Imagine my dismay at discovering that there is a northwest-by-north and a north-northwest, but no north-by-northwest. Oh well, it remains a damn fine movie...
*****
In my bag at the moment there are two books - Cities of Salt by one Abdelrahman Munif, and David Copperfield, by some English guy or another. I like 'em both, but, at this moment, prefer the Arab to the Englishman. It's tight, though, I'll tells ya.
*****
Helped with an engine tear-down on a Cessna 172. 'Helped' here signifies that I handed the guy tools and did some heavy lifting and removed some bolts - the guy could probably have done it faster without my constant yammering and helping...
It was a beautiful thing. Did you know there are folks who get paid to work such wonders?
*****
I forgot how much I hate literature seminars. Sure, the University is between terms, but this morning I sat in on a sort of informal bull-session with grad students and a couple of professors from a couple different departments [all of whom and which shall remain nameless in perpetuity on these here pages]. They chattered on about everything except the works in question. Theory, theory, everywhere theory - postcolonialisticalcumstructuralizinglacanism, or something like that - that's all these folks knew. I asked an apparently quite stupid question - 'Do any of y'all, you know, like this stuff?' I didn't get a straight answer.
*****
I don't think the fact that I like flying, taking engines apart, studying physics, and writing stuff, way way more than I like the academic study of littratoor, has any relevance whatsoever.
*****
I've a friend who thinks my desire to some day visit Mumbai is, well, insane. [By the bye, some few of the folks there still call it Bombay - Mumbai is an apparently overheated signifier.] He notes that the island city is overcrowded, wracked by corruption and violence, on the brink of another battle between Hindus and Muslims, and generally full of vice. He thinks this will change my mind. Oh, how little he knows me.
That city is the future in not-so-miniature. Best to understand it. Besides, no place is ever completely fallen until it's simply gone. Except for Dubai, that is, which will, one can pray, find itself consumed by the desert before too long.
I'll get to Bombay/Mumbai some time in the next decade for sure. I mean, there are other places to see first, like Montana. I've never seen Montana...
*****
Peter Theroux translated the novel by Munif. I had forgotten all about Theroux. Now I want to read his books again.
*****
At some point I would like to take up welding - I think it would be fun at parties...
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As you can hear, I've run out of things to say.
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It's all clear to me now...
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Peace out.
How sick - to wait - in any place - but thine -
I knew last night - when someone tried to twine -
Thinking - perhaps that I looked tired - or alone -
Or breaking - almost - with unspoken pain -
And I turned - ducal -
That right - was thine -
One port - suffices - for a Brig like mine -
Our's be the tossing - wild though the sea -
Rather than a mooring - unshared by thee.
Our's be the Cargo - unladen - here -
Rather than the spicey isles -
And thou - not there -
Emily Dickinson, #410, 1862
*****
‘Still Dunce the second reigns like Dunce the first,' Alexander Pope.
*****
I have from time to time dilated on the lunacy of one Chesterton. One thing in particular I cannot stand is his delight both in ‘dirtiness' as some sort of mortification of the soul, which he makes parcel of the virtues of English civilization. A sure sign of this civilization is the ‘wholesome diet of beef and beer' which the innately Christian Englishman makes his staple. Indeed, it seems that tea is for pagans - though I can't remember if they're the sort of pagans that the jolly elf though swell, or the more dour, throat-slitting, bog-hopping pagans native to his beloved Engelond. However that may be, I offer here the antidote to Chesterton, in the form of John Wilmot, the Earl of Rochester. For all I know, Chesterton could have been responding to the erstwhile reprobate.
‘In Easter-term she gets her a new gown,
When my young master's worship comes to town,
From pedagogue and mother just set free,
The heir and hopes of a great family;
Who with strong beer and beef the country rules,
And ever since the Conquest have been fools;
And now, with careful prospect to maintain
This character, lest crossing of the strain
Should mend the booby breed, his friends provide
A cousin of his own to be his bride,' [A Letter from Artemesia in the Town , To Chloe in the Country, c. 1670].
Note the change from end-stopped to enjambed lines as Artemesia moves from the statement of the case to commentary. Damn fine, I say.
*****
The Moon is distant from the Sea -
And yet, with Amber Hands -
She leads Him - docile as a Boy -
along appointed Sands -
He never misses a Degree -
Obedient to Her eye -
He comes just so far - toward the Town -
Just so far - goes away -
Oh, Signor, Thine, the Amber Hand -
And mine - the distant Sea -
Obedient to the least command
Thine eye impose on me -
Emily Dickinson, #387, 1862
This is just lovely in its music, both as a matter of rhythm in the lines and the modulation of vowels and consonants. Then there's the slant rhyme in the middle stanza. Finally, note that the conceit here is delicate, yet strong, and serves the song of a lover who is, alas, not always close, nor always warm. Yes, if the beloved addressed is not so near, then it is because Emily is distant.
*****
‘God keep me from completing anything. This whole book is but a draught - nay, but the draught of a draught. Oh, Time, Strength, Cash, and patience!' - Moby Dick, ch. 32

