From the journal of Steven H. Cullinane... 2003 July 1-15

Tuesday, July 15, 2003

Bishop and Saint

Today is the birthday of Clement Clarke Moore, author of "A Visit from St. Nicholas," also known as "The Night Before Christmas."

Here is a biography of Moore:

Clement C. Moore

Here is a related biography:

Bishop Paul Moore of New York

Here is an attack on Clement Moore:

A Plagiarist and a Creep 

Here is a defense of Clement Moore:

Yes, Virginia, Moore Did Write It.

It seems the real creep here is Greg Hill.

First runner-up creep: Gerald McDaniel, whose Cultural Calendar for today has the following entries:

  • On this day in 1779, a New York City clergyman and avocational poet Clement Moore was born. His only work of note is the poem "A Visit from Saint Nicholas," which gave us so many holiday icons. It turns out that scholarship now indicates that Moore, either intentionally or unintentionally, plagiarized the work, which was originally written by a Dutch-New York humorist. A lawsuit* eventually gave the original author's family proprietary rights.
  • On this day in 1789, the electors of Paris set up a Commune to live without the authority of the government.
  • The Marseillaise was officially adopted as the French national anthem on this day in 1795. "Allons, citoyens!"

    Actually, the Marseillaise has "Aux armes, citoyens!" not "Allons, citoyens" as the self-described liberal McDaniel claims.  The former phrase goes well with the populist song lyrics of Jimmie Rodgers:

    "I’m gonna buy myself a shotgun,
     one with a long shiny barrel."

    For more on Rodgers and shotguns, see my July 8 entry on the pursuit of happiness in Meridian, Mississippi, A Face in the Crowd.

    * I can find no other mention of any such lawsuit on the Web.  It seems to be a figment of McDaniel's liberal imagination.

  • 7:30 pm



    Monday, July 14, 2003

    Funeral or Wedding?

    From the New York Times of

    Bastille Day, 2003:

    Isabelle d'Orléans et Bragance, 93, Dies;
    Was the Countess of Paris

    By WOLFGANG SAXON

    Isabelle d'Orléans et Bragance, Countess of Paris, who was married to a pretender to the throne of France, died on July 5 in Paris. She was 93.

    The countess was the widow of Henri, Count of Paris, whom many royalists wanted to become King Henri VI of France. He died in 1999, and the couple's eldest son, also called Henri, claimed the title of Count of Paris and Duke of France, becoming the new pretender.

    Her full name was originally Isabel Marie Amélie Louise Victoire Thérèse Jeanne of Orléans and Bragana, or Bragance in French.

    The Countess was associated with the

    ville d'Eu in Haute-Normandie.

    The patron saint of the ville d'Eu is Lawrence O'Toole, also the patron saint of Dublin, Ireland.

    He is known in France as Saint Laurent, and here is a picture of his chapel near the ville d'Eu:

    Two pieces of music seem appropriate to memorialize both the dark and the bright sides of life on this Bastille Day.

    Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings was played at the funeral of Princess Grace of Monaco, and so should be sufficiently royal for the Comtesse de Paris.

    For the midi, click here.
    (Piano arrangement by Brian Robinson.)

    Cole Porter's "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To," originally sung (in a 1943 film) by Don Ameche, will serve to recall the bright side of life.  It was written after the 1931 Palermo wedding of the Comtesse but may, in a jazz arrangement, be pleasing to St. Norman J.  O'Connor, the jazz priest in my entry of July 5 — the date of death of the Comtesse, who may or may not have also been a saint.

    For the midi, click here.

    "Now you has jazz."
    -- Cole Porter, High Society

    7:00 pm

    Comments on this post:

    Alas, my French sucketh.

    Posted 7/15/2003 at 4:37 am by oOMisfitOo

    I'd also like to add that this particular post of yours led me down several by ways and highways of internet "linkage" (it started with the search for info on Lawrence O'Toole being a patron saint in Dublin, Ireland)

    As such, I began perusing massive amounts of Historical references to Ireland, found the trip I'm going to take when I turn 40 ... and it's all your fault.  Thank You.

    Posted 7/15/2003 at 6:29 pm by oOMisfitOo

    Ah ... HERE.

    Posted 7/15/2003 at 6:30 pm by oOMisfitOo



    Monday, July 14, 2003

    xxx 4:00 pm



    Sunday, July 13, 2003

    ART WARS, 5:09

    The Word in the Desert

    For Harrison Ford in the desert.
    (See previous entry.)

        Words strain,
    Crack and sometimes break,
        under the burden,
    Under the tension, slip, slide, perish,
    Will not stay still. Shrieking voices
    Scolding, mocking, or merely chattering,
    Always assail them.
        The Word in the desert
    Is most attacked by voices of temptation,
    The crying shadow in the funeral dance,
    The loud lament of
        the disconsolate chimera.

    — T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets

    The link to the word "devilish" in the last entry leads to one of my previous journal entries, "A Mass for Lucero," that deals with the devilishness of postmodern philosophy.  To hammer this point home, here is an attack on college English departments that begins as follows:

    "William Faulkner's Snopes trilogy, which recounts the generation-long rise of the drily loathsome Flem Snopes from clerk in a country store to bank president in Jefferson, Mississippi, teems with analogies to what has happened to English departments over the past thirty years."

    For more, see

    The Word in the Desert,
    by Glenn C. Arbery
    .

    See also the link on the word "contemptible," applied to Jacques Derrida, in my Logos and Logic page.

    This leads to an National Review essay on Derrida,

    The Philosopher as King,
    by Mark Goldblatt

    A reader's comment on my previous entry suggests the film "Scotland, PA" as viewing related to the Derrida/Macbeth link there.

    I prefer the following notice of a 7-11 death, that of a powerful art museum curator who would have been well cast as Lady Macbeth:

    Die Fahne Hoch,
    Frank Stella,
    1959


    Dorothy Miller,
    MOMA curator,
    died at 99 on
    July 11, 2003
    .

    From the Whitney Museum site:

    "Max Anderson: When artist Frank Stella first showed this painting at The Museum of Modern Art in 1959, people were baffled by its austerity. Stella responded, 'What you see is what you see. Painting to me is a brush in a bucket and you put it on a surface. There is no other reality for me than that.' He wanted to create work that was methodical, intellectual, and passionless. To some, it seemed to be nothing more than a repudiation of everything that had come before—a rational system devoid of pleasure and personality. But other viewers saw that the black paintings generated an aura of mystery and solemnity.

    The title of this work, Die Fahne Hoch, literally means 'The banner raised.'  It comes from the marching anthem of the Nazi youth organization. Stella pointed out that the proportions of this canvas are much the same as the large flags displayed by the Nazis.

    But the content of the work makes no reference to anything outside of the painting itself. The pattern was deduced from the shape of the canvas—the width of the black bands is determined by the width of the stretcher bars. The white lines that separate the broad bands of black are created by the narrow areas of unpainted canvas. Stella's black paintings greatly influenced the development of Minimalism in the 1960s."

    From Play It As It Lays:

       She took his hand and held it.  "Why are you here."
       "Because you and I, we know something.  Because we've been out there where nothing is.  Because I wanted—you know why."
       "Lie down here," she said after a while.  "Just go to sleep."
       When he lay down beside her the Seconal capsules rolled on the sheet.  In the bar across the road somebody punched King of the Road on the jukebox again, and there was an argument outside, and the sound of a bottle breaking.  Maria held onto BZ's hand.
       "Listen to that," he said.  "Try to think about having enough left to break a bottle over it."
       "It would be very pretty," Maria said.  "Go to sleep."

    I smoke old stogies I have found...    

    Cigar Aficionado on artist Frank Stella:

    " 'Frank actually makes the moment. He captures it and helps to define it.'

    This was certainly true of Stella's 1958 New York debut. Fresh out of Princeton, he came to New York and rented a former jeweler's shop on Eldridge Street on the Lower East Side. He began using ordinary house paint to paint symmetrical black stripes on canvas. Called the Black Paintings, they are credited with paving the way for the minimal art movement of the 1960s. By the fall of 1959, Dorothy Miller of The Museum of Modern Art had chosen four of the austere pictures for inclusion in a show called Sixteen Americans."

    For an even more austere picture, see

    Geometry for Jews:

    For more on art, Derrida, and devilishness, see Deborah Solomon's essay in the New York Times Magazine of Sunday, June 27, 1999:

     How to Succeed in Art.

    "Blame Derrida and
    his fellow French theorists...."

    See, too, my site

    Art Wars: Geometry as Conceptual Art

    For those who prefer a more traditional meditation, I recommend

    Ecce Lignum Crucis

    ("Behold the Wood of the Cross")

    THE WORD IN THE DESERT

    For more on the word "road" in the desert, see my "Dead Poet" entry of Epiphany 2003 (Tao means road) as well as the following scholarly bibliography of road-related cultural artifacts (a surprising number of which involve Harrison Ford):

    A Bibliography of Road Materials

    5:09 pm

    Comments on this post:

    Oh. My. God.

    There is just far too much for me here to find the hidden gems at the moment. 
    But oh ... there is something here for me ... I can feel it surely as I can feel a tiny crystal throbbing at the bottom of a wicker basket in the thrift store down the street.

    And I'm really good at that.

    Posted 7/13/2003 at 10:33 pm by oOMisfitOo



    Sunday, July 13, 2003

    Ground Zero

    Today's birthday: Harrison Ford is 61.

                 From The Gag

    Seven - Eleven Dice 

    Throw a seven or eleven every time. Set consists of a pair of regular dice and another set that can't miss. A product of the S. S. Adams Company. Make your friends and family laugh with this great prank!

     New York State Lottery:

    7-11 Evening Number: 000.

    From the conclusion of
    Joan Didion's 1970 novel
    Play It As It Lays: 

    "I know what 'nothing' means,
    and keep on playing."

    From a review of the 1970 film Zabriskie Point:

    "The real star of Zabriskie Point... is the desolate, parched-white landscape of Death Valley...."

    For Harrison Ford and Zabriskie Point, see

    Harrison Ford - Le Site En Français

    The Harrison Ford of the 1970 film Zabriskie Point and the "Harrison Porter" of the 1970 novel Play It As It Lays may not be completely unrelated.

    For the religious significance of the names "Porter" and "BZ" in Play It As It Lays, see both the devilish site

    A Wake-Macbeth Intertext:

    "Both 'porter' and 'belzey babble' operate as textual 'grafts' and 'hinges' ..."

    and the Princeton site

    Macbeth, Act II, Scene 3

    {Enter a Porter. Knocking within}

    PORTER:
    1. Here's a knocking indeed!
        If a man were porter
    2. of hell-gate he should have old
        turning the key.{Knock within}
    3. Knock, knock, knock. Who's there,
        i' th' name of
    4. Beelzebub?

    6:13 am

    Comments on this post:

    Thanks for the Wake-MacBeth bit...just watched Scotland, PA  which is a contemporized take on MacBeth.  If you like fluff and good looking young people I recommend it as a breezy watch.

    This synchronicity brought to your attention by me.

    Posted 7/13/2003 at 9:17 am by BabalonTheBride



    Saturday, July 12, 2003

    Before and After

    From Understanding the (Net) Wake:

    24

    A.

    "Its importance in establishing the identities in the writer complexus....will be best appreciated by never forgetting that both before and after the Battle of the Boyne it was a habit not to sign letters always."(114)

    Joyce shows an understanding of the problems that an intertextual book like the Wake poses for the notion of authorship.

    G. H. Hardy in A Mathematician's Apology:

    "We do not want many 'variations' in the proof of a mathematical theorem: 'enumeration of cases,' indeed, is one of the duller forms of mathematical argument.  A mathematical proof should resemble a simple and clear-cut constellation, not a scattered cluster in the Milky Way.

    A chess problem also has unexpectedness, and a certain economy; it is essential that the moves should be surprising, and that every piece on the board should play its part.  But the aesthetic effect is cumulative.  It is essential also (unless the problem is too simple to be really amusing) that the key-move should be followed by a good many variations, each requiring its own individual answer.  'If P-B5 then Kt-R6; if .... then .... ; if .... then ....' — the effect would be spoilt if there were not a good many different replies.  All this is quite genuine mathematics, and has its merits; but it just that 'proof by enumeration of cases' (and of cases which do not, at bottom, differ at all profoundly*) which a real mathematician tends to despise.

    * I believe that is now regarded as a merit in a problem that there should be many variations of the same type."

    (Cambridge at the University Press.  First edition, 1940.)

    Brian Harley in Mate in Two Moves:

    "It is quite true that variation play is, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, the soul of a problem, or (to put it more materially) the main course of the solver's banquet, but the Key is the cocktail that begins the proceedings, and if it fails in piquancy the following dinner is not so satisfactory as it should be."

    (London, Bell & Sons.  First edition, 1931.)

    6:23 pm



    Saturday, July 12, 2003

    Wake

    From my entry of Epiphany 2003,

    Dead Poet in the City of Angels:

    Certain themes recur in these entries.  To describe such recurrent themes, in art and in life, those enamoured of metaphors from physics may ponder the phrase "implicate order."

    For an illustration of at least part of the implicate order, click here .

    On this, the day when Orangemen parade in Northern Ireland, it seems appropriate to expand on the two links I cited last Epiphany.

    For the implicate order and Finnegans Wake, see sections 33 and 34 of

    Understanding the (Net) Wake.

    The second link in the box above is to the Chi-Rho page in the Book of Kells.  For a commentary on the structure of this page and the structure of Finnegans Wake, see

    James Joyce's Whirling Mandala.

    7:00 am



    Friday, July 11, 2003

    Father, Son,
    and Holy Coast

    Here are some religious meditations for the holy day 7-11:

    As the website Hollywood Jesus perceptively points out, defending the story theory of truth, "Images that carry universal truths move us from the mundane to the sacred.  Jesus knew this when he spoke in parables."

    Here is a parable about my own name.

    The Hollywood Jesus site tries to connect the cross of Christ, "holy wood," with Hollywood by claiming that the words "holly" and "holy" are cognate.

    See Hollywood and the Cross.

    From the Online Etymology Dictionary

    holly - O.E. holegn, from P.Gmc. *khuli-.

    holy - O.E. halig "holy," from P.Gmc. *khailagas. Adopted at conversion for L. sanctus. Primary meaning may have been "that must be preserved whole or intact, that cannot be transgressed or violated," which would connect it with O.E. hal (see whole).

    This shows that the holly-holy connection is, pace Neil Diamond, like nearly every other Christian claim, a damned lie.

    Connoisseurs of junk culture may enjoy
    a midi of Neil Diamond as background
    for this Hollywood Jesus.

    Here is a different Hollywood etymology that may be somewhat truer.

    From the RootsWeb.com archives:

    Re: CULLINANE-HOLLYWOOD-holly tree

    "Cullen in Irish is Ó Cuillin (holly tree). ...  This astonishingly simple name has worked its way through an astonishing number of variations including Cullion, Culhoun, MacCullen and Cullinane. ...

    In a message dated 6/5/01 8:24:18 PM Pacific Daylight Time, lawlerc@aol.comnojunk writes:

    'I do not have the surname in my family, but while looking at the Old Age Pension applications for the Barony of Strabane Upper, in the County of Tyrone, there was a notation that

    the English equivalent of the surname CULLINANE is HOLLYWOOD.' "

    10:23 pm

    Comments on this post:

    And it has the right number of syllables:

    "Hooray for Cul-li-nane..."

    Posted 7/12/2003 at 5:38 am by HomerTheBrave



    Friday, July 11, 2003

    Las Manos de Gershwin

    Today is the feast day of St. George Gershwin.

    The hands of
    George Gershwin,
    by Al Hirschfeld

    For related material, see

    Saint Nicholas vs. Mount Doom and

    Leadbelly Under the Volcano.

    See also related material on Judaism and on Lord of the Rings in this morning's links to the Conference of Catholic Bishops and to Stormfront.org.

    More on the film "Las Manos de Orlac" discussed briefly in the Under the Volcano link above:

    Facetious:  Digits of Death

    Serious:  Under the Volcano: A Dissertation.

    From the latter --

    "The ubiquitous posters advertising the 1935 MGM film Mad Love,

    advertised in Spanish as Las Manos de Orlac [The Hands of Orlac]...  reiterates this theme. ... Moreover, the current showings of Las Manos de Orlac represent a revival, the film having been shown in Quauhnahuac a year or so before. A 'revival' is literally a return to life...."

    Recall where the letters of transit in Casablanca were hidden.

    6:00 pm



    Friday, July 11, 2003

    Links for St. Benedict

    Today is the feast of St. Benedict.

    Here is a link from the left:

    The Trial of Depleted Uranium,
    by Saint Philip Berrigan

    Here is a link from the right:

    On a Preview of "The Passion,"
    a film by Saint Mel Gibson

    Both Berrigan and Gibson are devout  Catholics.  (I use the present tense for Berrigan, though he is dead, since, as a saint, he is not very dead.)  Both are worthy of respect, and should be listened to carefully, even though the religion they espouse is that of Hitler and Torquemada.

    Logos 

    For more details, see sites related to the above links.... Click on either of the logos below -- on the left, a Jewish meditation from the Conference of Catholic Bishops; on the right, an Aryan meditation from Stormfront.org.

         

    Both logos represent different embodiments of the "story theory" of truth, as opposed to the "diamond theory" of truth.  Both logos claim, in their own ways, to represent the eternal Logos of the Christian religion.  I personally prefer the "diamond theory" of truth, represented by the logo below.



    6:00 am



    Thursday, July 10, 2003

    Cut to Condon

    From today's New York Times:

    California Postpones
    Exit Exam

    By GREG WINTER

    aced with failure rates that could bar tens of thousands of students from graduating, the California State Board of Education voted yesterday to postpone the consequences of its high school exit exam for two years....

    The reprieve in California is the latest example of the reticence some states have shown when it comes time to impose the significant consequences of the testing movement they have pushed so avidly in recent years. More than two dozen states now have some form of make-or-break exams.

    Break.  Cut to Condon.

    Recommended reading and viewing:

    Winter Kills, a novel by Richard Condon.

    "Winter Kills," a film based on the novel.

    From a review of the film:

    "Winter Kills's storytelling style is the narrative equivalent of throwing a bag over the audience's head and pushing it down some dark stairs."

    Exactly the style needed for the California State Board of Education.

    1:29 pm

    Comments on this post:

    That's sad, I took that stupid test and it asked almost insulting questions, such as basic fraction usage, multiplication, and identifying the predicate in a sentece. People that failed that exam deserve to not pass high school

    Posted 7/10/2003 at 2:11 pm by analicia1



    Wednesday, July 09, 2003

    T is for Texas

    "Gimme a T for Texas"
    -- Jimmie Rodgers

    "T is for Texas" -- Anne Bustard,
    University of Texas at Austin

    "From 1928 to 1933
    he was chairman of the
    Mount Rushmore
    National Memorial Committee."
    -- Handbook of Texas Online
    on Joseph Stephen Cullinan,
    founder of Texaco

    "'Is this Hell? Or is this Texas?"
    -- Job: A Comedy of Justice 

    5:17 pm



    Tuesday, July 08, 2003

    A Face in the Crowd

    Six Dead in Mississippi Shooting 

    "I’m gonna buy myself a shotgun,
     one with a long shiny barrel"

    -- Jimmie Rodgers,
       "Father of Country Music,"
       "T for Texas" lyrics

    Related material:

    Jimmie Rodgers Museum, Meridian, MS

    East Mississippi Insane Hospital, Meridian, MS

    Location of East Mississippi Insane Hospital

    "Peace is Hell" -- TIME, issue dated July 14, 2003

    "Gen. Sherman: 'Meridian no longer exists!'  Well, he was wrong." -- Meridian Public Library


    5:04 pm

    Comments on this post:

    "Just un-f-in' believable"!

    Posted 7/8/2003 at 9:58 pm by NickyJett



    Monday, July 07, 2003

    "Peace is Hell"

    — Cover headline, TIME magazine,
    issue dated July 14 (Bastille Day), 2003.

    Yeah, and ________ (fill in the blank)
    is the Father of Lies.

    11:11 pm



    Monday, July 07, 2003

    Burying Andrew Heiskell

    Matthew Book 8:

    21 And another of his disciples said unto him, Lord, suffer me first to go and bury my father.
    22 But Jesus said unto him, Follow me; and let the dead bury their dead.

    Andrew Heiskell, former chairman and CEO of TIME, Inc., died on Sunday, July 6, 2003.

    The nauseating mixture of piety and warmongering instituted by Henry Luce continued under Heiskell in the Vietnam years, and continues today online, with a pious quotation from Mel Gibson and a cover headline, "Peace is Hell."

    A search for a Heiskell eulogy at TIME.com yields the following "quote of the week":

    "The Holy Ghost was working through me on this film, and I was just directing traffic." — Mel Gibson

    Recent TIME traffic included covers on Ben Franklin, Crusaders, and Harry Potter.


    July 7


    June 30


    June 23

    How Mel would direct this traffic is not clear.

    He would do well to pray, not to the ghost he calls holy, but to the ghost of T. S. Matthews, which may be summoned by clicking on the "jazz priest" link in yesterday's entry, "Happy Trails."  Matthews, who succeeded Luce as editor of TIME, can be trusted to dispose of Heiskell's immortal soul with intelligence and taste, in accordance with the company policy of Jesus quoted above.

    Should Militant Mel require more spiritual guidance, he might consult my entry of May 27, 2003, which seems appropriate on this, the birthday of storyteller Robert A. Heinlein, author of Job: A Comedy of Justice.

    4:30 pm



    Sunday, July 06, 2003

    Happy Trails

    Today is the birthday of Texans Nanci Griffith and George W. Bush.  It is also the feast day of Saint Roy Rogers and the alleged saint Thomas More.

    Seeking spiritual guidance from the life of Paulist "jazz priest" Norman J. O'Connor (see previous entry), who worked at a rehab called "Straight and Narrow," I did a Google search on "Nanci Griffith" + "Straight and Narrow."  At the top of the resulting list was a website that might have pleased Saint Roy:

    Welcome to the Wild West Show!

    Happy trails, indeed.

    2:14 pm

    Comments on this post:

    The one thing that prevented him from giving himself to that kind of life was that he could not shake off the desire of the married state. He chose, therefore, to be a chaste husband rather than an impure priest.

    ~sigh~
    Poor St. More.  He wanted more, and couldn't get it.

    Posted 7/6/2003 at 4:02 pm by oOMisfitOo

    ~chuckles~

    He was indeed a man for all seasons.  I wonder if he would have appreciated my latest post?

    Posted 7/6/2003 at 4:04 pm by oOMisfitOo



    Saturday, July 05, 2003

    Elementary,
    My Dear Gropius

    "What is space, how can it be understood and given a form?" -- Walter Gropius

    Stoicheia:

     
    "Stoicheia," Elements, is the title of
    Euclid's treatise on geometry.
     
    Stoicheia is apparently also related to a Greek verb meaning "march" or "walk."
     
    According to a website on St. Paul's phrase
    "ta stoicheia tou kosmou," which might be translated
     
     
    "... the verbal form of the root stoicheo was used to mean, 'to be in a line,' 'to march in rank and file.' ... The general meaning of the noun form (stoicheion) was 'what belongs to a series.' "
     
    As noted in my previous entry, St. Paul used a form of stoicheo to say "let us also walk (stoichomen) by the Spirit." (Galatians 5:25) The lunatic ravings* of Saul of Tarsus aside, the concepts of walking, of a spirit, and of elements may be combined if we imagine the ghost of Gropius strolling with the ghosts of Plato, Aristotle, and Euclid, and posing his question about space.  Their reply might be along the following lines:
     
    Combining stoicheia with a peripatetic peripateia (i.e., Aristotelian plot twist), we have the following diagram of Aristotle's four stoicheia (elements),

    which in turn is related, by the "Plato's diamond" figure in the monograph Diamond Theory, to the Stoicheia, or Elements, of Euclid.
     
    Quod erat demonstrandum.

    * A phrase in memory of the Paulist Norman J. O'Connor, the "jazz priest" who died on St. Peter's day, Sunday, June 29, 2003.  Paulists are not, of course, entirely mad; the classic The Other Side of Silence: A Guide to Christian Meditation, by the Episcopal priest Morton Kelsey, was published by the Paulist Press.

    Its cover (above), a different version of the four-elements theme, emphasizes the important Jungian concept of quaternity.  Jung is perhaps the best guide to the bizarre world of Christian symbolism.  It is perhaps ironic, although just, that the Paulist Fathers should distribute a picture of "ta stoicheia tou kosmou," the concept that St. Paul himself railed against.

    The above book by Kelsey should not be confused with another The Other Side of Silence, a work on gay history, although confusion would be understandable in light of recent ecclesiastical revelations.

    Let us pray that if there is a heaven, Father O'Connor encounters there his fellow music enthusiast Cole Porter rather than the obnoxious Saul of Tarsus.

    7:21 pm

    Comments on this post:

    I read your comment on Sarah's site (Misfit). Happened to me too.  Although I am very persona non grata among a lot of the Great Writers of Xanga, so there you go.

    Posted 7/6/2003 at 11:01 am by SoapOpera

    Oh.

    Well.  ~makes mental note to email Petra~
    And in other news, thumbs up to sodomy!  Yeah Texas! (regarding the Other Other side of Silence).

    Posted 7/6/2003 at 11:12 pm by oOMisfitOo



    Saturday, July 05, 2003

    He Walks With Me

    "Bonus question of the night (what Chris Culter would call the 'Person of the Day' award): Can anyone tell me, without looking it up (don't cheat, seriously, I want to know), what the word 'peripatetic' means?"

    -- EmilyMuse, 11:24 PM July 4, 2003 

    See EmilyMuse's site for my answer.  Her reply on July 5: "Person of the Day is you!"

    My response:

    More Boring Details
    of Greek Etymology

    Thank you for your comment.

    From a website on theology:

    "By the fourth century B.C, the verbal form of the root stoicheo was used to mean, 'to be in a line,' 'to march in rank and file.' The New Testament usage of the verb stoicheo retains an element of this usage in the five times that it is used.* The general meaning of the noun form (stoicheion) was 'what belongs to a series.' "

    *For instance, "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk (stoichomen) by the Spirit," Galatians 5:25.

    These remarks, together with my July 5 entry "Elements," which contains the (implied) Eagles' verse "We haven't had that spirit here since 1969," suggest that not I, but Walter Gropius, should be today's Person of the Day.  

    Documentation of my answer to Emily, "walking around," from the site Aristotle:

    "Aristotle's school, his philosophy, and his followers were called peripatetic, which in Greek means 'walking around,' because Aristotle taught walking with his students."

    6:44 pm



    Saturday, July 05, 2003

    Elements

    In memory of Walter Gropius, founder of the Bauhaus and head of the Harvard Graduate School of Design.  Gropius died on this date in 1969.  He said that

    "The objective of all creative effort in the visual arts is to give form to space. ... But what is space, how can it be understood and given a form?"

    "Alle bildnerische Arbeit will Raum gestalten. ... Was ist Raum, wie können wir ihn erfassen und gestalten?"


    Gropius

    — "The Theory and Organization
    of the Bauhaus
    " (1923)

    I designed the following logo for my Diamond Theory site early this morning before reading in a calendar that today is the date of Gropius's death.  Hence the above quote.

    "And still those voices are calling
    from far away..."
    — The Eagles
     
    Stoicheia:

     
    ("Stoicheia," Elements, is the title of
    Euclid's treatise on geometry.)

    4:17 am

    Comments on this post:

    you win the prize!! :)  heehee.  person of the day is you! :)Â

    Posted 7/5/2003 at 2:24 pm by EmilyMuse

    More Boring Details of Greek Etymology

    Thank you for your comment.

    From a website on theology:

    "By the fourth century B.C, the verbal form of the root stoicheo was used to mean, 'to be in a line,' 'to march in rank and file.' The New Testament usage of the verb stoicheo retains an element of this usage in the five times that it is used.* The general meaning of the noun form (stoicheion) was 'what belongs to a series.' "

    *For instance, "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by (stoichomen) the Spirit," Galatians 5:25.

    These remarks, together with my July 5 entry "Elements," which contains the (implied) Eagles' verse "We haven't had that spirit here since 1969," suggest that not I, but Walter Gropius, should be today's Person of the Day.

    Posted 7/5/2003 at 4:58 pm by m759

    Humn.  That picture of Gropius reminds me of THIS picture.

    Posted 7/6/2003 at 1:17 pm by oOMisfitOo



    Friday, July 04, 2003

    Self-Evident

    Today many Americans celebrate a declaration of certain "self-evident" truths.  Others feel that these alleged "truths" are misleading.  Seeking a worthy opponent for the authors of the Declaration on this secular holy day, I settled on the following recently published book, a sort of Declaration of Dependence of government on God (an imaginary entity who speaks only through politicians, clergymen, and other liars):

    Christian Faith
    and Modern Democracy:

    God and Politics in the Fallen World
    By Robert P. Kraynak
    Univ. of Notre Dame Press. 304p
    $49.95 (cloth) $24.95 (paper)

    From a review in the Dec. 24, 2001, issue of America, a Jesuit publication:

    "The author, who identifies himself as a practicing Catholic, asserts that Christianity is weakened by its close alliance with the contemporary version of democracy and human rights.... 

    The author states that 'modern liberal democracy...subverts in practice the dignity of man.'  He defends his thesis relentlessly and persuasively.... 

    Some readers of this well-organized volume will be disappointed that the author makes no mention of the four billion non-Christians among the world’s 6.1 billion inhabitants. The four billion Hindus, Muslims and Buddhists must be included in any attempt to make the modern state responsive to traditional and generally accepted norms of morality."

    -- Robert F. Drinan, S.J.

    Jefferson would probably appreciate Drinan's remark on catholic (i.e., universal, or "generally accepted") norms.

    The "traditional and generally accepted norms of morality" Drinan mentions are discussed ably by Christian apologist C. S. Lewis in his book The Abolition of Man, which argues for the existence of a universal moral code that I am pleased to note he calls, rightly, the Tao.  As an Amazon.com reviewer notes, Lewis uses this term in the manner of Confucius rather than that of Lao Tsu.  I prefer the latter. 

    For details, see the Tao Te Ching, (The Way and Its Power).  This is a far more holy scripture than the collections of lies called sacred by most other religions.  Both the leftist Jefferson and the rightist Kraynak wrongly assume that talk of a "Creator" means something.  It does not.  Classical Chinese thought is free from this absurd Western error.  Lewis at least had the grace to acknowledge the importance of non-Western thought, though he himself was unable to escape the lies of Christianity.

    12:00 am



    Thursday, July 03, 2003

    Self-Evident

    11:58 pm



    Thursday, July 03, 2003

    Yesterday

    On July 2, in various years, authors

    • Ernest Hemingway,
    • Mario Puzo, and
    • Vladimir Nabokov

    died.  They may serve as a sort of Trinity for those who admire excellence in style, character, and art.

    Quotations from Papa Hemingway that seem relevant to yesterday's entry:

    "Madame, all stories, if continued far enough, end in death, and he is no true-story teller who would keep that from you."
    -- Ernest Hemingway,
       Death in the Afternoon, Ch. 11

    "There is never any ending to Paris...."
    -- Ernest Hemingway, A Moveable Feast

     

    See also entries of Sept. 27, 2002.

    2:14 pm

    Comments on this post:

    Which one's the Holy Ghost?  ;o)

    And OH!  Before I forget, you can find me HERE, as well as here.

    Posted 7/4/2003 at 1:26 pm by oOMisfitOo



    Wednesday, July 02, 2003

    Three Days Late
    and a Dollar Short

    THE BOOK AGAINST GOD
    By James Wood.
    257 pp. New York:
    Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $24. 

    This is a book that attempts to recreate the myth of Saint Peter.

    See the New York Times review of this book from today, July 2, 2003, three days late.  The Feast of St. Peter was on June 29.

    The price, $24, also falls short of the theological glory reflected in the number 25, the common denominator of Christmas (12/25) and AntiChristmas (6/25), as well as the number of the heart of the Catholic church, the Bingo card

    For all these issues, see my entries and links in memory of St. Peter, from June 29

    The real "book against God," a novel by Robert Stone, is cited there.  The legend of St. Peter is best described by Stone, not Wood.

    7:00 pm



    Tuesday, July 01, 2003

    Jew's on First

    This entry is dedicated to those worshippers of Allah who have at one time or another cried
    "Itbah al-Yahud!" ... Kill the Jew!
    (See June 29 entries).

    Dead at 78

    Comedian Buddy Hackett died on Tuesday, July First, 2003, according to the New York Times.  According to Bloomberg.com, he died Sunday or Monday.


    Associated Press

    Buddy Hackett,
    on the set of
    "It's a Mad, Mad,
    Mad, Mad
    World"
    in 1962.

    Whatever.  We may imagine he has now walked, leading a parade of many other stand-up saints, into a bar.


    Hepburn at Chaillot

    MIDRASH
    for Buddy Hackett

    From my May 25 entry,

    Matrix of the Death God:

    R. M. Abraham's Diversions and Pastimes, published by Constable and Company, London, in 1933, has the following magic square:

    The Matrix of Abraham

    A summary of the religious import of the above from Princeton University Press:

    "Moslems of the Middle Ages were fascinated by pandiagonal squares with 1 in the center.... The Moslems thought of the central 1 as being symbolic of the unity of Allah.  Indeed, they were so awed by that symbol that they often left blank the central cell on which the 1 should be positioned."

    -- Clifford A. Pickover, The Zen of Magic Squares, Circles, and Stars, Princeton U. Press, 2002, pp. 71-72

    Other appearances of this religious icon on the Web include:

    On Linguistic Creation

    Picasso's Birthday

    1991 Yearbook
    Rolling Stone



    Hackett

    In the Picasso's Birthday version, 22 of the 25 magic square cells are correlated with pictures on the "Class of '91" cover of Rolling Stone magazine.  Number 7 is Rod Stewart.  In accordance with the theological rhyme "Seven is heaven, eight is a gate," our site music for today is "Forever Young," a tune made famous by Stewart.

    Roderick, actually   the name of the hero in "Madwoman of Chaillot"


    5:37 pm