Sunday, December 31, 2023
Happy new year - 2024
Please be careful …
The tale of Dim Kenney …
Ralph and I are former Inquirer colleagues. He’s a great reporter and a great writer. What he says about The Inquirer today is true.
Sounds good …
… Make Christmas Medieval Again. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
… The yuletide is supposed to start with Christmas, not end with it. The 12 days of Christmas run from Dec. 25 through Jan. 5, with that last evening called Twelfth Night—the evening before Epiphany. It’s a time for skits, with a Lord of Misrule appointed to lead the festivities: an evening of “cakes and ale,” as Shakespeare has the drunken Sir Toby proclaim in his own “Twelfth Night” play.
Something to think on …
Hmm …
If philosopher A urges (1) and philosopher B urges (2), and neither can convince the other, then I say that A and B are in a standoff
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Something to think on …
Friday, December 29, 2023
Something to think on …
Thursday, December 28, 2023
Savage maybe …
… but not so noble :Let’s finally recognize the slavery, conquest, and genocide of Native Americans by Native Americans.
Consider the cruelty of the Aztecs. For decades, the Aztecs brutally attacked neighboring tribes and built a vast empire in what is now central Mexico. They raped women, enslaved children, and participated in human sacrifice and capital punishment. Additionally, studies have shown that the Aztecs punished homosexuality with death and routinely exploited and murdered women.
Something to think on …
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
Something to think on …
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
The start of late night TV …
Pondering Agatha Christie …
… one of the things life teaches us is how to rationalize well. Just as Miss Marple said that there is a lot of wickedness in an English village, so there is a lot of spiritual sustenance in Agatha Christie. I do not mean by this the sustenance to be found in her convoluted plots, but rather in her shrewd observations of life, which might even be called philosophical
Something to think on …
Monday, December 25, 2023
A fine rebuttal …
The God I have faith in created me as a free induvudual, not as a automaton.
Endgame …
But the surge before death. My friend Harold Boatrite told his nurse, who had complimented him on how well he seemed and spoke, that he felt better than he had in months. A few minutes later he was dead.
Sunday, December 24, 2023
Getting at the truth …
How can we know what Jesus really taught? That is, how can we know that Christianity today is the same Christianity that Christ taught 2,000 years ago? Are the gospels accurate? These are questions taken up in an important new book by theologian Gary Michuta in The Gospel Truth: How We Can Know What Christ Taught.
Appreciation …
Few things would Willa Cather, were she alive today, loathe more than being taught in the contemporary university in a course on gay women writers, where today she no doubt often is. Taylor is excellent on Willa Cather’s lesbianism. He recognizes it without dwelling on it, never using it as a lever to pry open the putatively secret meanings in her fiction
Saturday, December 23, 2023
Friday, December 22, 2023
Getting the tune right …
… ‘Bach Against Modernity’ Review: Sacred Cantatas and Concertos. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
The 11 essays of “Bach Against Modernity” are mainly concerned, Mr. Marissen writes, with guarding against “a kind of cultural narcissism in which we end up miscasting Bach in our own ideological image and proclaiming the authenticity of that image, and hence its prestige value, in support of our own agendas.”
Thursday, December 21, 2023
A poem
The Alert
Mind and heart uplifted
In the dim light and silence
After Mass, out of somewhere
He hears whispered: Listen.
Outside he can see
Fall is nearly over.
The bare, curving limbs,
Pale blond sunlight, and sky
As blue as longed-for eyes
Somehow remind him: Listen
Appreciation …
… Remembering John Gardner. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
… every year since 1996, on an invariably chilly evening in late October, a far-flung score of folks have gathered in Gardner’s (and my) hometown of Batavia, New York, to read from his works, discuss his legacy and collectively fall short of his typical alcohol intake.
A poem …
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Another must-read …
Half the country – maybe more – will conclude that the whole system is rigged, that the establishment doesn’t follow the rules, and that it will gang up on anyone it sees is a threat. They will conclude, in short, that the government, and indeed the entire system, is illegitimate.
And they will be right. And the politicians of even a generation ago recognized that as enormously dangerous
A poem …
She Has Moved
They took her to a nursing home today,
After being in hospital these past few weeks.
His life is not the same with her not here.
The empty closet breaks his heart. Just now
Emptiness is what defines his life.
Words of wisdom …
When I was The Inquirer”s book editor I had many attractive young women who reviewed for me. We went out to lunch together. But I was raised — and trained by my mother and my teachers (nuns and priests) to be a gentleman, which I believe I still am. I never did, nor ever would have, thought of making a pass. I also love my wife,
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Lisa Halliday
Monday, December 18, 2023
This is worrisome …
Something to think on …
Nature and art …
… Class explores Nabokov as writer and ‘butterfly man”. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
‘
Nabokov’s deep interest in and connection to the natural world and his cross-pollinating interests in the sciences and the arts were the focus of a new seminar, “Nabokov, Naturally,” taught in fall 2023 by Anindita Banerjee, associate professor of comparative literature in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S).
Sunday, December 17, 2023
I fear so …
… ‘Liberty and Justice For All’ – A Tattered Cliche?
On Friday, The Wall Street Journal published an editorial whose slug got to the nub of the issue. “The special counsel,” it read, “tries to drag the Justices into his political timetable for the Jan. 6 trial of Donald Trump.” That’s it exactly. Smith wants the Court to decide now, today, so he can pursue his vendetta against Trump on the time table the election calendar has set. Most observers believe that the Court will be more circumspect. The writers of that editorial caution that “The wiser decision would have been to lay out the facts of what the special counsel found and let the voters decide. They chose to prosecute, and the damage has begun to unfold.”
Anniversary …
While deep in a variety of ways, The Quest for Community offers a discernible, if exceedingly complex, line of thought regarding the nature of humanity and the communities we form to maintain stability, order, and freedom. State, nation, and totalitarianism, as Nisbet saw it, challenged association and voluntary community.
A most interesting story …
A priest keeps watchful vigil over her gatherings, which are preceded by a Mass and Eucharistic adoration. This fall, the archbishop of Rosario released a remarkable statement endorsing her, describing her as a “phenomenon occurring within the Catholic Church.”
Something to think on …
Saturday, December 16, 2023
Maybe not what you thought …
Where Lane Fox shines, however, is in his evaluation of the poem’s literary power. In the second part of the book, he looks at the heroes of the poem and the world they inhabit and finds that our lives are not so different from theirs without diminishing any of the poem’s foreignness.
Something to think on …
Something to read carefully …
Friday, December 15, 2023
A comprehensive analysis …
… above all else, we must focus on returning American higher education to its original purposes: to seek the truth; to teach young adults the things they need to flourish; and to pass on the knowledge that is the basis of our exceptional civilization.
Something to think on …
Thursday, December 14, 2023
In case you wondered …
In 1955, Angel Flores first used the term magical realism, drawing on Roh’s earlier and similar term in asserting that magical realism was an amalgamation of magic realism and marvelous realism. According to Flores, the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges was the movement’s originator. The newly coined term magical realism was soon used to name a trend that emerged within German fiction in the 1950s, which included such works as Günter Grass’ 1959 novel Die Blechtrommel (The Tin Drum).