From the the Writer’s Almanac: On this day in 1864 Union General Sherman wrote to the Atlanta City Council: “You cannot qualify war in harsher terms than I will. War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it.”
General Sherman had just captured Atlanta. Along the way, his soldiers had taken part in something known as “total war”: They’d burned down crops, confiscated millions of pounds of corn and feed, and destroyed thousands of horses and mules and cows. They’d wrecked bridges, torn up railroad tracks to make train transport unusable, and they’d destroyed telegraph lines. In late August, they’d forced the surrender of Atlanta, occupied the city, and demanded that it be evacuated.
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Starded reading The Catcher in the Rye and I am lovin’ it. You sense clearly on the first couple of pages that Salinger has invented a new voice back in 1945. The voice of still feels fresh and strong.
Update: December 6, 2010. I finally finished reading this 192 page book yesterday. My fall was not a bountiful harvest for literature as you can see from these stats. This is 64 pages per month or two pages a day of reading. Well, it is at least not as pathetic as in high school when we discussed the book in class but I never read it. But I do have a good memory of the book cover. I will write a some observations about this American classic in the next couple of days.
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This Night Only
by Kenneth Rexroth
[Eric Satie: GYMNOPÉDIE #1]
Moonlight now on Malibu
The winter night the few stars
Far away millions of miles
The sea going on and on
Forever around the earth
Far and far as your lips are near
Filled with the same light as your eyes
Darling darling darling
The future is long gone by
And the past will never happen
We have only this
Our one forever
So small so infinite
So brief so vast
Immortal as our hands that touch
Deathless as the firelit wine we drink
Almighty as this single kiss
That has no beginning
That will never
Never
End
From the Writer’s Almanac
Continue Reading“One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words.”
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Priests tell us that revenge is a base motive. But if your husband (or wife) cheated on you with a dozen of other people and you end up in tabloits for months looking like a fool, wanting to get even may be therapeutic. Elin waited to speak out until the divorce from her Tiger was finalized. Now she has given what she calls an exlcusive inteview with People Magazine. She describes the common emotions of any person whose trust was fundamentally violated. “I felt so stupid. How could I not know any thing. ... I have been through the stages of disbelief and shock, to anger and ultimately grief over the loss of the family I so badly wanted for my children.” Elin says this was her first and last interview. In true American fashion, despite obvious physical problems caused by the divorce stress (isomnia, weightloss, hairloss, etc.) she ends the interview with this statement: “I also feel stronger than I ever have. I have confidence in my beliefs, my decisions and myself.” Elin wants to finish her college degree in psychology. If she does, she will find that psychologically this is not over even though divorce papers are signed. Will Tiger ever regain his golfing ability? I hope he does not rush into another mariage in a quest to recature his golf mojo. What this episode shows once again: reason does not rule the world!
I had lunch at a Thai Restaurant today. On the front side of her T-shirt, the attractive waitress had a daring message printed. I could not resist asking her: “What does ‘Meaningful Overnight Relationship Wanted’ mean?” She smiles and says innocently: “I don’t know.” This answer left everything open…
Vincent suffers from Tourette’s syndrome, “an inherited neuropsychiatric disorder with onset in childhood, characterized by multiple physical (motor) tics and at least one vocal (phonic) tic” (Wikipedia). When his mother dies, his father, a politician in Bavaria, sticks him into an institution of people with mental problems so that his tic gets cured. Now we are in location explored by earlier films such as Rain Main and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. The film at times is funny and has a few deep moments, but it also deteriorates into cheesy kitsch. It is also too close the earlier German film The Princess and the Warrior (Der Krieger und die Kaiserin), which was a lot better and I recommend you see instead.
I have been enchanged by Bettye LaVette’s voice over the past couple of days, listinening to her new release Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook. Her transformation of rock songs into the R&B / Soul genre are masterful. Probably the strongest track on the record is “Nights in White Satin.” Wao, how deeply can this voice reach into our soul. Listen!
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