Tuesday, April 30, 2024
Something to think on …
Monday, April 29, 2024
Something to think on …
Something to think on …
Sunday, April 28, 2024
Appalling …
Those of an age remember quite well who coined te phrase “final solution.’
In case you wondered …
Something to think on …
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Expel them all …
Choosing unknowing …
I want to know less about the things that divide us and more about the things that unite us. Less about the scandalous and personal and more about the transcendent and universal.
Friday, April 26, 2024
Something to think on …
Thursday, April 25, 2024
I should think not …
I didn’t get the vaccine. My cardiologist agreed. I am in the top 1 percent of the population to die of a heart attack. I also got tested for Covid frequently, since I couldn’t visit Debbie without being tested. Always negative. I have a good immune system.
Something to think on …
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Interesting …
I don’t usually opine on this subject, but I have some personal info that I think is pertinent. As a love child — i.e., illegitimate — I was surely a candidate for abortion, though I doubt the thought ever crossed my mother’s mind. Trust the science, we are told. Well, the basic science is that the fetus is a genetically unique living being. If the pregnancy is a threat to the mother’s life, that may prove an exception — though the mother may be willing to take the risk. But in the case of rape, both mother and child are victims. They could bond on that. I do not think the mother’s convenience should be decisive. After all, there are ways of having sex that can prevent pregnancy. OK, I’m a man. So how much does my opinion count? But I think the matter is deserving of more careful pondering. We are talking about taking a life. Who knows what that kid might achieve?
Something to think on …
Tuesday, April 23, 2024
Another racist
Excuse me, your Honor …
So this clown can decide what parts of the Constitution are admissible in her courtroom. Remove her.
A tradition we can do without …
… It Always Starts With the Jews.
These so-called students are obviously ignoramuses, and that’s the kindest thing one can say.
Something to think on …
Word master …
… Dostoevsky’s idiom. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
… Dostoevsky owes much of his verbal virtuosity to intuition rather than deliberate strategy. In every case, his word choice, however bizarre it first appears, makes the most accurate and meaningful response to the momentary situation created by the plot or a character’s immediate experience.
Monday, April 22, 2024
Something to think on …
Cause for concern …
… The Moral Rot at the Heart of Our Elite Institutions,
One scientist explained a while back (I forget who) that it took him years to make the connection between the fact that every time he read about something he knew in the media, it was wrong, and the fact that this was true of almost everything he read.
Sunday, April 21, 2024
Something to think on …
Saturday, April 20, 2024
This is distressing
Translation services under assault by The Machine. Sadly, this is going to get worse before it gets better
Hmm …
Just so you know …
Social utility is a value. But truth is a value that trumps it. The pursuit of truth is an end in itself. Paradoxically, the pursuit of truth as an end in itself may be the best way to attain truth that is useful to us.
Friday, April 19, 2024
If you're in London...
...A new exhibit explores The Troubles in Northern Ireland through portraiture
Seasonal nostalgia …
Thursday, April 18, 2024
Yet another poem …
… this one by me.
Elegy
In Memory of Zelda
The aging princess presides
Over the ruin of the late king’s palace.
The dowager queen cannot help
But notice the walls give way,
The dust gather. The aging princess
Toasts her aging consort and complains.
Hounds bay among debris, the moon
Opaquely shines through soiled panes.
The dowager queen listens and wanly smiles.
“A driving rain may streak,” she thinks,
“But never cleanse the windows,
Whether of house or soul. All
Gives way, nothing being done.
Time was, the princess danced
Beneath a moon effulgent, not opaque,
And children gamboled on the lawn.
The children now are fled
To regions where auroras dance instead.
How it will end seems clearer
Than the windowpanes, though when
Remains obscure, as always.” The aging princess
Takes her aging consort by the hand
And leads him in a halting sarabande.
The royal cats cry out, extend their claws.
The dowager queen listens and wanly smiles.
In case you wondered …
One of my favorite poets …
Honoring a centenary …
His claim to immortality is Mrs. Bridge, which astonishes in its build-up of quiet power. Like many books that are ostensibly about nothing at all, it is, of course, about everything.
Wednesday, April 17, 2024
Something to think on …
Tuesday, April 16, 2024
Something to think on …
Latter-day nonsense …
Monday, April 15, 2024
Something to think on …
Our greatest essayist …
Epstein has been called a conservative, but that is only because the shallowness prevailing among the well-educated is usually leftist. What he really is is an exposer of bullshit in all its smelly varieties.
Sunday, April 14, 2024
Truth and faith …
Truth is a quest. An endless procession through a labyrinth of evidence to a deeper understanding of what really is out there in the world. And yet, truth itself is something that we can’t know for certain—except, perhaps, under controlled or limited circumstances.
Another word …
Still,deserving some room at the top …
In a literary sense, Room at the Top is a landmark work of Northern realism. “Certainly no one until John Braine had described the exact kind of urges operating within the post-war specimen,” wrote [Kenneth] Allsop.
His influence only increases …
Although he was born nearly 121 years ago and died nearly 60 years ago, Waugh’s life is one filled with lessons for Catholics today.
Something to think on …
Saturday, April 13, 2024
A poem …
You are the sun in the corner of my picture
In a dream I am putting together
A puzzle. I think it is Eden
But I'm not sure- green here, a flower there.
And where would Eden be without trees?
You're the sun in the corner of my picture;
A look here, a contour there, and hints that
You're a lover who cannot be possessed.
But you are in my Eden and I am glad.
Assembling a puzzle of Eden leaves me
Halfway between architect and shaman.
There may be few ways to get it right.
“Unlucky”, I say to deflect attention.
It's best to have a good reason to talk to God
I'm always a fuck up but I get that right.
Jennifer Knox
Something to think on …
Friday, April 12, 2024
Something to think on …
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Something to think on …
Here’s to you …
… Drinking, a poem by Gabriela Mistral. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden,)
This past Sunday, April 7, marked the. 135th anniversary of Gabriela Mistral’s birth.
Wednesday, April 10, 2024
Real poetry for children …
Sound advice …
Something to think on …
Tuesday, April 09, 2024
Something to think on …
Monday, April 08, 2024
Something to think on …
Sunday, April 07, 2024
Take a look at these …
I was on assignment in Dublin some years, working on a piece about the centenary of Bloomsday. Ireland is a lovely place.
Something to think on …
Saturday, April 06, 2024
Another blogging note …
I just have too much to do just now. Blogging is going to be spotty for a while. I’ll post when I can. Bear in mind I try to read is sent to me before I post a link. That takes time.
Blogging note …
I have much to deal with in my personal life these, not least of which is my wife’s current infirmity. So I will get to blogging when I can. Please bear with me.
Thin in every sense
Novels in translation are often prey for the whims of quixotic or plain bad writing, but lines such as “his whole being radiated a distinctive air through his fresh eau de cologne” are not just bathetic but suggest that either the book’s translator Anne McLean was not up to the job or, more likely, Márquez’s existing work was so poor that even the most talented interpreter would be unable to make headway with its incomprehensibilities and banalities.
A poem by a master …
A dubious biography …
For your reading pleasure …
… Today’s Poem: Here. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
I spent a pleasant day once chatting with Rhina at the West Chester University Poetry Conference.
Something to think on …
Friday, April 05, 2024
Blogging note …
I had a very long day yesterday, and this morning, most uncharacteristically, I overslept. So I have things to do right now, and blogging will have to wait until this afternoon, when I return from my mabdatiory daily walk.
Something to think on …
Thursday, April 04, 2024
Gathering poems …
Drawing from a tradition with antecedents in antiquity, the practice of editing a commonplace book required a student to collect fragments of writing that interested them—portions of dialogue, bits of sermons, selections of poems—and arrange them together
Contemplating curtail call …
Evidently, the time is ripe for a survey of the branch of cultural production concerned with the end of the world. And yet, as Lynskey points out, tales have been told about it for as long as we’ve been doing story.