Month: September 2008

  • In memory of Paul Newman:

    Hole in the Wall

    Loren Eiseley,
    Notes of an Alchemist:

    I never found
    the hole in the wall;
    I never found
    Pancho Villa country
    where you see the enemy first.

    -- "The Invisible Horseman"

    This quotation is the result of
    the following meditation:

    Part I:

    The Feast of St. Michael
    and All Angels

    On Michaelmas 2008 (yesterday):

    The mailman brought next Sunday's New York Times Book Review. On the last page was an essay by Steven Millhauser, "The Ambition of the Short Story." It said that...

    "The short story concentrates on its grain of sand, in the fierce belief that there-- right there, in the palm of its hand-- lies the universe. It seeks to know that grain of sand the way a lover seeks to know the face of the beloved."

    Part II:
    An Actor's Lesson

    A search for the "grain of sand" phrase in this journal yielded a quotation from actor Will Smith:

    "Smith has just finished reading The Alchemist, by the Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho: 'It says the entire world is
    contained in one grain of sand, and you can learn everything you need
    to learn about the entire universe from that one grain of sand. That is
    the kind of concept I'm teaching my kids.'"

    The quotation's source is The Independent of July 9, 2004.

    Part III:
    A date with Reba

    The date of The Independent's story turns out to contain, in this journal, a meditation on white-trash food and Reba McEntire.

    (Recall her classic lyric
    "I might have been born
    just plain white trash,
    but Fancy was my name.")


    It also contains the Notes of an Alchemist quotation above.


    "Let, then, winged Fancy find

    Thee a mistress to thy mind"

    -- John Keats, "Fancy"

    A passage closely related to Keats's poem:

    "Fullness... Multitude."

    These are the missing last words of Inman in Cold Mountain, added here on the Feast of St. Luke, 2004.  For the meaning of these words, click on Luke.

  • Today's Sermon:

    Buffalo Soldier

    Part I:

    Retired pastor William W. McDermet III on the editorial page of Saturday's Buffalo News (Warren E. Buffett, chairman):

    "In the 1940s, there was no Internet or television, so after school I
    amused myself with a snack of graham crackers and milk, maybe a comic
    book or a Tinkertoy project. Yet what was really exciting was a
    frequent ring of the doorbell, which mother answered, followed by the
    request: 'Can Billy come out and play?'"

    Part II:

    Excerpt from Fritz Leiber's
    "Damnation
    Morning," 1959
    :

    "Time traveling, which is not quite the good clean boyish fun
    it's cracked up to be, started for me when this woman with the sigil on
    her forehead looked in on me from the open doorway of the hotel bedroom
    where I'd hidden myself and the bottles and asked me,


    Linda Hamilton as Our Lady of Judgment Day

    Our Lady of
    Judgment Day

     'Look, Buster,
     do
    you want to live?'"

    Part III:

    Saint Anna


    Washington Post,
    Sunday, Sept. 28, 2008 --
    Sheri Jennings, ROME --

    "It's early autumn in 1944,
    and the Nazis are advancing
    on the Italian front...."

  • For Paul Newman:

    The Revelation Game
     
    (continued from Sept. 21)



    Lotteries
    Sept. 26,
    2008
    Pennsylvania
    (No revelation)
    New York
    (Revelation)
    Mid-day
    (No belief)
    No belief,
    no revelation

    084

    Revelation
    without belief

    006
    Evening
    (Belief)
    Belief without
    revelation

    340
    Belief and
    revelation

    006

    See also

    Members of the Hole in the Wall Gang

    Hole in the Wall.

  • Mathematics and Beauty:

    Christmas Knot
    for T.S. Eliot's birthday

    (Continued from Sept. 22--
    "A Rose for Ecclesiastes.")

    From Kibler's
    "Variations on a Theme of
    Heisenberg, Pauli, and Weyl
    ,"
    July 17, 2008:

    "It is to be emphasized
     that the 15 operators...
    are underlaid by the geometry
     of the generalized quadrangle
     of order 2.... In this geometry,
    the five sets... correspond to
    a spread of this quadrangle,
     i.e., to a set of 5 pairwise
    skew lines...."

    -- Maurice R. Kibler,
    July 17, 2008

    For ways to visualize
    this quadrangle,

    Inscape

    see Inscapes.

    Related material

    A remark of Heisenberg
    quoted here on Christmas 2005:

    The eightfold cube

    "... die Schönheit... [ist] die

    richtige Übereinstimmung


    der
    Teile miteinander

    und mit dem Ganzen
    ."

    "Beauty is
    the proper conformity
    of the parts to one another
    and to the whole."

  • Annals of Poetry:

    Gates of Hell

    (continued from the birthday
    this year of Pope Benedict XVI)

    "'I took a course in modern poetry when I was back at the university,'
    he began. 'We read six authors-- Yeats, Pound, Eliot, Crane, Stevens, and
    Gallinger-- and on the last day of the semester, when the prof was feeling a
    little rhetorical, he said, "These six names are written on the century, and all
    the gates of criticism and Hell shall not prevail against them.''"

    -- "A Rose for Ecclesiastes,"
    a 1963 story by Roger Zelazny

    The last poet of the six is fictional.
    The name "Zelazny" might be
    subsituted for "Gallinger."
    It won't happen, but
    I wouldn't mind if it did.

  • Happy Birthday, Stephen King:

    A Tale

    "... told by an idiot,
    full of sound and fury,

     signifying nothing"    

    -- Quoted here Sept. 14

    "We've got to get ourselves
      back to the garden."         

    -- Quoted here Sept. 10

    Being There, by Jerzy Kosinski

    "The woman introduced herself. 'I am Mrs. Benjamin Rand. I am called EE by my friends, from my Christian names, Elizabeth Eve.'

    'EE,' Chance repeated gravely.

    'EE,' said the lady, amused.

    Chance recalled that in similar situations men on TV introduced themselves. 'I am Chance,' he stuttered and, when this didn't seem to be enough, added, 'the gardener.'"

    -- Jerzy Kosinski, Being There

    Related material:

    "Heidegger's philosophy of Dasein, his model of the ego, reminds me
    of... the ancient temple of Jerusalem.... in the innermost chamber, the
    holy of holies, the room was completely empty. The essence of Dasein,
    similarly, is nothingness, a fact that it tries to hide by assuming the
    trappings of existence."

    -- Heinz Pagels,
       The Dreams of Reason

    "Nothing is the great mystery. It cannot be described. Words can try
    to touch it. Zen may be such a word and Tao, Christ, Allah, Buddha, and
    others. There is a word called 'God.'"

    -- Janwillem van de Wetering,
       A Glimpse of Nothingness

  • For John von Neumann:

    The Revelation Game
     
    (continued from Sept. 8)

    Lotteries
    Sept. 20,
    2008
    Pennsylvania
    (No revelation)
    New York
    (Revelation)
    Mid-day
    (No belief)
    No belief,
    no revelation

    531

    Revelation
    without belief

    116
    Evening
    (Belief)
    Belief without
    revelation

    228
    Belief and
    revelation

    000

    Related material:

    Deep Beauty

  • At Times:

    A Story of Sorts
     
    LA Times Rose Garden story, photo by AP's Pablo Martinez  Monsivais

    Photo by Pablo Martinez Monsivais

    Related material:

    The American President,
    American Beauty,
    and the time of this entry,

    11:27
    AM EDT

  • The Religion of Journalism, continued:

    In memory of

    James Crumley, author of One to Count Cadence, and of Paul Flynn, a former president of USA Today. On Thursday, the date of Flynn's death, for the first time in months I bought a copy of USA Today. Earlier that morning I had posted The Religion of Journalism.

    Walked to the store the other day
    (Your left, your left, your left right left)
    Dead men beside me all the way
    (Your left, your left, your left right left)
    Didn't know it then but I know it now
    (Your left, your left, your left right left)
    Heard it through the grapevine,
        don't know how
    (Your left, your left, your left right left)
    Dead men beside me all the way
    (Your left, your left, your left right left)
    One to count cadence and one to pray
    (Your left, your left, your left right left)

  • Extra Ecclesiam:

    Toward the Light

    O dark dark dark
    They all go into the dark
    -- Four Quartets  

    This morning's NY Times obituaries:

    (Click to enlarge.)


    NY Times obituaries, Sept. 19, 2008, starring Norman Whitfield

    "I love those Bavarians...
    so meticulous
    ."

    Marvin Gaye sings 'I Heard It Through the Grapevine'

    Related material:

    Church of the Forbidden Planet,

    Campaign Song,

    At the Apollo.