a K'yi-Lihian moon, Professor Clemmons will take it upon himself to appoint a resident of the sanitarium's population to become a doctor. After all, who would be better to assist the professor than someone who has personal first hand knowledge of his methods! Thus is the case with Dr. Greenman, previously known as The Green Man. Or maybe The Green Man simply broke into the Professor's office, and being the kleptomaniac that he is, stole a bunch of his tools and came to visit you to help you relax and sleep, because deep down inside, TGM is lonely and empty and just wants a friend to play with. Timeline of Events: 00:00:00 Dr. Greenm...
I want to tell all of you about the real Green Man urban Legend, and his name was Raymond Robinson. You can read more about him from the links below: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_Robinson_(Green_Man) http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid;=18846843 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/roadtrippers/investigator-uncovers-pho_b_6222616.html All three of these articles are done tastefully and factually. Raymond Robinson was a local legend in Western PA near where I grew up. We always told stories that "The Green Man" will get you, among other scary tales when I was a kid, like Crybaby Bridge. Raymond was a real person and is slowly turning into a true legend. Raymond "Ray" Robinson (October 29, 1910 – June 11, 1985) was a severely disfigured man whose years of nighttime wa...
The prehistory and origin of the Green Man symbol, a part of the history of a culture that lasted millennia and built the great megaliths like Gobekli Tepe and Stonehenge
From the mini-album Switch On Your Electric Light (PANTECHNICON 16001) released 3 October 2016. Download from pantechniconrecordings.bandcamp.com.
From the 1990 BBC adaptation of the Kingsley Amis novel with Albert Finney and Nickolas Grace
"Green Man" (demo) by Type O Negative. From the unreleased "October Rust" demo tape (1996).
Mark Olly discusses his book Revealing the Green Man. To many, The Green Man is little more than a chubby face peering through a veil of leaves. Sometimes cute, sometimes vaguely sinister, he is nonetheless widely regarded as merely a meaningless symbol from an age long lost. In reality, however, he could rather be said to be the esoteric embodiment of the very essence of life itself, an ancient archetype once known the world over. On a journey through myths and legends, magic and folklore, we explore the mystery of The Green Man. From the time of the Celts and Druids, the rise of the Roman Empire, the Anglo-Saxon annals, and the descent into the Dark Ages and beyond, we meet with Robin Hood, Herne the Hunter, King Arthur, and many other colourful characters along the way. It is a tale p...
In this episode, Green Man attempts to help you with your precarious problem of having a crinkly plastic bag fused to your head. Was it the work of Professor Clemmons? Did you not follow Sammich Man's instructions correctly? We may never know. This ASMR "improv performance" was recorded with binaural microphones so headphones are highly recommended. The PPPP Playlist: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvYncOsqMfxz6Cg8qQgrv8ep8C4aFQRo_ Official facebook page: https://twitter.com/EphemeralRift Twitter: https://twitter.com/EphemeralRift
Green Man and the ASMR Box 'O Tingles. Social stuff: Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/ephemeralrift1 Twitter: https://twitter.com/EphemeralRift Thanks as always for watching and subscribing. All the best, Green Man
In this episode of Dead Island, Simon and Lewis encounter a weird glitch. (another weird glitch) Title Splashscreen by Cranberry: https://yogscast.com/cmps_index.php?pageid=comics ● Yogscast Gear: http://yogscast.spreadshirt.co.uk/ ● Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/yogscast ● Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/yogscast ● Forums: http://yogscast.com/forum.php ● Podcast: http://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-yogpod/id304557271
Seed: LMD9 VBKB Subscribe to my channel for more gaming videos!: http://bit.ly/Northernlion If you enjoyed the video, please consider hitting the Like button. It helps me out a lot! Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NorthernlionLP Follow me on Facebook: http://facebook.com/Northernlion As Northernlion, I produce a variety of gaming content for YouTube every single day. Be sure to tune in if you're interested in reviews, previews, first impressions videos, gameplay, walkthroughs, and playthroughs of new releases, my favorite classic games, as well as my favorites from the world of indie gaming. Thanks for watching (and reading this description!) and I hope I'll see you again.
He was already drunk, and becoming slightly pompous; the pub jukebox blared in the corner, and outside, crowds flowed with supernatural ease through the Green Park arcades, and downhill to the river, sifting through glass-fronted boutiques, leaving for Metroland and the Christmas break. I listened because I had nothing better to do: all my friends had gone, and he'd bought me a drink.
"That winter," he said, "I went back to the family house, which was then at the edge of a large and half-finished estate. It was still and quiet, backing onto a copse the bulldozers had missed when they levelled the heath. The drab light lent everything an insubstantiality, intensifying the curious end-of-term feeling I had, the sense that the days themselves were somehow exhausted.
Three windows took up one side of the dining room, with a steadily murmuring radiator underneath. Enamel paint curled away from the window frame in flakes and peels, and the hot metal in the room gave off its alienating, faintly acidic smell. I remember clouds drifting in, and I watched them pick up the red flare of the streetlights."
This last point emphasised by a moment of silence, which he filled with a look around the bar.
"Late one night a figure appeared in the garden. It was almost pathetic; hungry-looking. boss-eyed and twisted. Under the faint light that the room cast over the gravel, I could see that its skin was made of flowers. It was hollow. It shied like an animal, and disappeared into the wood.
I knew it - you would have too, if you'd been there; it was a figure I'd glimpsed in a car park as a child; an expression crossing the face of a stranger late one night at Waterloo Station as I hurried for a train with my parents; a carving in the portico of a mediaeval church. In some nightmarish way it was particular, and it was also infinite. It was itself, it was the wood, it was the last roses in the garden, and yet it was also a wider sentience, perhaps best described as the feeling that the trees and fields we look at have always secretly been looking back into us.
The air felt charged, somehow electric, and as I stared at the place it had been, I became aware of a smell of dust. I smelt the billions of falling microscopic specks, the ghost dust-rain that surrounds all of us, all the time. For one moment of hyper-awareness I could read its mixtures and vintages, the histories and provenance of each particle of dust in the room. And faintly, hauntingly, somewhere on the edge of all the others, I smelt the surviving dust of 1978.
It was a dust of forgotten piano lessons; church halls; school gatherings in terrapin huts. Back then, to a child's nose, even the smell of glass differed from room to room, and for one second I could smell all the mirrors and the windows of those lost days, the unbounded spaces between them; it was a dust of the exhaust fumes of Austin Allegros, the naked wooden floors of a new house, bike tyres and long-discontinued cigarette brands. A dust that conjured pools of evening light, mysterious journeys, finished lives, dreads and hopes of an almost atavistic intensity.
I blinked, I seem to remember I was terrified, but at the same time so surprised, so overwhelmed with longing, with love for the past, love for the dead, that at that moment fear had no real meaning: I inhabited a bright, blank space that I'd encountered once before when I dislocated my knee on a rugby field.
Then neither quickly nor gradually, it was gone. The room returned, and with it the seamlessness, the ordinary loneliness of the night. I never saw that figure, or anything like him, again.
Days later, when the weather had broken, I looked over the hill, past the woods, and the developer's tracks and pylons. The freezing air seemed to distort the sounds of the construction vehicles, and their bleeps and revs sang like human voices. I remember thinking, 'If the world was one degree stranger, one degree more fluid, I could have escaped and joined myself back there, I could have disappeared forever. But it isn't, and I'm stranded here, split into two, getting ready for bed in a dormitory town.' "