Tuesday, October 31, 2023
Tracking the decline …
Unlike the Nazis, who took pains to hide their actions, Hamas broadcast them to the world. Live videos of the horrors were circulating on the internet—and on broadcast television—on the day of the attack. For those with lingering doubts, or inclined to split hairs about whether victims were beheaded or simply found with severed heads, international reporters were on the ground in Israel within 48 hours to chronicle the atrocities
A poem for today …
My Darling, My Jack-o-lantern
By Jennifer Knox
My darling, my jack-o-lantern. No need
to waste your love upon the dead.
For when you give that unrequited smile
There stirs an errant fire within your head.
And what a merry chase the dead can give!
Run, and run by black grasping branches wild,
by blowing, flickering flames of autumn leaves.
I chased love, and got a jack-o-lantern's smile.
Yes, suddenly this jack-o-lantern turns,
And offers up a listing leer for love.
For the first time I feel hoarfrost,
And never will pursue this bitter cold.
Good evening zombie, zombie of my love!
My flame is hot — yours cold as the stars above.
Something to think on …
Monday, October 30, 2023
Appalling …
Something to think on …
Not exactly progress …
… Bryan Appleyard: No one should trust the camera in the age of AI. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
Technology cheats, and increasingly often simply lies. Sometimes benignly, as in art photography. This was most spectacularly and well meaningly demonstrated by Boris Eldagsen when he won a photography competition. He declined the prize because this was not a photograph, it was an AI-generated image.
Sunday, October 29, 2023
Pathetic …
Once upon a time, journalists and scholars on both the left and right were staunchly devoted to free speech and academic freedom, if only out of self-interest. Liberals like Nat Hentoff of the Village Voice defended the rights of Klansmen and Nazis because they knew the First Amendment was their profession’s paramount principle. But in the past decade, that bipartisan devotion has been disappearing, particularly at elite colleges. Harvard’s journalists and scholars adopted the principles that Hentoff criticized in the title of one of his books: free speech for me, but not for thee.
Something to think on …
Saturday, October 28, 2023
Something to think on …
Friday, October 27, 2023
Thursday, October 26, 2023
Reading Scripture …
… Chalk’s humblest argument turns out to be his most effective. Even if the Bible testified to its own perspicuity, it cannot be denied that as a practical matter, disputes cannot usually be settled by simply appealing to the Bible. Only an authoritative teaching office can settle disputes definitively
Something to look forward to …
Much classified information about Royal Navy Commander Ian Fleming and the British Naval Intelligence Division in WWII has been declassified since the previous biographies of the creator of James Bond, and Nicholas Shakespeare includes the newly declassified information in the book.
Something to think on …
Sounds reasonable to me …
On campuses across America — and not just at the college level — students march while chanting “From the river to the sea,” an explicit call for the annihilation of Israel and its so-called “colonizers.”
If it’s decolonization they want, then we should accommodate them.
Wednesday, October 25, 2023
Appreciation …
What makes Late Romance an exemplary literary biography is the way Yezzi—a poet and a former editor of The New Criterion who now teaches at Johns Hopkins—connects Hecht’s aesthetic ideals with his personality and experiences. If Hecht flourished in his chosen “hieratic tradition” while others chafed against it, he did so because, as Yezzi writes, he “discovered in language the ‘hidden law’ that bestows an implicit order on the world, without which, like Lear, ‘we shall go mad.’” For Hecht, madness wasn’t just a Shakespearean allusion, but an ever-present possibility, and his best poems rely on formal strictness to contain an intimate knowledge of chaos and evil.
Parlous times …
Something to think on …
One must be ruthless with one's own writing or someone else will be.
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
Just so you know
“The Day of Judgement will not come about until Muslims fight the Jews (killing the Jews), when the Jew will hide behind the stones and trees. The stones and trees will say, ‘O Muslims, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him’.” (Hamas Charter, Article 7)
Something to think on …
Monday, October 23, 2023
In case you wondered …
“Why can’t world leaders understand that Hamas wants to drive Israel ‘into the sea’ and kill all the Jews? Don’t believe me, believe Hamas; below are excerpts of the Hamas charter.”
Something to think on …
Sunday, October 22, 2023
Something to think on …
Vanishing treasures …
The bad news about the United States only gets worse. According to Jeff Deutsch, author of the recent In Praise of Good Bookstores, in 1994 there were 7,000 independent such shops in America; a quarter century later, that number had shrunk to 2,500, “and of those few bookstores left, even fewer sell books exclusively.” That was 2019. The number must be far lower today.
Saturday, October 21, 2023
Something to think on …
Friday, October 20, 2023
Something to think on …
Thursday, October 19, 2023
A poem …
Pilgrimage
Pray the journey lasts long enough
To be enriched with lingering detours
Along paths beckoning to villages
Where time holds no sway, until
You find yourself, grateful at last,
To learn there won’t be any heading back.
Appalling …
I fear it may be so …
Americans like to say, “If I was alive in Germany back in the 1930s, I would have done something.”
Good news, now is your chance to prove it.
Something to think on …
Dealing with controversy …
In our interview, Houellebecq insisted that French criticism of mass migration was not rooted in concerns about seeing one’s own culture displaced by another, but only in the link between migration and crime.
Wednesday, October 18, 2023
Something well worth being reminded of …
Gaza is a special tragedy in that it possesses many of the finest beaches in the whole of the Mediterranean. It is a natural tourist destination. Of course, this is impossible though, as Hamas will not permit people to walk about in bikinis and one-pieces. Nor is it receptive to the idea of liberal democracy
Something to think on …
Tuesday, October 17, 2023
Something to think on …
Monday, October 16, 2023
Truly profound …
I think I finally get this Pope. He is more like me than I had noticed. He lives his faith — which requires much improvisation and imperfect phrases. Do it long enough though, and insights start to visit.
Something to think on …
Sunday, October 15, 2023
Sounds good to me …
Prior to the adoption of the Pendleton Act in 1883, government employment operated according to the “spoils system,” which meant that hiring in the executive branch was controlled by the Executive. When a new administration came in, everyone’s job was up for grabs, at least potentially. This “rotation in office” had several advantages, which were widely appreciated at the time, and propounded by presidents from Jefferson to Jackson to Lincoln.
In case you wondered …
There's no mistaking his world is a privileged one, but the warmth of his writing and his characters make it difficult to protest
Something to think on …
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Something to think on …
It may well be ……
A few years ago most of our society was sleepwalking toward disaster. Now more and more people are awake and noticing.
Appreciation …
Some have compared Fosse to Samuel Beckett, but the Norwegian’s prose is far more accessible than the Irishman’s. No doubt it owes much to the strain of modernism that tends toward minimalism, but the spirit and intent of this stripping down is more warmly human and approachable than that of his twentieth-century influences. Fosse might be considered an acquired taste, but the bar of entry isn’t high: Septology is the kind of novel that teaches you how to read it. The mental adjustment is entirely manageable.
Friday, October 13, 2023
Graham Swift
Something to think on …
Thursday, October 12, 2023
Poem …
Something to think on …
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
Something to think on …
That is the mystery of grace: it never comes too late.
— François Mauriac, born on this date in 1885
Tuesday, October 10, 2023
Blogging note …
Debbie, my wife, has been moved to a nursing home in the suburbs. One of her aides is about to drive me out there to see her. Blogging has to take a back seat today.
Something to think on …
Monday, October 09, 2023
Jorge Luis Borges
Something to think on …
Sunday, October 08, 2023
Something to think on …
Even against the greatest of odds, there is something in the human spirit - a magic blend of skill, faith, and valor - that can lift men from certain defeat to incredible victory.