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Wednesday, April 23, 2014

APRIL 24 -- Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains.


Hello, seekers of oddities ...


A 1766 portrait of Rousseau
 
I am Jean-Jacques Rousseau ... or rather his ghost



My friend, Samuel Clemens, is morose this day for on this date in 1066,

Halley's Comet appeared in the night sky over the English Channel and was seen as a harbinger of national disaster --

which it was as William the Conqueror defeated English forces at the Battle of Hastings and the rest, pun intended, was history.

Why is my friend, Samuel, morose over Halley's Comet?  His spirit is tied to that celestial object, but that is a tale for him to tell.



On this date in 1800, President John Adams approved legislation to appropriate $5,000 to establish the Library of Congress. 

The first books were bought from Great Britain. 

And so like the British,

their troops promptly burned them when they burned down a great deal of Washington, D.C. in 1814. 

What Britian gives, it eventually takes away.



Ah, but to be sane in a world of mad men is in itself madness.


Take my friend, Oscar Wilde ...



On this day in 1891 his The Picture of Dorian Gray was published.

The novel caused an uproar for

 "its effeminate frivolity, its studied insincerity, its theatrical cynicism, its tawdry mysticism, its flippant philosophizing, its contaminating trail of garish vulgarity,"

but it sold well, making Wilde the focus of even more debate and finger-pointing ...

until the British in their hypocrisy imprisoned him for having loved too well if not too wisely.

Only in France could he find refuge.




You might accept that a man of my sensibilities would roam the Library of Congress,

a brilliant witness to the alliance of literature and architecture against the transforming and destructive forces of time.

But I wager you will find it odd that I return again and again to the Bob Hope archive, anchored by a career file of some 85,000 jokes, many of these tied to the politics of the day.

“Kennedy looked a little nervous,” Hope quipped after one of the1960 presidential debates. “He’d never been allowed to stay up that late before.”

“If you criticize Gorbachev too much,” he warned during the last years of the Cold War, “you’re kaputski. Kaputski — it’s an Old Russian word meaning, ‘Siberia is lovely this time of year.’ ”

Many of Hope’s political jokes can resonate beyond their original era: “No one party can fool all of the people all of the time. That’s why we have two parties.”




On this date in 1908, Ralph DePalma made his debut in New York.  In 25 years of racing, he would win 2000 times, including the Indy 500.

File:DePalma1912.jpg
 
But the Frenchman in me applauds most his pushing his car over the finish line in 1912 when,

while leading by five and half laps, his car broke down.  He may have lost but he won the hearts of every Frenchman who watched.



The romantic in me weeps on this day, for on this date in 1942 Lucy Maud Montgomery died.

 Montgomery spent her first three decades in Cavendish, Prince Edward Island, the place which she and her Anne of Green Gables books have made famous.

After almost three more decades in the Toronto area, she was buried back in Cavendish, though in town rather than in the sort of spot described in “A Request”:

"When I am dead
I would that ye make my bed
On that low-lying, windy waste by the sea,
   
Where murmurs creep
From the ancient heart of the deep,
Lulling me ever, I shall most sweetly sleep.
While the eerie sea-folk croon
On the long dim shore by the light
                                    of a waning moon…."




Fellow Frenchman, Gustave Flaubert, had his Three Tales published on this day in 1877.

It contains “A Simple Heart,” one of his most famous stories, especially since Julian Barnes’ Flaubert’s Parrot (1984).

Criticized by George Sand for his detached style,

Flaubert created the servant Félicité, whom he describes as “a poor country girl, pious but mystical, quietly devoted, and as tender as freshly baked bread.”

His aim, he said, was the furthest thing from irony: “I want to arouse people's pity, to make sensitive souls weep, since I am one myself.”


Well, I must depart. 

My friend, Samuel Clemens, and I intend to deflate the ever-growing ego of Winston Churchill ...

especially on this day when in 1953, he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.

The ghost of Bob Hope intends to join us.  Last year, he told Churchill:

“I'm surprised the Queen knighted you, Winny.  What with your ambition that's like asking Morris the Cat to watch your tuna salad."  




Are you wondering which author I will pick for the letter U?

A most erudite, under-appreciated one: Sir Peter Alexander Ustinov

He was also renowned as a filmmaker, theatre and opera director, stage designer, author, screenwriter, comedian, humorist, newspaper and magazine columnist.

A noted wit and raconteur, he was a fixture on lecture circuits for much of his career.

He was also a respected intellectual and diplomat who, in addition to his various academic posts, served as a Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF and President of the World Federalist Movement.

In 2003 Durham University changed the name of its Graduate Society to Ustinov College in honour of the significant contributions Ustinov had made as chancellor of the university from 1992 until his death.

“I imagine hell like this: Italian punctuality, German humour and English wine.”
Peter Ustinov


 

10 comments:

  1. Another post bursting at the seams with information, history, sadness (which parallels the history) and quirky fun. Thank you.

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  2. Elephant's Child:
    The Outlaw trail is usually a sad one but sometimes filled with quirky fun as you say. "-)

    Alex:
    BoB Hope was a true hero during WWII with his non-stop tours and writing new jokes and skits every few days while visiting hospital wards whose patients tore at his heart.

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  3. <<<----Many of Hope’s political jokes can resonate beyond their original era: “No one party can fool all of the people all of the time. That’s why we have two parties.”

    Oh my. How true that is. When you look at it in this way isn't all of the arguments that are Right and Left-based absolutely ridiculous??? We The People somehow missed that critical point when the two parties stopped fighting one another and started working together. That only leaves We The People to fight amongst ourselves.

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  4. A fantastic collection of facts and historical interests, Roland, the kind of post that appeals to me.

    So many people that will be forgotten if we don't keep bringing them to light. You're doing your part to keep them alive in our hearts.

    Poor Oscar, he misjudged how fickle the public can be. I read Dorian Gray, and I wanted to see how it compared to the movies of that name. No comparison. The book by Wilde surpasses the movies. Bravo for France!

    I love that Ralph De Palma pushed his car over the finish line, what a media moment that must have been! And if Frenchmen loved it, I say Viva la France again.

    I admit I've never read Anne of Green Gables, I tried and couldn't get into it, just not my taste. That quote reminds me of Annabelle Lee, by Poe (isn't it?)

    Loved this post, Roland! Sorry to ramble on but you mentioned France. . .

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  5. Robin:
    Gore Vidal says much the same thing in my post of tomorrow. Politics is a galaxy away from patriotism these days!

    D.G:
    I did this post for you because I knew how fond of France you are. :-)

    Yes, poor Oscar -- he didn't realize how vicious the English power structure was.

    I loved that DePalma photo of him pushing his car over the finish line. He never quit!

    Like you, Anne of Green Gables I found not to be my cup of tea. Perhaps if I went back to it now it would be different?

    That poem was haunting and sad, wasn't it?

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  6. Oddly enough, I never read Anne of Green Gables, but I loved the series of movies. :)

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  7. Apologies, Roland. I have not stopped by in some time. And I have missed your wit and writing.

    I will be back, tomorrow.

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  8. What an interesting post, I don't know where to begin. I love Anne of Green Gables and too bad the author didn't get to be buried according to her wishes. I have tried a couple of times to read Madame Bovary, without success. Ack, the British, I gotta love them in spite of myself, if that's correct English, maybe I meant in spite of themselves. I better quit while I'm ahead here. Great work, Roland.

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  9. Chrys:
    I must try one of those movies.

    Susan:
    I'm glad you liked my post -- no apologies, please! I have so little free time myself that I understand.

    I think you will like Saturday's post. Tomorrow's is a bit unusual.

    Inger:
    I tried to make this post something special. Like with tomorrow, I am limited to what happened on a particular day.

    Don't feel bad about Madame Bovary. I am the same way with British humor!
    Thanks for the nice words about this post!

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