“I’m still here but yet I’m gone”: Glen Campbell’s “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” is a powerful song. To my mind it belongs in the company of the Beach Boys’ “’Til I Die” and Johnny Cash’s recording of Trent Reznor’s “Hurt”: existential statements, all.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Water towers of New York
The photographer Ronnie Farley on New York water towers: “They’re the only natural looking thing in the skyline.” There’s a story at WNYC’s Studio 360. And here’s a portfolio of Farley‘s water-tower photographs. Of the two water-tank manufacturers mentioned in the WNYC story, one has a website (with vertigo-inducing photographs); the other has a website coming soon.
[No hampers around these water towers.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:44 AM comments: 0
“The damned desire of having”
A striking phrase from Rolfe Humphries’s 1955 translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses: “the damned desire of having.” The phrase ends a catalogue of new arrivals from the Iron Age: “trickery and slyness, plotting, swindling, / Violence and the damned desire of having.” In Latin, book one, line 131, it goes like this: “amor sceleratus habendi ,” the polluted, profaned, defiled love of having.
I love the Humphries translation of the poem. His Lucretius is somewhere on my (imaginary) to-read list.
Other Ovid posts
In the palace of Rumor : Ovid’s Polyphemus : Raymond Carver and Ovid
By Michael Leddy at 7:19 AM comments: 0
Sunday, October 19, 2014
Scenic wallpaper
Cooper Hewitt’s Object of the Day, yesterday: mid-twentieth-century scenic wallpaper, manufactured by the J. C. Eisenhart Wall Paper Co., Hanover, Pennsylvania. Imagining a wall of this stuff makes me think of the problem of infinite regress. It’s rivers and trees, all the way down. And across.
You can subscribe to Cooper Hewitt’s Object of the Day and get all kinds of interesting objects through the mail.
By Michael Leddy at 10:28 AM comments: 0
Friday, October 17, 2014
Domestic comedy
“‘. . . the wine-dark fleece.’ Was that one mine?”
“No, that was mine.”
Related reading
All OCA domestic comedy posts (Pinboard)
[Not all fleeces are golden.]
By Michael Leddy at 4:12 PM comments: 2
Mark Trail arrows
[Mark Trail, October 14, 15, 16, 17, 2014.]
Mark is back from Africa and just back from fishing with Rusty. He has asked neighbor Mitch Wilson to come over. Mark to Mitch: “I’m aware of your expertise with a longbow.” What are you trying to say, Mark? A weirdly sexualized archery contest follows: Mitch shoots (THIP), Cherry shoots (THUP), Mark shoots (THK), and Mitch splits Mark’s arrow. That's the sound of SHUK. Oh SHUK.
Related reading
All OCA Mark Trail posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:46 AM comments: 2
Thursday, October 16, 2014
Edgar who?
From Patrick Leigh Fermor’s A Time of Gifts: On Foot to Constantinople: From the Hook of Holland to the Middle Danube (1977), the first of three volumes recounting the writer’s 1933–1934 walk across Europe. Here Leigh Fermor is visiting a Benedictine monastery, Göttweig Abbey, in the company of a shoemaker named Paul:
He led me along an upper cloister to see an Irish monk of immense age and great charm. His words are all lost, but I can still hear his soft West of Ireland voice. Except for his long Edgar Wallace cigarette holder, our host could have sat for a picture of St. Jerome.Edgar Wallace (1875–1932) was a writer of immense output. Today he may be best known as the writer of the first draft of the screenplay for King Kong (1933). Wallace appeared on the cover of the April 15, 1929 issue of Time, cigarette holder in hand and mouth.
[Image from Time Cover Search.]
The image of St. Jerome with a cigarette holder is best left to the individual imagination.
Related posts
From A Time of Gifts : One word from A Time of Gifts : Leigh Fermor’s Brueghel : Leigh Fermor’s eye
[Monks smoke?!]
By Michael Leddy at 9:26 AM comments: 6
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
“Objects on which to lavish attention”
Susan Sontag, in “The Aesthetics of Silence” (Styles of Radical Will, 1969):
In one of its aspects, art is a technique for focusing attention, for teaching skills of attention. (While the whole of the human environment might be so described — as a pedagogic instrument — this description particularly applies to works of art.) The history of the arts is tantamount to the discovery and the formulation of a repertory of objects on which to lavish attention.Back in grad school, I put these sentences on the syllabus for my freshman lit and comp class. Some nerve. I was an optimistic kid. Still am.
By Michael Leddy at 7:35 AM comments: 2
A universal question
“I love the idea that somehow this is the universal question, the thing that unites us”: Where do birds go when it rains? (xkcd).
By Michael Leddy at 7:32 AM comments: 0
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Protecting the Chuck
Converse on in the courts:
In complaints filed with the International Trade Commission and in federal court, Converse claims that 31 retailers and manufacturers have infringed on one or more of its shoe’s trademark designs, including one or two black stripes, and the so-called cap above the toe. The Converse star is not in question.Read it all: Converse Sues to Protect Its Chuck Taylor All Stars (The New York Times).
Converse All Stars puzzle me. At one time I lived in them. I still have a pair that I wear once a year, when I dress up as a younger me on Halloween. How I — or anyone — ever played basketball in Chucks is beyond me: they offer no support.
By Michael Leddy at 2:32 PM comments: 0