Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Henry Miller

 


It had been many years since I last read a novel by Henry Miller, but having recently finished Nexus, the second part of his Rosy Crucifixion, I can safely say that I've jumped right back in. There really is nothing like Miller when he launches into a meditation on the debauched or neglected. Nexus is not Cancer or Capricorn, but then, I don't think Miller intended it to be. Nexus is, instead, a reflection on those critical years before leaving for Europe, before assuming his badge as an expatriate. Nexus is odd in this way: it has more plot, more linearity than Miller introduces elsewhere. But that is not a critique: Nexus reveals a more restrained Miller, but not one without literary merit. There are parts of Nexus where Miller simply seems to speak for me: his reflections anticipate my own; his observations approach mine. This is the universal quality that Miller seems to have achieved in so many of his works: this tendency to write for us, on behalf of us. Miller has much to say, and not all of it focuses on sexuality. Indeed, Nexus is a book largely devoid of this topic. But still, Miller's reflections are direct and profound -- and transcendent, too. He aspires to the angels, and there are moment when he undoubtedly reaches them. "But then a queen steps so lightly," he writes, "even when crushing a louse." It's good to be back!

Something to think on …

Hot lead can be almost as effective coming from a linotype as from a firearm.
John O’Hara, born on this date in 1905 

Something to think on …

 I think that one is constantly startled by the things that appear before you on the page when you're writing.

Shirley Hazzard, born on this date in 1937

Something to think on …

The task of a writer is not to solve the problem but to state the problem correctly.
— Anton Chekhov, born on this date in 1860

A philosopher like no other …

 … Seeing Both Sides: St. Thomas Aquinas. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

There are no cheap shots or straw men in the Summa Theologica. Aquinas has no need of them; they would only corrupt what he is trying to do. When he debates the existence of God, he doesn’t cast aspersions on wicked atheists; he simply tries to make the strongest case for atheism before he gives his reasons for rejecting them and for affirming God’s existence. Thinking is complicated enough, without being further complicated by personalities – even one’s own personality

Something to think on …

There are connoisseurs of blue just as there are connoisseurs of wine.
— Colette, born on this date in 1873

It’s even worse today …

… Too much college : Essays in Idleness. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.
I have fond memories from my college years, but I graduated 60:years ago.

Something to think on …

Courtesy is a small act but it packs a mighty wallop.
— Lewis Carroll, born on this date in 1832

Something to think on …

I'll be a poet, and you'll be poetry.

— François Coppée, born on this date in 1842

Something to think on …

The only important thing in a book is the meaning that it has for you.
— W. Somerset Maugham, born on this date in 1874

Tenebrous prose …

… Septology: A Review - Ad Fontes. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Translation, when present, is always an issue for the reader. The task of Fosse’s translator, Damion Searls, was easy in one sense, but dauntingly difficult in another, I would imagine. As a Norwegian translator myself, I was interested to examine the original text. In terms of sheer faithfulness, I have to say this is probably as accurate a translation as you’ll ever encounter. The book’s vocabulary, as already mentioned, is limited, and the same phrases repeat again and again. Literary effects are produced, not through subtle phrasing and word selection, but through multiple iterations.

Something to think on …

If only we'd stop trying to be happy, we could have a pretty good time.
— Edith Wharton, born on this date in 1862

Something to think on …

A novel is like a bow, and the violin that produces the sound is the reader's soul.
— Stendhal, born on this date in 1783

This is pretty big …

… Leave the Pews | RealClearPolitics.

What became clear within that Facebook group and in so many other quarters since Oct. 7 is that much of secular Judaism, in both the Reform and Conservative branches, had become overtly political and not really religiously based at all. For many Jews, their religious identity had become so intertwined with leftist politics that they couldn’t force a separation even when they themselves were being targeted with their own bad ideas.

Maybe we shouldn’t teach the Constitution anymore, either …

… what with that pesky Second Amendment: Business Insider: Very Dangerous to 'Indoctrinate' Young Americans That They Can Lawfully Possess a Firearm - The Truth About Guns.

The amendment that reminds that we are an independent nation because we took up arms against the British Crown.

Nice guy …

… Remembering Lenin - the First Great Communist Mass Murderer.

His followers weren’t too nice either. They should all be remembered as world-class scumbags. Pol pot seems to have been especially awful. How do people become like that? Schoolyard creeps that most of us could have decked with one punch.

Very thoughtful …

… Pastoral Practice After Fiducia Supplicans | Church Life Journal | University of Notre Dame.

My friend Katherine and I shared power attorney for a gay couple, who had stopped practicing gayness when they converted. I thinking the problem here is fidelity. Some people are gay. If they practicd fidelity to each other, I don’t see why, if they are faithful to each other, their relationship can’t be blessed. When Debbie and I married, we promised to be faithful to each other. Which I had recently to explain to a woman who, for some reason, finds me attractive. I would never break my marriage vows.

Something to think on …

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

Surely there are funds to restore it …

 … A Poet’s Legacy in Stone: Will Yeats’s Tower Survive? (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Flannery O’Connor seems to have been fluent …

… St. Thomas Aquinas With a Southern Drawl | The Russell Kirk Center. (Hat tip,  Dave Lull.

… Professor Ference has made a major contribution to O’Connor reading and study. In the final chapter, the author asserts, “I do not think it is an exaggeration to argue that the soul of O’Connor’s fiction is Thomism.” He adds, “If a student desires to understand what gives O’Connor’s narrative art life, he or she must study O’Connor’s Hillbilly Thomism.” While this might overstate the case, Ference makes as strong an argument as anyone has for its veracity. 

Coping with snow …

… (15) The Coldest Place - by Glenn Harlan Reynolds.

…  there’s an even bigger preparedness lesson in this week’s events:  To protect yourself from power outages, bitch.  Loudly and a lot.

Friday, January 19, 2024

The new Nazis …

 … Violent mob attacks the last place you’d ever expect,

Let us be clear: this abhorrent display was not a protest; it was an act of intimidation, a calculated insult to the vulnerable and a stain on the conscience of those who participated.

Thursday, January 18, 2024

Outrage well deserved …

 … Advocates Outraged That Feds Asked Banks to Search Customers’ ‘Religious Texts’ Purchases.

“This is beyond alarming,” Family Research Council President Tony Perkins told The Epoch Times. “If we did a word search in history of the type of activities the Biden administration is engaged in, it would return words like ‘KGB,’ ’totalitarian,‘ ’repressive,’ ‘anti-democratic,’ and ‘grave threat to freedom.’”

A poem …

 For the Spotted Owl

By Jennifer Knox

...a poem on the controversy wherein the legal protection offered by the Endangered Species Act of 1973 failed to protect the endangered northern spotted owl because many jobs were at stake in the lumber and paper industries of the Pacific northwestern United States.


A stained-glass window shines between each branch.

Tall spires rise to candelabras of stars,

And all is well where the spotted owl flies.


You with the heart on your sleeve, what do you think-

Shall we let the spotted owl and all of nature be?

Who are we to stand in the way of progress?


Explain to me a spider web strung with dew-

Each drop catching the colors of a rainbow,

And all is well where the spotted owl flies.


Consider pine-green mist, where the selfish

Giant takes down trees wherever he goes.

Who are we to stand in the way of progress?


I spy through the keyhole of my cement jungle

A holy land where beauty abounds.

All is well where the spotted owl flies.


Let's all go into that final sunset

And let the spotted owl and all of nature be.

Who are we to stand in the way of progress?

All is well where the spotted owl flies

Alwas a good idea …

… Just Think! by Robert W. Service | Poetry Foundation. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden, who notes that Service would have turned 150 this past Tuesday.)

Something to think on …

Has there ever been a society which has died of dissent? Several have died of conformity in our lifetime.
— Jacob Bronowski, born on this date in1908

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Appalling …

… The Return of the Swastika - Tablet Magazine.

This anti-Semitism resurgence is really worrisome. None of these moral morons had better run into me. I remember that guy Hitler.

Exactly when …

… did Canada become a totalitariam state?  — Jordan Peterson throws down, warns 'the war has barely started' after Canadian court affirms he must undergo 're-education' | Blaze Media.

Re-education is what the old Soviet Union used to subject dissenters to.Thought proceeds better when different viewpoints are discussed in dialogue (see Plato and Aristotle). Canada deserves all the mockery it gets for this.

Something to think on …

If what they say is right we're none of us going to have time to do all that we planned to do. But we can keep on doing it as long as we can.
— Neville Shute, born on this date in 1899

Something to think on …

The writer's first job is not to have opinions but to tell the truth... and refuse to be an accomplice of lies and misinformation.
— Susan Sontag, born on this date in 1933

Something to think on …

I assure you, an educated fool is more foolish than an uneducated one.
— Moliere, born on this date in 1622

A wise msn indeed …

… Romano Guardini: A Man of His Times, A Man for Our Own | The Russell Kirk Center. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

In his insightful introduction to this recently published volume of Guardini’s works entitled The World and the Person: And Other Writings, Robert Royal describes him as a profoundly influential figure, notable as he “combines the academic rigor of the heyday of German intellectual life with the gentler human qualities of Italian culture.” His influence has seeped into the twenty-first century through no less than Pope Benedict XVI and Pope Francis, both of whom studied Guardini’s thought as doctoral students.

Something to think on …

Any formal attack on ignorance is bound to fail because the masses are always ready to defend their most precious possession - their ignorance.
— Hendrik Willem van Loon, born on this date in 1882

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Remembering Rabelais …

… The Resurrection of the Bawdy. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

“[. . .] there must be a reciprocal relationship between our high culture and our low. High culture does not come from nothing. Rather, it alchemizes over time from a vast swamp of low culture in which a community is working out, in some form or another, the problem of the body, of what it means to be a human, to exist as an eternal soul in a flatulent, flabby, fleshy shell, a shell that (somehow) God promises will be with us in Heaven

Something to think on …

The Christian is like the ripening corn; the riper he grows the more lowly he bends his head.
— A. B. Guthrie, born on this date in 1901

Indeed …

… Trusting the science might work if there were actual science involved.

How can anyone reasonably be expected to trust scientific evidence when the entire system is so heavily biased in one political direction? Even unbiased studies that happen to have finding that just coincidentally coincide the progressive orthodoxy are going to be questioned simply because there’s no grounds for trusting that particular study in light of the heavy bias evidence elsewhere.



Fear and mindfulness …

… Hell’s Bells. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

My strong suspicion is that the West’s “mental health crisis” is really a spiritual health crisis. Our prevailing secular, materialist ideology denies our true identity as God’s children, made in His own image and likeness. We see ourselves as trousered apes and meat computers. Our media and technology cause us to disscociate from our environment: the people, plants, animals, and objects all around us. We’re cut off from our fellow creatures—from Creation. We dissociate ourselves from Reality and collapse into subjectity, becoming easy prey to those fears which the Evil One plants within us.

Blogging note …

 I got a lte start this morning and must go out for my morning walk. Blogging will resume later on.

Something to think on …

The Wild still lingered in him and the wolf in him merely slept.
— Jack London, born on this date in 1876


Something to think upon …

 You may not get everything you dream about, but you will never get anything you don't dream about. 

— William James, botr on this date in 1842


Quite a guy …

… The labyrinth of Guy Davenport's mind - UnHerd. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

Davenport was a friend of my late friend John Davison.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Appreciation …

… RIAN JOHNSON ON THE GENIUS OF JOHN DICKSON CARR JOHNSON ON THE GENIUS OF JOHN DICKSON CARR. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)

The first quality that blows your hair back in any of Carr’s novels is so fundamental that it’s easy to take it for granted: beyond the plotting or the puzzling, beyond the mystery itself, first and foremost the man is just one hell of a writer. Like walking into a well-put-together room, when you’re in the hands of a good writer you can just feel it. His prose is genteel without being fussy, brisk but rich, funny while keeping your feet in the dirt, and all of it woven with that effortless breeze of step that we as readers recognize and happily fall in behind. 

Something to think on …

Long live freedom and damn the ideologies.
— Robison Jeffers, born on this date in 1887

Tuesday, January 09, 2024

Something to think on …

Art must not serve might.
 Karel Čapek, born on this date in 1890

Something to thing on …

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