Month: October 2004

  • Counting Crows
    on the Feast of St. Luke

    "In the fullness of time,
    educated people will believe
    there is no soul
    independent of the body,
    and hence no life after death."

    -- Francis Crick, who was awarded
    a Nobel Prize on this date in 1962

    "She went to the men on the ground and looked at them and then she
    found Inman apart from them. She sat and held him in her lap. He tried
    to talk, but she hushed him. He drifted in and out and dreamed a bright
    dream of a home. It had a coldwater spring rising out of a rock, black
    dirt fields, old trees. In his dream, the year seemed to be happening
    all at one time, all the seasons blending together.  Apple trees
    hanging heavy with fruit but yet unaccountably blossoming, ice rimming
    the spring, okra plants blooming yellow and maroon, maple leaves red as
    October, corn crops tasseling, a stuffed chair pulled up to the glowing
    parlor hearth, pumpkins shining in the fields, laurels blooming on the hillsides, ditch banks full of orange
    jewelweed, white blossoms on dogwood, purple on redbud. 
    Everything coming around at once.  And there were white oaks, and
    a great number of crows, or at least the spirits of crows, dancing and
    singing in the upper limbs.  There was something he wanted to
    say."

    -- Charles Frazier, Cold Mountain

    "Fullness... Multitude."

  • Last Bell

    And there is always one last light
       to turn out
       and one last bell to ring
    And the last one out of the circus
       has to lock up everything.

    -- Mrs. Potter's   Lullaby

    No se puede vivir sin amar.

  • Up the River

    The careful reader will note that the previous entry has two parts.

    Part I, "Spain," links to the home page of a Spaniard named Jesús.

    Part
    II, "Take This Cup," links to a page about a poet named César.

    I found Jesús in a search for images of "Apocalypse Now" prompted in turn by earlier entries.

    I knew of César from library browsing.

    This afternoon, I looked at the home page of the site where I found the essay on César; this in turn led to another essay:

    The Necessity For Story

    by  Frederick Zackel

    While it's a story that's never been written, a
    suggested title-- Indiana Jones Sails Up The River Of Death--

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04B/041016-Poster2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    shows how
    readily we as individuals or we as a culture can automatically
    visualize a basic story motif. We may each see the particular elements
    of the story differently, but almost instantaneously we catch its drift.

    The hero sails up the river of death to discover what
    lies within his own heart: i.e., how much moral and physical strength
    he has.

    Indiana Jones sails up the River of Death.

    We are following Indiana Jones up the River of Death.
    We're going to visit with Colonel Kurtz. (You may not want to get off
    the boat.)

    No, I am not mixing up metaphors.

    These are the Story.

    For what it's worth, the birthday of Jesús is April 9... See the entry of April 9, 2003, "Hearts of Darkness."

    The birthday of César is March 16.  See the entry of March 16, 2003,  on the letter A... Here is the logo of the site where I found both César and "The Necessity For Story"--

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04B/041016-AsideLogo.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

  • This just in...

    From today's New York Times:

    Bruce Palmer, who played bass guitar for Buffalo Springfield... in the 1960's, died on Oct. 1 in
    Belleville, Ontario. He was 58.

  • Midnight in the
    Garden
    continued

    Umberto Eco,
    Foucault's Pendulum,
    page
    176:

    Here, too, you entered through a little garden...

    Amparo drew me aside as we went in.  "I've figured it out," she said. 
    "That tapir at the lecture talked about the Aryan age, remember?  And this one
    talks about the decline of the West.  Blut und Boden, blood and earth.  It's
    pure Nazism."

    "It's not that simple, darling.  This is a different
    continent."....

    If the outside was seedy, the inside was a blaze of violent colors.  It
    was a quadrangular hall, with one area set aside for the dancing of the
    cavalos.  The altar was at the far end, protected by a railing, against which
    stood the platform for the drums, the atabaques.  The ritual space was still
    empty....

    "Atabaque - a large tom-tom
    that is used in
    Afro-Brazilian
    religious celebrations"

    -- The
    Sounds of Samba

    at Yale

     The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04B/041016-Atabaque.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Atabaque


    "Of African origin, and made of jacarandá wood in a
    conical shape. A calfskin head covers the top of the drum. It is used a lot in
    capoeria and candomblé and umbanda rituals all over Brazil. There are three
    kinds of atabaques: Rum, Rumpi, and Lê. Rum has the deepest sound and is a solo
    drum; Rumpi has a medium sound, and Lê is the highest. These three hold the
    beat."

    Like the beat, beat, beat of the tom-tom....

    --- Cole Porter, "Night and Day"

    Your feats end enormous,
        your volumes immense,
    (May the Graces I hoped for
        sing your Ondtship song sense!),
    Your genus its worldwide,
        your spacest sublime!
    But, Holy Saltmartin,
        why can't you beat time?

    In the name of the former
        and of the latter
        and of their holocaust. Allmen.

  • The Eight and the Six

    (See yesterday's entry)

    Today's lottery numbers

    in Pennsylvania
    (State of Grace):

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04A/041015-PaLottery.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Nite and Day....

    with an apology
    to St. Cole Porter,
    whose feast is today.

  • Snow Jobs

    In memory of C. P. Snow,
    whose birthday is today

    "Without the narrative prop of
    High Table dinner

    conversation
    at Cambridge, Snow would be lost."
    -- Roger Kimball*

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04A/041015-Sup.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    "It was a perfectly ordinary night
    at Christ's high table, except that
    Hardy was dining as a guest."
    -- C. P. Snow**

    "666=2.3.3.37, and there is
    no other decomposition."
    -- G. H. Hardy***

    * The Two Cultures Today

    ** Foreword to
    A Mathematician's Apology

    *** A Mathematician's Apology

    Oct. 15, 2004, 7:11:37 PM

  • Star Wars,
    continued

    The Eight

    Lest the reader of the previous entry mistakenly take Katherine Neville's book The Eight
    more seriously than Fritz Leiber's greatly superior writings on
    eightness, here are two classic interpretations of Leiber's "spider" or
    "double cross" symbol:

    The image<br />
“http://www.log24.com/log/pix04A/Trigrams04.gif” cannot be displayed,<br />
because it contains errors.

    Aristotle:
    The 4 elements and
    the 4 qualities
    (On Generation and
    Corruption, II, 3
    )

     

    The image “http://www.log24.com/log/pix04A/Trigrams02A.gif” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

    Richard Wilhelm:
    The 8 trigrams
    (Understanding
    the I Ching
    ,
    154-175)

    The Six

    Less impressive, but not
    completely without interest,
    is the six-pointed star:

    This symbol consists of
    two triangles

    representing
    male and female,
    fire and water,
    up and down,
    etc., etc., etc.

    For some deeper properties
    of the number eight, see a
    Log24.net entry of 4/4/03.