Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Poets and words …

 … Chasing the Ineffable. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I make translation easier for myself by sticking mostly to poets writing in the mainstreams of their traditions. In most cases I can find scholarship and data bases that help to illuminate a word’s meanings, so my biggest frustrations occur with poetry that is more experimental.

Wonderful …

… JazzProfiles: In Bloom Again With Blossom Dearie [From the Archives]. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I met her once. One of the high points of my life. I had been a fan since her days on the Jack Paar show, the greatest late-night TV show ever.

Something to think on …

Fundamentally a good author has his or her own sense of style. There is a natural, deep voice, and that voice is present from the first draft of a manuscript. When he or she elaborates on the initial manuscript, it continues to strengthen and simplify that natural, deep voice.
— Kenzaburō Õe, born on this date in 1935

Making things clear…

… Four Notes on the Gun Debate for the Reasonable.

Only a fool dismisses essential distinctions as pedantry. And if one is not willing to learn the elementary terminology of a debate, then one should  not presume to enter the debate.  One who does not understand such terms as abortifacientembryogamete, and viable should not enter the abortion debate, for example.

Monday, January 30, 2023

The genuine article …

… Can Philosophy be Debated? - by William F. Vallicella.

There is nothing adversarial  in a genuine philosophical conversation.  The person I am addressing and responding to is not my adversary but a co-inquirer.  In the ideal case there is between us a bond of friendship, a philiatic bond.  But this philiasubserves the eros of inquiry.  The philosopher's love of truth is erotic, in the root, not the sexual, sense of the term, the love of one who lacks for that which he lacks.  It is not the agapic love of one who knows and bestows his pearls of wisdom. God’s love is agapic; Socrates’ love of truth is erotic; Socrates’ love for his friends is philiatic.

This is a brilliant piece. This is philosophy as I learned it at a Jesuit college (long before the Jesuits went adrift). Getting together to inquire into the nature of things — which demands, of course, continual rehearsal.


Quite a correspondence …

… The Eliot–Hale Letters. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

This is a digital edition, free-to-access, of the complete surviving correspondence between T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) and Emily Hale (1891–1969)

Something to think on …

What his imagination is to the poet, facts are to the historian. His exercise of judgment comes in their selection, his art in their arrangement.
— Barbara Tuchman, born on this date in 1912

Tracking the decline …

… America’s war on words. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

“Killing two birds with one stone” and asserting “there’s more than one way to skin a cat” will consign you to the naughty step, as both expressions “normalize violence against animals.” Exclaiming “I killed it!” about your presentation at work is sure to make your mates blanch. (Whoops! The UK Home Office has banned the word “mate,” for reasons unexplained; perhaps white men found supremacist solidarity in the term.) Come now, “doing a good job should not be equated with death.” “Killing it” could “also be triggering if someone close to the recipient actually was killed.”

Something to think on …

True charity is the desire to be useful to others with no thought of recompense.
— Emanuel Swendenborg, born on this date in  1688

Something to think on …

Sit down and put down everything that comes into your head and then you're a writer. But an author is one who can judge his own stuff's worth, without pity, and destroy most of it.
— Sidonie Gabrielle Colette, born on this date in 1873

A grammarian opens up …

… A Q&A with Bryan Garner, "the least stuffy grammarian around" | OUPblog. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

I decided, quite consciously (though misguidedly), that if a big vocabulary impressed girls, I could excel at it as nobody ever had. By that time, my grandparents had given me Webster’s Second New International Dictionary, which for years had sat on a shelf in my room. I took it down and started scouring the pages for interesting, genuinely useful words. I didn’t want obsolete words. I wanted serviceable words and remarkable words. I resolved to copy out, by hand, 30 good ones per day—and to do it without fail.

What crap …

Against Copyediting: Is It Time to Abolish the Department of Corrections? (Hat tip, Dave Lull.) 

It’s clear that copyediting as it’s typically practiced is a white supremacist project, that is, not only for the particular linguistic forms it favors and upholds, which belong to the cultures of whiteness and power, but for how it excludes or erases the voices and styles of those who don’t or won’t perform this culture. Beginning with an elementary school teacher’s red pen, and continuing with agents, publishers, and university faculty who on principle turn away work that arrives on their desk in unconventionally grammatical or imperfectly punctuated form, voices that don’t mimic dominance are muffled when they get to the page and also before they get there—as schools, publishers, and their henchmen entrench the idea that those writing outside convention are not writing “well,” and therefore ought not set their voices to paper at all.

This is called categorism. Instead of thinking of something on its own terms, you fit it into a category, in this case, I guess, so-called critical race theory. 

 

 

 

Something to think on …

The hurrier I go, the behinder I get.
— Lewis Carroll, born on this date in 1832

Wow …

I met the oldest woman in the world—who shared her memories of Van Gogh in Arles. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.

Theoretically the young girl and the struggling artist could certainly have met, living as they did in the same town for 15 months in 1888-89. It was also quite plausible that Van Gogh patronised the family shop for canvas.

The power of imaginarion …

… reflections (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

If a writer’s aim be logical conviction, he must spare no logical pains, not merely to be understood, but to escape being misunderstood; where his object is to move by suggestion, to cause to imagine, then let him assail the soul of his reader as the wind assails an aeolian harp. If there be music in my reader, I would gladly wake it. Let fairytale of mine go for a firefly that now flashes, now is dark, but may flash again. Caught in a hand which does not love its kind, it will turn to an insignificant ugly thing, that can neither flash nor fly.

Something to think on …

Forget the damned motor car and build the cities for lovers and friends.
— Lewis Mumford, who died on this date in 1990

Something to think on …

What makes old age hard to bear is not the failing of one's faculties, mental and physical, but the burden of one's memories.
— W. Somerset Maugham, born on this date in 1874

Well worth ndering …

… Simone Weil in the Light of Plato

Inner purification and meditation, by which the soul "gathers herself together," are necessary for the philosopher's approach to the Real. The true philosopher aims at a separation of the soul from the body, and so must not fear death. We fear death because we love the body and its pleasures.

Something to think on …

There is nothing more marvelous or madder than real life.
— E. T. A. Hoffmann, born on this date in 1776

Great writer, and nice gy …

… The Vast Humanity of Anton Chekhov | The New Republic. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Bob Blaisdell’s new biography, Chekhov Becomes Chekhov, is absorbing, pleasurable, and as unaffected as its subject; and while describing Chekhov’s life through close readings of his multitudinous stories and correspondence over two years—1886 to 1887—he doesn’t simply (as the title promises) explain how Chekhov came to be Chekhov but rather how impossible it was for him to become anybody else.

Sounds pretty accurate to me …

…  THROUGH A COPYEDITOR’S EYES..

I was on The Inquirer copy desk for several years, and I was a copy editor of books for a good many years before that.

Something to think on …

If you know what you are going to write when you're writing a poem, it's going to be average.
— Derek Walcott, born on this date in 1930

Sunday, January 22, 2023

Worth considering …

The Real January 6 | Power Line.

The January 6th protest was milder than any of the hundreds of Black Lives Matter riots the summer before, and led to no serious destruction of Capitol artifacts. But the Democrats en masse pretended to be horrified. They denounced the protest as an “armed insurrection” and compared it to Pearl Harbor and 9/11 and other enemy attacks on the United States which resulted in thousands of deaths.


I don’t think the Democrats pretended to be “horrified’. I think they were worried that they had been found out and that many would disagree for various reasons.  This is what happens when those entrusted with managing government think that the top priority is their maintaining power by pandering to fashionable coteries.

Indeed …

… The Night Also Belongs to the Lord - The Stream.

The left is the deadly enemy of joy. This is why Adam Kinzinger recently made fun of Lauren Boebert for dancing. You can’t attain Utopia if people are dancing and skateboarding and gardening and racing mini-bikes and having keg parties; it’s much more important to police dance clubs and censor jokes

Something to think on …

Growing old-it's not nice, but it's interesting.
—  August Strindberg, born on this date in 1849

Something to think on …

The single fact of existing is already a true happiness.
— Blaise Cendrars, who died on this date in 1961

A fine poet and likely a saint …

The Vow She Kept.  (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Sor Juana devoted herself to investigating as much as possible of this world while also serving the demands of the next.

Friday, January 20, 2023

My town …

… Philadelphia's Kensington neighborhood looks like a scene from the WALKING DEAD | Daily Mail Online.

I started life not far from Kensington. My family used to shop there. I bought my first Classics Illustrated in the Woolworth’s there. A friend of mine some months drove me through. The place bore no resemblance to the place I remember. What a bunch of losers. Of course, our worthless DA is no help. 

 

A book to study …

 ‘THAT HIDEOUS STRENGTH,’ BY C. S. LEWIS. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Both the Greta Thunberg cult and N.I.C.E. are hostile to human procreation. Today’s progressives, though “sex-positive” in theory, in fact despise any human sexual activity that could produce natural offspring.

 Does anyone remember that Perelandra, the second volume of Lewis’s trilogy, was made into an opera by Donald Swann, one half of the comedy duo Flanders and Swann?

More here.

Something to think on …

Kind hearts are the garden, kind thoughts are the roots, kind words are the blossoms, kind deeds are the fruit.
— John Ruskin, who died on this date in 1900

Ah, yes …

Poetry | National Review: Inertia, By A.M.  Juster. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Hmm …

… Priest says he went to Hell, wouldn't wish it on his worst enemy - The Jerusalem Post

Johnson continued, adding that there is a section of Hell where music is played. He says he heard songs there like Rihanna's "Umbrella" and Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry Be Happy". Sounds nice, right? No. He said that it's not the original artists who sing the songs, but a group of demons that use the words to torture us. 

A masterpiece …

… The Poor You Have Always With You - Front Porch Republic. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

As the Word of God is “a red-hot iron,” men are inclined to pick it up with a pair of tongs, to hold it at a distance. Too many preachers end up “purring like a tabby cat” instead of “feeling the pain of it”—the wound of the Word that leaves us stripped of pretense, pulling groans for redemption from the bowels of our souls.

Something to think on …

A man is no less a slave because he is allowed to choose a new master once in a term of years.
— Lysander Spooner, born on this date in 1808

Interesting …

… The Plate by Anthony Hecht | Poetry Magazine. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)

Anthony Hecht would have turned 100 on January 16  (my brother would have turned 89.

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

A poem …

 Essences

For Linda

Gazing at the sky he wondered

If clouds were what they suggested

And only incidentally what they

Were made of. Ingredients of ink tell

Neither tale nor truth and one body’s much

The same as any other’s though nobody’s

Quite the same as anybody else.

What is real is the effect, not the cause,

The painting, not the pigment.


Well-deserved praise …

 Paul Johnson: Committed to Truth for Its Own Sake - The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.

Marx’s own mother, I learned from Johnson, said she wished her freak show of a son “would accumulate some capital instead of just writing about it.” Moreover, the great historian informed us that Marx “never set foot in a mill, factory, mine or other industrial workplace in the whole of his life,” steadfastly abjured invitations to do so, and denounced fellow revolutionaries who did. He never let a fact or a glimmer of reality stem the flow of poison from his pen. He had no money because he refused to work for it, then cursed those who had it and didn’t share it with him

Congratulations …

… Bard College Professor Jenny Xie Awarded a 2023 Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship in Literature.

“I strive to create work that demonstrates the vital force unassimilated language can have, of the power and charge that can pulse through words when they behave differently, against rules and convention, and against forces that collude to render language more utilitarian, more homogenous, and free of nuance and rich complexity,” she writes.

Something to think on …

The less men think, the more they talk.
— Baron de Montesquieu, born on this date in 1689

Something to think on …

Maybe we've been too silly to deserve a world like this.
— Nevil Shute, born on this date in 1899

Begging to disagree …

things that matter: Some positives and negatives about Paul Johnson.

Naturally, the left-wing Guardian would take this position. Paul Johnson was a great writer and a great historian.

Interesting …

… Surprising Research Reveals Religion Is Not the Main Reason for Rejection of Evolution in Schools.


Also interesting is something Werner Heisenberg said: “I think that modern physics has definitely decided in favor of Plato. In fact the smallest units of matter are not physical objects in the ordinary sense; they are forms, ideas which can be expressed unambiguously only in mathematical language.”

So do many …

… I'm Sorry, I Do Love The Chosen | Stand Firm. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Dallas Jenkins making an eminantly watchable program about Jesus and his disciples. His source material is the biblical gospel accounts, with, by his own admission, lots of expert exegetical, doctrinal, and theological advice from various scholars. He draws on the Old Testament and tradition and then works out possible backstories and imaginative reckonings of Jesus’ ministry. As one person I like very much on Twitter put it, it’s basically “historical fiction” in that a lot of what is going on is straight out of the Bible, but then a lot of it isn’t as well.

Something to think on …

Creativity represents a miraculous coming together of the uninhibited energy of the child with its apparent opposite and enemy, the sense of order imposed on the disciplined adult intelligence.
— Norman Podhoretz, born on this date in 1930

Something to think on …

Freedom requires guns.
— Franz Grillparzer, born on this date in 1792

Another must-read …

… The best of Paul Johnson - The Spectator World.

He was great historian and a great writer. His biography of Eisenhower is outstanding.

This is must reading …

… Global Warming: Questions that Need Distinguishing.

This is a wonderful demonstration that philosophy is grounded in asking the pertinent quedtions. 

Tracking the decline …

… Young sacrifice belief in God on altar of Satanism.

OK, I’m an old guy who had four years of sacred theology and studied Thomism (as well as existential phenomenology). But that at least gives me some grounds for thinking these people are ignorant. Try mysticism, folks.

Still cause for concern…

… The Integrity of Poetry by Micah Mattix | Articles | First Things. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

So where are we today, thirty years after Can Poetry Matter? We are still awash in mediocre verse. The only difference is that now people are reading it. Poets still write flat, fragmented verse to demonstrate they’ve learned the rules of the game and can now teach others those rules. Gioia rightly observed that this is ­poetry-as-a-means-to-an-end. But the ready-made and sloganeering work of the Instapoets is also poetry-as-a-means-to-an-end, though sometimes a more lucrative one. Political poems always run the risk of turning into propaganda, but the political language of Gorman’s poetry, for example, lacks the earnestness of even the worst kind of political poem. She doesn’t hope to change minds, only to profit from minds that are already changed.

Something to think on …

The world's becoming a museum of socialist failures.
— John Dos Passos, born on this date in 1896

Plus ça change …

… The Integrity of Poetry by Micah Mattix | Articles | First Things. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

So where are we today, thirty years after Can Poetry Matter? We are still awash in mediocre verse. The only difference is that now people are reading it. Poets still write flat, fragmented verse to demonstrate they’ve learned the rules of the game and can now teach others those rules. Gioia rightly observed that this is ­poetry-as-a-means-to-an-end. But the ready-made and sloganeering work of the Instapoets is also poetry-as-a-means-to-an-end, though sometimes a more lucrative one. Political poems always run the risk of turning into propaganda, but the political language of Gorman’s poetry, for example, lacks the earnestness of even the worst kind of political poem. She doesn’t hope to change minds, only to profit from minds that are already changed.

Something to think on …

The separation of state and church must be complemented by the separation of state and science, that most recent, most aggressive, and most dogmatic religious institution.
— Paul Feyerabend, born on this date in 1924

Thursday, January 12, 2023

Blogging note …

 I am inthe ER with Debbie, who is being checked our head injuries resulting fromfallf.

Hmm …

…  Words, Words, Words. (Hat tip, zdave Lull.)

The subtitle to Marche’s essay is: “The College Essay is Dead.” Perhaps because Marche no longer teaches, he does not realize that the obit is a bit late: the college essay died years ago. During my three decades of teaching at a public university, I have encountered a dwindling number of students who can write a declarative sentence, much less a clear thesis. Perhaps more important, they have no desire to learn how.

That Plato and Aristotle had reservations about writing is one thing. As it happens, writing has been around now for quite some time now and has given quite a few masterpieces. There is something to be for learning how to do it.

Something to think on …

You look back and see how hard you worked and how poor you were, and how desperately anxious you were to succeed, and all you can remember is how happy you were.
— Jack London, born on this date in 1876

RIP …

… Charles Simic, Pulitzer prize-winning poet, dies at age 84 | Poetry | The Guardian.

He and I spent a very pleasant evening dining and tslking many years ago. 

So-called higher education …

… Award-winning immigrant professor loses faith in American higher education system | The College Fix.

The straw that broke the camel’s back for Svoronos came in 2020 after he reprimanded a student who came late to class, saying to her what he has said to many other aspiring med students: “a doctor who comes in late is called an undertaker.”

Distinctions …

… 'Spirituality' and 'Religion' - by William F. Vallicella.

I rather enjoy telling people that I am not spiritual, but religious.

Something to think on …

You may not get everything you dream about, but you will never get anything you don't dream about.
— William James, born on this date in 1842

Something to think on …

The heads of strong old age are beautiful beyond all grace of youth.
— Robinson Jeffers, born on this date in 1887

A poem …

 Now and Then


Circumstance, as usual, conducted

His affairs, flourishing life's ornaments.

So now, grown old, he finds himself, as years

Before, alone at times, and finds as well

He thinks as then, and sees how that is good.

He has not strayed too far: Usual birds

And garden, standard house plants, strolls still grand,

Though slower. God's about, and always has

Been. So he pays scant heed to time and deed

Once over. Here and now is where he means

To be, though here and now just now

Only draw him back, suspending tense,

Elsewhere and here conjoined in palimpsest —

Faded parchment, layered script — time in between

So long ago and now dissolving into somewhere

Once before, as if his mother were nearby,

Attaching her heart to flowers, vines, and thorns,

Allowing him to be what he's become.


Monday, January 09, 2023

Blogging note …

 I am actually not feeling well today and had a very restless night. So I’m mostly going to lie low.

Something to think on …

Let no one think that real gardening is a bucolic and meditative occupation. It is an insatiable passion, like everything else to which a man gives his heart.
— Karel Ćapek, born on this date in 1890

Something to think on …

It is better to sleep on things beforehand than lie awake about them afterwards.
— Balrasar Gracián, born on this date in 1601

They knew better …

… Riddle solved: Why was Roman concrete so durable? | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

During the hot mixing process, the lime clasts develop a characteristically brittle nanoparticulate architecture, creating an easily fractured and reactive calcium source, which, as the team proposed, could provide a critical self-healing functionality. As soon as tiny cracks start to form within the concrete, they can preferentially travel through the high-surface-area lime clasts. This material can then react with water, creating a calcium-saturated solution, which can recrystallize as calcium carbonate and quickly fill the crack, or react with pozzolanic materials to further strengthen the composite material. These reactions take place spontaneously and therefore automatically heal the cracks before they spread. Previous support for this hypothesis was found through the examination of other Roman concrete samples that exhibited calcite-filled cracks.

The war against stupidity …

… Of 'Blind Review' and Pandora's Box.

In the early '80s I attended an APA session organized by a group that called itself PANDORA: Philosophers Against the Nuclear Destruction of Rational Animals.  One of the weighty topics that came up at this particular meeting was the very name 'Pandora.'  Some argued that the name is sexist on the ground that it might remind someone of Pandora's Box, which of course has nothing to do with the characteristic female orifice, but in so reminding them might be taken as a slighting of that orifice.  ('Box' is crude slang for the orifice in question.)  I pointed out in the meeting that the name is just an acronym, and has nothing to do either with Pandora's Box or the characteristic female orifice.  My comment made no impression on the politically correct there assembled. 

Something to think on

Mystery is the essence of divinity.
— Zora Neale Hurston, born on this date in 1891

Friday, January 06, 2023

I never make them myself …

Nine literary New Year’s resolutions. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)

Most of these, though, I already do. Hey, I wasn’t born yesterday.

A wonderful story about a wonderful person …

… The Woman Who Abandoned a Successful Recording Career to Play Music for the Dying. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

This life story would be impressive under any circumstances, but especially so when you consider that Therese Schroeder-Sheker had a brilliantly successful career as a recording artist and concert hall performer. She could have spent her entire life as a music star, but instead put her primary focus on serving those in the most dire and hopeless situations.

Oddly, the only famous musicians I’ve got to know were mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves and tenor Luciano Pavarotti, both of whom turned out to be just nice people. Of course, Temple Painter, who was a world-famous harpsichordist, wax simply a dear friend. 


 

No easy journey …

Bertha Benz — the PR pioneer who introduced the world to the car. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Her problem was that Karl had no marketing sense. He had a perfectly workable car that should, by then, have been flooding the streets of Germany and beyond. Instead he just kept trying to make it better. It was as if Steve Jobs had gone all the way to the iPhone 10 before bothering to put his phone in the shops. 

In case you wondered …

… What Makes Poetry Christian by Andrew Frisardi. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

… Mattix rightly notes that Christian poetics asserts that a poem’s life is a sign of the higher creative principles at work in the world. So Christian poetry “is inherently double – both surface and depth, material and immaterial.” The poems in this book are accordingly multifaceted and stamped with the poets’ lives, from the psalm-like directness and fluid cadences of the late North Dakotan poet-farmer Timothy Murphy, to the unadorned Mennonite physicality of Pennsylvanian Julia Spicher Kasdorf, to Louisianan Jennifer Reeser’s blend of Anglo-American prosody with Native American prayer and song.