Month: October 2002

  • Slieve na mBan


    The view in the entry below is from Slievenamon or Slieve/Sliabh na mBan, a mountain in County Tipperary.


    From an interview with  Dr. Mary McAuliffe, an historian who specializes in women’s history of the medieval period in Ireland:


    “It seems that there were no witchcraft trials in the Gaelic Irish areas. There isn’t a tradition of witchcraft in the Gaelic Irish communities because people believed in magical women….  Another interesting thing about the… case was that it happened in Slieve na mBan, where the barrier between this world and the next is thinnest. Slieve na mBan means the ‘mountain of women.’” 


    From Finn’s Household in Part II Book I of


    Gods and Fighting Men

    The Story of the Tuatha De Danaan
    and of the Fianna of Ireland,

    arranged and put into English

    by Lady Augusta Gregory

    with a preface by W. B. Yeats

    [1904]

    “Where do you come from, little one, yourself and your sweet music?” said Finn. “I am come,” he said, “out of the place of the Sidhe in Slieve-nam-ban….”


    Finn, again!James Joyce

  • To the Green Lady
     of Perelandra



    View from the slopes of Slieve na mBan


    In honor of the relationship between theology and literature, of the Green Lady of C. S. Lewis, and of… 


    John Flood BA, MA (NUI), Ph.D. (Dublin)
    Senior Lecturer. Formerly a tutor at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, and Trinity College, Dublin, his Ph.D. was on the influence of the interpretation of the figure of Eve in Early Modern writing. His research interests include the Renaissance, George Orwell, J. R. R. Tolkien and the relationship between theology and literature.


    … this site’s music is now Caoine Cill Chais, The Lament for Kilcash.


  • Garden Party Revisited


    From the Archives:  On this date in 1992,







    “Sinead O’Connor was booed off the stage at a show honoring Bob Dylan at Madison Square Garden (famous for booing folks off the stage)….


    Click for ordering information.


    Sinead’s new album.  The Gaelic title, “Sean-Nos Nua,” means
    Old-Style New.


    The crowd was acting in disapproval of O’Connor’s tearing up a picture of Pope John Paul II on ‘Saturday Night Live’ October 3, 1992.”


    Go mbeidh rincí fada ag gabháil timpeall,
    Ceol veidhlín is tinte cnámh.

  • “History is a nightmare
    from which I am trying to awake”
    – James Joyce in Ulysses



    “Be of good cheer, Master Ridley, and play the man, for we shall this day light such a candle in England as I trust by God’s grace shall never be put out.”
    – Hugh Latimer, former Bishop of Worcester, to his friend Nicholas Ridley, former private chaplain to Henry VIII, on the occasion of their being burned at the stake by the Roman Catholic queen Bloody Mary Tudor on October 16, 1555

  • Hitler’s Still Point


    For the views of the noted philosopher Adolf Hitler on the Roman Catholic Church, click here

  • Are the hams silent now, Clarice? 










    See also my Xanga entry of August 3, 2002.

  • From the Archives:


    On this date in 1971, ”Rick Nelson was booed off the stage when he didn’t stick to all oldies at the seventh Annual Rock ’n’ Roll Revival show at Madison Square Garden, New York. He tried to slip in some of his new material and the crowd did not approve. The negative reaction to his performance inspired Nelson to write his last top-40 hit, ‘Garden Party,’ which hit the top-ten about a year after the Madison Square Garden debacle. ‘Garden Party,’ ironically, was Nelson’s biggest hit in years.”


    “With a little effort, anything can be shown to connect with anything else: existence is infinitely cross-referenced.”


    Opening sentence of Martha Cooley’s The Archivist








    Woe unto
    them that
    call evil
    good, and
    good evil;
    that put
    darkness
    for light,
    and light
    for darkness


    Isaiah 5:20



    As she spoke
    about the Trees
    of Life
    and Death,
    I watched her…
    The Archivist


    The world
    has gone
    mad today
    And good’s
    bad today,

    And black’s
    white today,
    And day’s
    night today


    Cole Porter


    Actor Pat O’Brien died on this date in 1983.


    “A man in Ireland, who came in contact with a Bible colporteur, at first repulsed him. Finally he was persuaded to take a Bible and later he said: ‘I read a wee bit out of the New Testament every day, and I pray to God every night and morning.’  When asked if it helped him to read God’s Word and to pray, he answered: ‘Indade it does. When I go to do anything wrong, I just say to myself, “Pat, you’ll be talking to God tonight.” That keeps me from doing it!’”
    worldmissions.org


    colporteur 
    … noun…
    Etymology: French, alteration of Middle French comporteur, from comporter to bear, peddle….
    a peddler of religious books

  • Going His Way


    October 14 in history:


    1888 Katherine Mansfield, author, is born.


    1977 Bing Crosby, singer/actor (Going My Way), dies.


    “He was given up to his dream. What did garden-parties and baskets and lace frocks matter to him? He was far from all those things. He was wonderful, beautiful…. Happy … happy … All is well, said that sleeping face. This is just as it should be. I am content.”


    – Katherine Mansfield, “The Garden Party


    In honor of Mansfield, Crosby, and other authors and singers, this site’s music is now a midi rendition of Rick Nelson’s classic.

  • Two Literary Classics
    (and a visit from a saint)


    On this date in 1962, Edward Albee’s classic play, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” opened on Broadway.










    George and Martha by
    Edward Albee
      


    Click to enlarge.
    George and Martha by
     St. James Marshall


    As I was preparing this entry, based on the October 13 date of the Albee play’s opening, after I looked for a picture of Marshall’s book I thought I’d better check dates related to Marshall, too.   This is what I was surprised to find:  Marshall (b. Oct. 10, 1942) died in 1992 on today’s date, October 13.  This may be verified at


    The James Edward Marshall memorial page,


    A James Edward Marshall biography, and


    Author Anniversaries for October 13.


    The titles of the three acts of Albee’s play suffice to indicate its dark spiritual undercurrents:


    “Fun and Games” (Act One),
    “Walpurgisnacht” (Act Two) and
    “The Exorcism” (Act Three).


    A theological writer pondered Albee in 1963:


    “If, as Tillich has said of Picasso’s Guernica, a ‘Protestant’ picture means not covering up anything but looking at ‘the human situation in its depths of estrangement and despair,’ then we could call Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? a ‘Protestant’ play. On any other definition it might be difficult to justify its religious significance except as sheer nihilism.”
    – Hugh T. Kerr, Theological Table-Talk, July 1963


    It is a great relief to have another George and Martha (who first appeared in 1972) to turn to on this dark anniversary, and a doubly great relief to know that Albee’s darkness is balanced by the light of Saint James Edward Marshall, whose feast day is today.


    For more on the carousel theme of the Marshall book’s cover, click the link for “Spinning Wheel” in the entry below.

  • She’s a…
    Twentieth Century Fox






    Columbus Day
    Dinner Dance
    Date: Sat Oct 12, 2002
    Time: 6:30pm-???
    Italian American Club
    of Southern Nevada

    2333 East Sahara Ave.,
    Las Vegas, NV 89104
    Live music by Boyd Culter’s 5-Piece band, prime rib dinner, and dancing at the Italian-American Club of Southern Nevada. All are welcome to attend. Tickets are only $25 and must be purchased in advance.
    Cost: $25.00
    For More information
    Call 457-3866  or visit  
    Web Site


    In honor of this dance, of Columbus, and of Joan Didion, this site’s music for the weekend is “Spinning Wheel.”  For the relevance of this music, see Chapter 65 (set in Las Vegas) of Didion’s 1970 novel Play It As It Lays, which, taken by itself, is one of the greatest short stories of the twentieth century.


    The photograph of Didion on the back cover of Play It (taken when she was about 36) is one of the most striking combinations of beauty and intelligence that I have ever seen.


    She’s the queen of cool
    And she’s the lady who waits.
    The Doors, “Twentieth Century Fox,” Jan. 1967


    Play It As It Lays is of philosophical as well as socio-literary interest; it tells of a young actress’s struggles with Hollywood nihilism.  For related material, see The Studio by Didion’s husband, John Gregory Dunne.  A review of Dunne’s book:


    “Not since F. Scott Fitzgerald and Nathanael West has anyone done Hollywood better.”


    High praise indeed.