Wheelhorse, good word. Come across in Missionary Stew: “And as one party wheelhorse in Boston had once told Haere, ‘When old Dave cuts your throat, Draper, you don’t smell no fuckin’ magnolias.”
Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
July 27, 2024
Noting, in Missionary Stew, that Ross Thomas has a Pynchonesque style of naming characters, similarly playful, not as over-the-top. (Well, “B.S. Keats” is pretty over-the-top. This was published in ’83 so Pynchon could have been an influence.)
Arc of the moral universe
July 26, 2024Aeschylus, Agamemnon, 364-366:
τείνοντα πάλαι τόξον, ὅπως ἂν
μήτε πρὸ καιροῦ μήθ᾽ ὑπὲρ ἄστρων
βέλος ἠλίθιον σκήψειεν.
Literal translation: “Long he pulled his bow so that/ neither prematurely nor beyond the stars/ the arrow vainly fell.” Lattimore’s is good: “[Zeus] bent the bow with slow care, that neither/ the shaft might hurdle the stars, nor fall/ spent to earth short driven.”
Idea is that Zeus took his time bring justice to Paris in order to get it right. Seems like there is some similarity — both in the content and imagery — to MLK’s remark about “the arc of the moral universe is long…” which appears to be a paraphrase of a statement by transcendentalist Theodore Parker.
July 25, 2024
Post: “Academics who study the subject have consistently found the value of many hospitals’ good work pales in comparison with the value of their tax breaks. Studies have shown that generally nonprofit and for-profit hospitals spend about the same portion of their expenses on the charity care component.”
July 24, 2024
Aeschylus, Agamemnon 74-75: ἰσχὺν/ ἰσόπαιδα νέμοντες ἐπὶ σκήπτροις.
Smyth: “… supporting on our canes a strength like a child’s.”
Lattimore: “… to prop up on staffs the strength of a baby.”
“Typewriter” to mean “typist”
July 24, 2024Again, the wiktionary entry for the word I was looking up quotes the very passage in which I came across the word I’m looking up — typewriter to mean typist in Kipling’s Captains Courageous.
I haven’t uncovered yet any hard information about precisely when typist overtook typewriter to mean a person who types, however. Here is typist, typewriter on ngrams. Perhaps the drop-off in mentions of typewriter that begins in 1914 owes something to typist gaining more prominence.
Finally looking up windlass
July 22, 2024I had always imagined a windlass was something vaguely nautical, and as something so technical I could never possibly understand it — an obscure type of sail, perhaps — both of which notions are totally fatally wrong, I find today.
I also supposed that the name was derived from wind, the airy noun, not from wind, the revolving verb, which is also wrong, though the noun and verb are themselves related.
July 21, 2024
Hilarious. These people want to replace great books with good books, it seems to me.
Faulkner and Anderson
July 21, 2024I knew that Faulkner had worked at a book store in NYC and knew that he had struck up a friendship with Sherwood Anderson but until reading the foreword to the copy of Soldier’s Pay I picked up the other day I hadn’t known these two facts were related: Anderson’s wife owned the book shop Faulkner had worked at and it was through her that he came to know Anderson himself.
July 21, 2024
I don’t know how I, a peace enthused person, intellectually got here, I suppose because I follow the news, but the U.S. needs to be on more of a war-footing, in my opinion: focus for starters on ship-building.
Being able to identify gods
July 20, 2024This reminds of the passage in Book 5, I think it is, in which Athena gives Diomedes the power to see gods.
“For I easily recognized the prints from his feet and legs As he was leaving. The gods are really conspicuous.” (*)
July 20, 2024
Seems that Dart Drug and Toys R Us were started in Adams Morgan. The name, “once hyphenated, is derived from the names of two formerly segregated area elementary schools.”
Sanctuary
July 20, 2024No, Sanctuary is not a mere potboiler but you do see something in it of Faulkner the yarn-teller, who is usually more submerged beneath other things.
… I must have read this years ago, for while I encounter the plot as something new (probably having not previously understood it) certain sentences throughout it will ring out as familiar — e.g. “a careful coal.”
July 19, 2024
Came across the expression “seated on his spine” a couple times in Sanctuary but am unable to find out what that means. I’d imagine it means “upright” but it could as easily mean “reclined.”
July 15, 2024
So in the southern United States a loblolly can be a mudhole. The wiktionary entry quotes the very passenge from Faulkner’s Sanctuary that induced me to look it up.
July 11, 2024
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Plays that are written after the plays within them
July 7, 2024The obviously very speculative idea that Nabokov’s Pale Fire and Wallace’s Infinite Jest both began as plays-within-plays but without the exterior play, which they then tried retrospectively to build an exterior play (or novel) around.
In Pale Fire‘s case, the play-within-the-play is its extraordinary but perhaps somewhat anachronistic poem; that was great but didn’t work on its own as a poem, so what could he build around to make it work? In Infinite Jest‘s case, it is the experimental films of the genius father that didn’t work as pieces on their own, so what setting could Wallace give them that would make them work?
July 6, 2024
ngrams: rappahannock,occoquan,potomac,susquehanna,anacostia…. a little surprised by Rappahannock’s increase since 2010.
July 6, 2024
Thinking of my post from yesterday, I feel like Thucydides envisions a world in which, not only is the community of Greek city states split between Sparta and Athens, but individual city-states are themselves split into democratic and oligarchic factions. So when I see large voting blocks of NATO countries supporting countries that are opposed to NATO, for example, that is what comes to mind.