Art, Book reviews, Ceramics, Photographs, Postcards, Quick Fiction, Quotations, and (Usually Aquatic) Reflections. (P.S. This blog looks better in the web version.)
Friday, September 29, 2017
Dear Lord Byron . . . Postscript
Friend: What was it? Do you know now?
Me: I wanted to be able to say that I knew what Byron thought and felt and meant in any given moment and any given text, but since I didn't mean to write the next biography all of that did not serve me well. I failed to digest much of what I was consuming and I didn't know how to stop except by teaching other people.
Me: Though, you know, there were times when I did know. But that was mysticism and not academically allowed.
Friend: Matt, so the obsession was mastery--and you achieved it, just not in the exact way you envisioned.
Me: Mastery is an illusion, but I once believed in that illusion.
Thursday, September 28, 2017
Dear Lord Byron . . . .
I've been teaching some books about specific obsessions, and in order for my students to understand that I was not judging or maligning the authors for their obsessions, I made a bit of a joke about understanding obsession myself, about being obsessed. I mentioned my nine years in graduate school and detailed how I'd not only read and annotated all that Lord Byron had written, published or not published, but also had read and annotated the thirteen volumes of his letters that we have and had read and annotated the letters sent to him and had even started reading and annotating all that Byron himself had read . . . in chronological order.
(And that's not counting the bookcase or two full of literary scholarship on Lord Byron and English Romanticism and European history and heroism I also read and annotated.)
What started out as a joke became a little more serious: I do understand obsession.
I survived mine, but not everyone does.
(And that's not counting the bookcase or two full of literary scholarship on Lord Byron and English Romanticism and European history and heroism I also read and annotated.)
What started out as a joke became a little more serious: I do understand obsession.
I survived mine, but not everyone does.
Missing the Muses
Salt water;
clay;
blank pages and time;
a new album to spark my own lyrics to titles and tunes;
and a good book of poetry or prose to knock me off my feet a bit.
Sunday, September 24, 2017
Graves: "Mermaid, Dragon, Fiend"
MERMAID, DRAGON, FIEND
In my childhood rumors ran
Of a world beyond our door—
Terrors to the life of man
That the highroad held in store.
Of mermaids' doleful game
In deep water I heard tell,
Of lofty dragons belching flame,
Of the hornèd fiend of Hell.
Tales like these were too absurd
For my laughter-loving ear:
Soon I mocked at all I heard,
Though with cause indeed for fear.
Now I know the mermaid kin
I find them bound by natural laws:
They have neither tail nor fin,
But are deadlier for that cause.
Dragons have no darting tongues,
Teeth saw-edged, nor rattling scales;
No fire issues from their lungs,
No black poison from their tails:
For they are creatures of dark air,
Unsubstantial tossing forms,
Thunderclaps of man's despair
In mid-whirl of mental storms.
And there's a true and only fiend
Worse than prophets prophesy,
Whose full powers to hurt are screened
Lest the race of man should die.
Ever in vain will courage plot
The dragon's death, in coat of proof;
Or love abjure the mermaid grot;
Or faith denounce the cloven hoof.
Mermaids will not be denied
The last bubbles of our shame,
The Dragon flaunts an unpierced hide,
The true fiend governs in God's name.
--ROBERT GRAVES
Thursday, September 21, 2017
Dumas' The Three Musketeers (novel and films)
My favorite version--after reading Alexandre Dumas' classic novel The Three Musketeers--to watch: Richard Lester's version (scripted by the author of the Flashman novels!)--
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-LfUtHnEBY
But then you'll also need to watch Richard Lester's sequel (though part of the original French novel):
The Four Musketeers--
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMhwGUGNuxI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-LfUtHnEBY
But then you'll also need to watch Richard Lester's sequel (though part of the original French novel):
The Four Musketeers--
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMhwGUGNuxI
Saturday, September 16, 2017
Dougie MacLean's "Leis A Lurighan"
On the ocean o‘he
Waves in motion o‘ho
Not but clouds could we see
O'er the blue sea below
Islay loomin‘ o‘he
In the gloamin‘ o‘ho
Our ship's compass set we
And our lights we did show
Aros passing o‘he
Was harrassing o‘ho
The proud belows to see
High as masthead to flow
Captain hollers o‘he
To his fellows o‘ho
Those that courage would flee
Let him go down below
In the tempest o‘he
Waves were crashing o‘ho
And the cry of the sea
As the cold winds did blow
Captain hollers o‘he
To his fellows o‘ho
Those that won't stay with me
Let them go down below
Wednesday, September 6, 2017
Neoprene Dreams
Or, A Sense of Menace? Doesn't that first shot seem like a certain type of paperback crime novel cover?
Or, really, the other shots, the accidental photographs . . . .