Saturday, April 29, 2023
Saturday, April 22, 2023
(posts) Raymond Carver's poem, "Reading"
Reading
yours is, and mine. Imagine
a château with a window opening
onto Lake Geneva. There in the window
on warm and sunny days is a man
so engrossed in reading he doesn’t look
up. Or if he does he marks his place
with a finger, raises his eyes, and peers
across the water to Mont Blanc,
and beyond, to Selah, Washington,
where he is with his girl
and getting drunk for the first time.
The last thing he remembers, before
he passes out, is that she spits on him.
He keeps on drinking
and getting spit on for years.
But some people will tell you
that suffering is good for the character.
You’re free to believe anything.
In any case, he goes
back to reading and will not
feel guilty about his mother
drifting in her boat of sadness,
or consider his children
and their troubles that go on and on.
Nor does he intend to think about
the clear-eyed woman he once loved
and her defeat at the hands of eastern religion.
Her grief has no beginning, and no end.
Let anyone in the château, or Selah,
come forward who might claim kin with the man
who sits all day in the window reading,
like a picture of a man reading.
Let the sun come forward.
Let the man himself come forward.
What in Hell can he be reading?
Saturday, April 15, 2023
something about William Makepeace Thackeray’s novel "Barry Lyndon"
Barry Lyndon (or, The Luck of Barry Lyndon) is the fictional memoir of a lower-middle-class Irishman who scratched out a rocky spot for himself in English aristocracy. The protagonist, roguish Redmond Barry of Ballybarry, exhausts his wits and ambition imprinting himself over society’s vulnerabilities and corruption. Though Redmond satisfies some big ambitions, his insecurities insist, and success and failure come in equal measure.
Redmond believed—no, knew!—he was a gentleman who belonged in the aristocracy. But events brought his Irish family low, and Redmond came of age feeling victimized, stewing unhappily among the unwashed.
Barry Lyndon is written in Redmond's pompous, earnest voice, and he tells of his travels, military enlistments, ruined affairs, con jobs, rivalries, and retributions.
After scrambling a while, Redmond’s ambitions gain traction finally when he unites with his uncle, a fellow adventurer and conman. Redmond then marries into wealth, his mark being the Countess of Lyndon. Redmond promptly spends her money, runs out of luck, and ends up living on an allowance in prison.
Redmond has scores of confidence and self-belief but belongs nowhere and is without principles.
I saw Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation, “Barry Lyndon,” years ago. I loved the film, which is different from the novel, but the novel is a fun, special read on its own—largely because Redmond’s phrasings are incredibly droll.
Note: Barry Lyndon is considered a picaresque novel. It was written by William Makepeace Thackeray and first published as a serial in 1844.
Friday, April 07, 2023
something about "You and Me" by Penny & The Quarters
"You and Me" by Penny & The Quarters played on a commercial a few months ago, but I first heard it while watching "Blue Valentine," the painfully moving 2010 American drama. The movie shows the exciting beginning and exhausted end of a serious long-term relationship that produced a child but starved for something more than love.
Saturday, April 01, 2023
about CVS
I had never had covid yet,
but the quarter and change I got back from the self-checkout kiosk at CVS
definitely had a virus on them. That is how I caught the flu this year. So that
was last Saturday night. I felt bad Sunday, but I was wearing a mask when I left the
house Monday morning—I noticed it was gone when I woke up feeling bad on the
bus and the bus pulled up to the train station downtown, which is nowhere near
where I normally go. I probably had a high fever, but I was so parched that I
doubt I was spraying many droplets of infection or anything else if you know
what I mean. I suddenly found myself on the wrong train and wearing a mask that
was definitely not mine. I got off at the next stop and was accosted by all
these females that live around there I guess. They were advertising drugs. Not
one of those ladies had my mask, too.