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KATHRYN'S PICKS
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Patrick:
KATHRYN'S ORPHANS
Ada Monroe and Inman (Cold Mountain)
Anne Shirley (Anne of Green Gables)
Babe (Babe)
Bambi
Bathsheba Everdene (Far from the Madding Crowd)
Batman
Beatrice (Much Ado about Nothing)
Becky Sharp (Vanity Fair)
Cecily Cardew (Importance of Being Earnest)
Champion (Les Triplettes de Belleville)
Cinderella
Collin Fenwick (The Grass Harp)
Dorothea Brooke (Middlemarch)
Dorothy Gale (The Wizard of Oz)
Edward Scissorhands
Eleanor Roosevelt
Elizabeth (Frankenstein)
Ellen Foster (Ellen Foster)
Ellie Arroway (Contact)
Eppie (Silas Marner)
Estella (Great Expectations)
Esther Summerson (Bleak House)
Eustacia Vye (Return of the Native)
Evelina
Flora Poste (Cold Comfort Farm)
Francis Marion Tarwater (The Violent Bear It Away)
Frodo Baggins (The Lord of the Rings)
Gou Wa “Doggie” (King of Masks)
Hadji (Johnny Quest)
Harriet Smith (Emma)
Harry Potter
Harvey Cheyne, Jr. (Captains Courageous)
Hawkeye (Last of the Mohicans)
Heathcliff (Wuthering Heights)
Heidi
Helena (All’s Well That Ends Well)
Homer Wells (Cider House Rules)
Huckleberry Finn
Hyacinth Robinson (The Princess Casimassima)
Irwin (Northfork)
Isabelle Archer (The Portrait of a Lady)
Jack Dawson (Titanic)
Jack Redburn (Master Humphrey's Clock)
Jake and Elwood Blues (The Blues Brothers)
James Henry Trotter (James & the Giant Peach)
Jane Eyre
Jane Fairfax (Emma)
Jen and Kira (The Dark Crystal)
Jo (Bleak House)
Joe Christmas (Light in August)
Jude Fawley (Jude the Obscure)
Kim (Kim)
Leo Tolstoy
Lilo (Lilo and Stitch)
Lillian (The Chimes)
Lily Bart (The Age of Innocence)
Lily Owen (The Secret Life of Bees)
Little Foot (The Land Before Time)
Little Nell (The Old Curiosity Shop)
Little Orphan Annie
Lucinda Leplastrier (Oscar and Lucinda)
*Lucy Manette (Tale of Two Cities)
Luke Skywalker (Star Wars)
Margaret, Helen, and Tibby Schlegel (Howard's End)
Marilyn Monroe
Mary Lennox (The Secret Garden)
Mary McCarthy
Mathilde and Manech (A Very Long Engagement)
Mattie Silver (Ethan Frome)
Miette (City of Lost Children)
Millie Theale (The Wings of a Dove)
Miriam Chadwick (Oscar and Lucinda)
Mowgli (The Jungle Book)
Nameless (Hero)
*Neo (The Matrix)
Oliver Twist
Orphan Girl (Gillian Welch)
Oscar Hopkins (Oscar and Lucinda)
Our Johnny (Our Mutual Friend)
Pai (Whale Rider)
Patrick Dennis (Auntie Mame)
Peter Pan and the Lost Boys
Philip Carey (Of Human Bondage)
Pip (Great Expectations)
Pollyanna
Posthumus (Cymbeline)
Princess Mononoke
Queen Elizabeth I
Rickie Elliot (The Longest Journey)
Rosa (Edwin Drood)
Salvatore “Toto” (Cinema Paradiso)
Sara Crewe (The Little Princess)
Seymour Krelborn (Little Shop of Horrors)
Smike (Nicholas Nickleby)
Solomon Perel (Europa Europa)
Sophie Neveu (The DaVinci Code)
Sophy Viner (The Reef)
Spiderman
Stuart Little
Sue Bridehead (Jude the Obscure)
Tarzan
Tanya Chernova (Enemy at the Gates)
Tertius Lydgate (Middlemarch)
Tom (Water Babies)
Tom Jones
Tom Sawyer
Trilby
Trinity (The Matrix)
Will Ladislaw (Middlemarch)
Will Turner (Pirates of the Caribbean)
W. Somerset Maugham
* = new or recent addition
AMNESIACS
[no name] (The Man Without a Past)
Dory (Finding Nemo)
Eleanor Mannering (Garden of Lies)
Giambattista "Yambo" Bodini (The Mysterious Flame
of Queen Loana)
Jason Bourne (The Bourne Identity)
Joel Barish and Clementine Kruczynski
(Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind)
Leonard Shelby (Memento)
*Manech (A Very Long Engagement)
Nick Petrov (Oblivion)
Peter Appleton (The Majestic)
Rita (Mulholland Drive)
Ryder (The Unconsoled)
Samson Greene (Man Walks into a Room)
Will Barrett (The Last Gentleman)
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Patrick: Lagniappe
It is not true that calamitous events are
bound, or even likely, to excite great tragic images. Nearly
sixty years after the bomb bay doors of the Enola Gay
opened to release Little Boy, and a new level of human conflict,
over Hiroshima, there is still no major work of visual art marking
the birth of the nuclear age. No esthetically significant
painting or sculpture commemorates Auschwitz. It is most
unlikely that a lesser though still socially traumatic event, such
as the felling of the World Trade Center in 2001, will stimulate any
memorable work of art. What we do remember are the photos,
which cannot be exceeded.
--Goya by Robert Hughes
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'Look at the guests in the hotel, they are
rich. Those women with lifted faces and dyed hair and awful
little dogs.' She said again with one of her flashes of
disquieting wisdom, 'You seem to get afraid of being old when you're
rich.'
--Loser Takes All by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
[H]er cruelty was a kind of pride which kept
her going; it was her best quality, she would have been merely
pitiable without it.
--The Fallen Idol by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'How much do you earn a year with your
Westerns, old man?'
'A thousand.'
'Taxed. I earn thirty thousand free.
It's the fashion. In these days, old man, nobody thinks in
terms of human beings. Governments don't, so why should we?
They talk of the people and the proletariat, and I talk of the mugs.
It's the same thing. They have their five-year plans and so
have I.'
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
For the first time Rollo Martines looked back
through the years without admiration, as he thought: He's never
grown up. Marlowe's devils wore squibs attached to their
tails: evil was like Peter Pan - it carried with it the horrifying
and horrible gift of eternal youth.
Martins said, 'Have you ever visited the
children's hospital? Have you seen any of your victims?'
Harry took a look at the toy landscape below
and came away from the door. 'I never feel quite safe in these
things,' he said. He felt the back of the door with his hand,
as though he were afraid that it might fly open and launch him into
that iron-ribbed space. 'Victims?' he asked. 'Don't be
melodramatic, Rollo. Look down there,' he went on, pointing
through the window at the people moving like black flies at the base
of the Wheel. 'Would you really feel any pity if one of those
dots stopped moving - for eve? If I said you can have twenty
thousand pounds for every dot that stops, would you really, old man,
tell me to keep my money - without hesitation? Or would you
calculate how many dots you could afford to spare? Free of
income tax, old man. Free of income tax.' He gave his
boyish conspiratorial smile. 'It's the only way to save
nowadays.'
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Then the racket began to get organised: the big
men saw big money in it, and while the original thief got less for
his spoils, he received instead a certain security. If
anything happened to im he would be looked after. Human nature
too has curious twisted reasons that the heart certainly knows
nothing of. It eased the conscience of many small men to feel
that they were working for an employer: they were almost as
respectable soon in their own eyes as wage-earners; they were one of
a group, and if there was guilt, the leaders bore the guilt. A
racket works very like a totalitarian party.
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
[N.B.: Or, in the case of China, a
totalitarian party works very like a racket.]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
A buffet laden with coffee cups; an urn
steaming; a woman's face shiny with exertion; two young men with the
happy intelligent faces of sixth-formers; and, huddled in the
background, like faces in a family album, a multitude of the
old-fashioned, the dingy, the earnest and cheery features of
constant readers.
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The Bible says that if a man does something bad
to you, you ought to give him the chance to do more bad to you, like
giving him your other cheek to slap. That's in the Sermon on
the Mount. But I always thought that ought to be changed a
little. If you do pure good to a man that's harmed you that
shames him too much. No man is so bad that you ought to shame
him that way. Do you see? You ought to do just a little
bit of bad in return, so he can keep his self-respect. Do you
see what I mean?
--Heaven's My Destination by Thornton
Wilder
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Saw Barrière who
told us this striking anecdote. On the Place de Grève
he had seen a condemned man whose hair had visibly stood on end when
he had been turned to face the scaffold. Yet this was the man
who, when Dr. Pariset had asked him what he wanted before he died,
had answered: 'A leg of mutton and a woman.'
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 29 January 1860
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'Oh!' said Lafontaine. 'The Empress was
charming. When my manager told her that I was very hoarse, she
said: "We shall come back another time."'
'That's just like the Bonapartes!' said Scholl.
'They always imagine they're going to come back!'
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 25 January 1860
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Patrick: Lagniappe
We talk about his Carthaginian novel, which he
is in the midst of writing. He tells us of his research, his
studies, the reading he has done, the piles of notes he has made,
and the incomprehensibility of the words involved, which is forcing
him to paraphrase all his terms. 'Do you know the full extent
of my ambition?' he asks. 'I just want an intelligent man to
shut himself up for four hours with my book, so that I can give him
a feast of historical hashish. That's all I ask. . . . After
all, work is still the best means of whiling away one's life.'
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 12 January 1860
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Then we remark how few people there are who can
appreciate something well done and beautiful in itself, like the
rhythm of a sentence. 'Can you imagine anything more stupid',
Flaubert asked, 'than struggling to eliminate the assonances from a
sentence or the repetitions from a page? For whom? And
then, even when the book succeeds, the success you obtain is never
the kind you wanted. It was the farcical bits in Madame
Bovary that made it a success. Success is always off the
mark. As for style, how many readers enjoy and appreciate it?
And remember that style is what makes us suspect in the eyes of the
law, for the courts are all for the classics. . . . But in reality
nobody has read the classics! There aren't eight men of
letters who have read Voltaire, and I mean really read him.
And there aren't five who could tell you the titles of Thomas
Corneille's plays. Art for art's sake? It received its
greatest consecration in the address delivered to the Academy by a
classical writer, Buffon, when he said: "The manner in which truth
is enunciated is more useful to humanity than the truth itself."
If that isn't art for art's sake, what is? And how about La
Bruyère, who says: "The art of writing
is the art of defining and depicting."'
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 12 January 1860
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Noticeable, too, is the re-emergence of
sentiment as the prince of the critical utensils. Commentators
respond, not to the novel, but to its personnel, whom they want to
"care about," in whom they want to "believe." Such remarks as
"I didn't like the characters" are now thought capable of settling
the hash of a work of fiction. This critical approach will
eventually elicit what it fully deserves--a literature of
ingratiation. And we will then have reached the destiny that
Alexis de Tocqueville predicted for American democracy: a flabby
stupor of mutual reassurance.
--The Second Plane by Martin Amis
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The old enemy was a superpower; the new enemy
isn't even a state. In the end, the U.S.S.R. was broken by its
own contradictions and abnormalities, forced to realize, in Martin
Malia's words, that "there is no such thing as socialism, and the
Soviet Union built it." Then, too, socialism was a modernist,
indeed a futurist, experiment, whereas militant fundamentalism is
convulsed in a late-medieval phase of its evolution. We would
have to sit through a Renaissance and a Reformation, and then await
an Enlightenment. And we're not going to do that.
--The Second Plane by Martin Amis
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Patrick: Lagniappe
I was once asked: "Are you an Islamophobe?"
And the answer is no. What I am is an Islamismophobe, or
better say an anti-Islamist, because a phobia is an irrational fear,
and it is not irrational to fear something that says it wants to
kill you. The more general enemy, of course, is extremism.
What has extremism done for anyone? Where are its
gifts to humanity? Where are its works?
--The Second Plane by Martin Amis
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Patrick: Lagniappe
There is an obvious end to the amount of purely
physical experiment in music, just as there is an obvious end to
geographical exploration. Wyndham Lewis has pointed out that
when speed and familiarity have reduced travelling in space to the
level of the humdrum those in search of the exotic will have to
travel in time, and this is what has already happened in music.
The Impressionist composers vastly speeded up the facilities for
space travel in music, exploring the remotest jungles and treating
uncharted sea as though they were the Serpentine. Stravinsky,
at one time the globe trotter par excellence can no longer thrill us
with his traveller's tales of the primitive steppe and has, quite
logically, taken to time travelling instead. He reminds one of
the character in a play be
Evreinoff
who lives half in the eighteenth century, half in the present.
--Music Ho! by Constant Lambert
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Patrick: Lagniappe
But today every composer's overcoat has its
corresponding hook in the cloakroom of the past. Stravinsky's
concertos (we have it on the composer's own authority) are 'like'
Bach and Mozart;
Sauguet's music is admired becase 'c'est dans le vrai tradition
de Gounod'; another composer's score is praised because in it 'se
retrouvent les graces étincelleantes de
Scarlatti'. The composer can no longer pride himself on being
true to himself--he can only receive the pale reflected glory of
being true to whichever past composer is credited at the moment with
having possessed the Elixir of Life.
It would be a mistake, I think, to put this
attitude down to a spiritual humility comparable to the quite
natural inferiority complex a modern sculptor might feel in the
presence of some early Chinese carving. It is more in the
nature of a last refuge, comparable to the maudlin religiosity of a
satiated rake. After the debauches of the Impressionist period
nothing is left to the modern composer in the way of a new
frisson save a fashionable repentance.
--Music Ho! by Constant Lambert
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Patrick: Lagniappe
This extraordinary speeding up in technical
experiment gives a pleasantly vertiginous quality to the
Impressionist period, which distinguishes it from all other
experimental periods in music; and in spite of the fact that much of
their experiment leads us to a blind alley there is an exhilaration
of the barricades about the Impressionist composers that imposes a
certain gratitude. 'Pioneers, O Pioneers!' we feel as we
listen to Iberia, Pierrot Lunaire, and Le Sacre du
Printemps. To be a pioneer is not necessarily the
proudest of boasts for a composer--but it is at least something to
boast about. We cannot turn to the present generation and
sing: 'Pasticheurs, O Pasticheurs!' with the same grateful
enthusiasm.
--Music Ho! by Constant Lambert
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Pierrot Lunaire, moreover, cannot be
considered an isolated example of the fin-de-siècle
quality in Schönberg's music.
Die Glückliche Hand, with its great
black cat crouching like an incubus or succubus on the hero, and its
green-faced chorus peering through dark violet hangings is in the
purest Edgar Allan Poe tradition, while Erwartung, with its
vague hints of necrophily, brings in the Kraft-Ebbing touch (Jung at
the prow and Freud at the helm) which is the twentieth century's
only gift to the 'nineties. I am not suggesting for a moment
that Schönberg rises no higher than the
weak decadence of Giraud. There is in his music a fierce
despair, an almost flamelike disgust which recalls the mood of
Baudelaire's La Charogne and places it far above the
watercolour morbidities of the chosen text. But at the moment
I am not trying to determine the purely musical value of Schönberg's
various works--I merely wish to indicate the undoubted neurasthenic
strain that is symptomatic of his period, and which can be found in
works like Stauss' Salome and Elektra which,
musically speaking, are widely differentiated from Schönberg's
in technique.
--Music Ho! by Constant Lambert
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The 'humanities' : perhaps this was the key
word for the 1780s. It was astonishing how much the upper
classes knew. Fox was an authority on Cassandra of Lycophron,
known to scholars as 'the Obscure' : Walpole could read a blazon or
print a fine edition or write about the history of Richard III: the
classics had been flogged into everybody, so that the Latin poets
were quoted as familiarly as educated people now quote Shakespeare:
Greek was spouted in the House of Commons, though with no great
success: it was in the royal library that Dr Johnson met the
bibliophile king: the main legacy of the coarse Sir Robert Walpole
was a fabulous collection of pictures: all society went nightly to
hear Handel or the Opera: the business of the country had actually
been transacted between George I and his First Minister in dog
Latin: an Irish earl had possessed the temerity to argue with
Bentley: Selwyn, who was an ignoramus, wrote his unimpressive
letters instinctively in a mixture of English, French and Italian:
in Paris, at Madame de Deffand's and at other salons, the visiting
English talked almost as easily in the foreign tongue: and the
scandalous Wilkes, who had belonged to the Hell-fire Club and who
had set all Britain by the ears in Parliament, retired gracefully to
edit Theophrastus.
--The Age of Scandal by T.H. White
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The Prince de Kaunitz, who wore satin stays,
passed a portion of every morning in walking up and down a room in
which four valets puffed a cloud of scented powder, but each of a
different colour, in order that it might fall and amalgamate into
the exact nuance that best suited their master's taste
(CAPTAIN JESSE)
--The Age of Scandal by T.H. White
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Patrick: Lagniappe
It is useless to whine. It has happened.
It is the logical result of our half-baked Victorian
humanitarianism. All men are not equal. That ridiculous
idea of English democracy was invented in the reign of Queen
Victoria, and it has now become bureaucracy.
--The Age of Scandal by T.H. White
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Well, we have lived to see the end of
civilisation in England. I was once a gentleman myself.
When I was an undergraduate at Cambridge, the Master of a college
was a fabulous being, who lived in a Lodge of breath-taking beauty
and incalculable antiquity, tended by housemaids, footmen and a
butler. There he consumed vintage port, wrote abstruse
treatises if the spirit moved him, and lived the life of an
impressive, cultivated gentleman. Such posts were among the
few and noble rewards rightly offered to scholarship by the
civilisation which then existed.
When I last stayed in Cambridge, I lunched with
two Masters of colleges. Both of them had to help with the
washing-up after luncheon.
--The Age of Scandal by T.H. White
[N.B.: These are the opening lines to
T.H. White's idiosyncratic work about the culture of late-eighteenth
century England (that is, right before the Regency). It is
consciously written in the spirit of Lytton Strachey and is as well
constructed as a work of well-wrought fiction (no surprise, since
T.H. White wrote, among other marvelous things, The Sword in the
Stone). I highly recommend it.]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The cemetery is divided in two halves: French
crosses on one side, English headstones on the other. A place
where time and silence have stood their ground. In the
distance, wheat fields and low hedges, trees. I walk along
rows of crosses on each of which is written the single word:
INCONNU. Row after row. On the English side there are
the pale headstones:
A SOLDIER
OF THE GREAT WAR
KNOWN UNTO GOD
In front of each grave there are flowers:
flame-bursts of yellow, pink, red, orange. Apart from roses I
recognize none of the flowers; the rest remain unknown, unnamed.
The only sound is of humming bees, of light
passing through trees, striking the grass. Gradually, I become
aware that the air is alive with butterflies. The flowers are
thick with the white blur of wings, the rust and black camouflage of
Red Admirals, silent as ghosts. I remember the names of only a
few butterflies but I know that the Greek word psyche means
both 'soul' and 'butterfly'. And as I sit and watch, I know
also that what I am seeing are the soul of the nameless dead who lie
here, fluttering through the perfect air.
--The Missing of the Somme by Geoff
Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Theodor Adorno said famously that there could
be no poetry after Auschwitz. Instead, he failed to add, there
would be photography.
--The Missing of the Somme by Geoff
Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
In some ways, then, we talk of the horror of
war instinctively and enthusiastically as Rupert Brooke and his
contemporaries jumped at the chance of war 'like swimmers into
cleanness leaping'.
This is not just a linguistic quibble.
Off-the-peg formulae free you from thinking for yourself about what
is being said. Whenever words are bandied about automatically
and easily, their meaning is in the process of leaking away and
evaporating. The ease with which Rupert Brooke coined his
'think only this of me' heroics by embracing a ready-made formula of
feeling should alert us to - and make us skeptical of - the ease
with which these sentiments have been overruled by another.
--The Missing of the Somme by Geoff
Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
In 1919, at eleven a.m., not only in Britain
but throughout the Empire, all activity ceased. Traffic came
to a standstill. In workshops and factories and at the Stock
Exchange no one moved. In London not a single telephone call
was made. Trains scheduled to leave at eleven delayed their
departures by two minutes; those already in motion stopped. In
Nottingham Assize Court a demobbed soldier was being tried for
murder. At eleven o'clock the whole court, including the
prisoner, stood silently for two minutes. Later in the day the
soldier was sentenced to death.
--The Missing of the Somme by Geoff
Dyer
[N.B.: This is a description of the first
Armistice Day on November 11th, 1919, the anniversary of the end of
the Great War (now known as World War One).]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The Great War ruptured the historical
continuum, destroying the legacy of the past. Wyndham Lewis
sounds the characteristic note when he calls it 'the turning-point
in the history of the earth', but there is a sense in which, for the
British at least, the war helped to preserve the past even as it
destroyed it. Life in the decade and a half preceding 1914 has
come to be viewed inevitably and unavoidably through the optic of
the war that followed it. The past as past was
preserved by the war that shattered it. By ushering in a
future characterized by instability and uncertainty, it embalmed for
ever a past characterized by stability and certainty.
--The Missing of the Somme by Geoff
Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
On the insensible stone Don Lelio lay, almost
inconscious, his form wound in a ligature, marmoreal in white
stillness. His terete members but an hour ago so apt and
flexuous, were distorted by incessant twitchings and cold as snow.
Already his lips were livid; they disclosed the purity of teeth
clenched and continually strident. In the pallid throat,
palpitated a vein with diminishing rhythm. Coerulean stains
appeared below the flickering lashes of the half-closed eyes.
Like rose-petals in a breeze, even the nostrils quivered.
Bloomed the abhominable unmistakeable pallor on the bow, where the
soft caesarial hair was humid with the dew of the breath of Death.
--The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Why continue to think me horrible? For
Goodness' Sake do try to get to the Height of the Comic Cosmic
Viewpoint. You MUST traverse the Valley of the Shadow.
The Realm of White Light is only reached through the Ravine of
Ultra-Violet despair. Get up on the Comic Cone; and peep at
yourself in passing. View your meaningless gyrations and
senseless circumlocutions in perspective. Stop your sulking;
and come out on the blue blue blue (turquoise, sapphire, and
sometimes) indigo blue (aquamarine) lagoon. Squatting in your
stews, you taint the light-dowered air. And your livers get
into your eyes, and your hearts into your boots. People who
can't change their minds are in danger of losing them. It is
Mirth alone which keeps men sane. Oh yes--and, Life is Mind
out for a Lark. Well, now?
--The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Dr. and Mrs. van Someren found his company a
continual source of pleasure. Time had added new strings to
his conversational bow. 'Have you ever seen serpents sliding
out of the eye-holes of skulls?' was one of his openings, derived
from his explorations among the islands, one of which he had found
to be littered with the whitening bones of Austrians heaped there at
the end of the war of liberation. He talked of the violet
evenings and rapid dawns which he had observed from his boat, and
had many stories of the quaint behaviour of his young gondoliers,
one of whom he frequently described as 'a tiger with a simper'.
There was a story, too, of a dark night when his miserable
meditations had been interrupted by arrest as a spy.
--The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
I cannot tell you how profoundly moved I was by
your gift, the silver ankh. I instantly perceived how you, and
Harry, must have thought hard till you thought my thoughts.
The evidence was of many kinds, the ankh itself, the size, the
metal, AND above all the adornment of it, as never an ankh has been
adorned before, with my sign of the crab, and my moon, and my
cross-potent-elongate, all of which make it my very, very own.
Such interest in ME, shown by such an exactly intimate knowledge of
my secret and not more than half-formed desire and taste, has never
been shewn before. The effect is almost to strike me dumb.
Thank you, I do: but thanks express but feebly what I feel.
--The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons
[N.B.: And that, folks, in the good
Baron's slightly prolix prose, is why gift cards and the gift of
cash, although such presents may reflect generosity (along with the
sunshine and the rain that fall on both the just and the damned,
indiscriminately), fail to express thoughtfulness as to the
individuality of the recipient. True gifts--as opposed to
mere means of support--validate the unique worthiness of the
receiver: I know you and know what would bring you special
delight. Oh, who am I kidding, here's a fiver and quit bugging
me.]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The hands of the guilty don't necessarily
tremble; only in stories does a dropped glass betray agitation.
Tension is more often shown in the studied action.
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'What I disliked about him at first sight,'
Martins told me, 'was his toupée.
It was one of those obvious toupées -
flat and yellow, with the hair cut straight at the back and not
fitting close. There must be something phoney about a
man who won't accept baldness gracefully.
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
As we drove away I noticed Martins never looked
behind - it's nearly always the fake mourners and the fake lovers
who take that last look, who wait waving on platforms, instead of
clearing quickly out, not looking back. It is perhaps that
they love themselves so much and want to keep themselves in the
sight of others, even of the dead?
--The Third Man by Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
To me it is almost impossible to write a film
play without first writing a story. Even a film depends on
more than plot, on a certain measure of characterisation, on mood
and atmosphere; and these seem to me almost impossible to capture
for the first time in the dull shorthand of a script. One can
reproduce an effect caught in another medium, but one cannot make
the first act of creation in script form. One must have the
sense of more material than one needs to draw on. The
Third Man, therefore, thought never intended for publication,
had to start as a story before those apparently interminable
transformations from one treatment to another.
--Preface to The Third Man by
Graham Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Of this money the Khan has such a quantity made
that with it he could buy all the treasure in the world. With
this currency he orders all payments to be made throughout every
province and kingdom and region of his empire. And no one
dares refuse it on pain of losing his life. And I assure you
that all the peoples and populations who are subject to this rule
are perfectly willing to accept these papers in payment, since
wherever they go they pay in the same currency, whether for goods or
for pearls or precious stones or gold or silver. With these
pieces of paper they can buy anything and pay for anything.
And I can tell you that the papers that reckon as ten bezants do not
weigh one.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
[N.B.: This is just whacky. Only
some despot like the Great Khan could force others to take his
paper--which is backed by nothing of value other than the Great Khan
himself--in trade for valuable goods and services. What would
stop the Great Khan from flooding the market with his paper?
It's a good thing we live in the modern world where the good ol'
yankee dollar is backed by . . . well, by . . . oh, I'm sure it's
back by something. But, at least we're not flooding the market
with lots of newly-minted paper money (well, other than that two
trillion over the last twelve months). Where's the Great Khan
when you need him in order to impose some fiscal discipline?]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
On the northern side of the palace, at the
distance of a bow-shot but still within the walls, the Great Khan
has had made an earthwork, that is to say a mound fully 100 paces in
height and over a mile in circumference. This mound is covered
with a dense growth of trees, all evergreens that never shed their
leaves. And I assure you that whenever the Great Khan hears
tell of a particularly fine tree he has it pulled up, roots and all
and with a quantity of earth, and transported to this mound by
elephants. No matter how big the tree may be, he is not
deterred from transplanting it. In this way he has assembled
here the finest trees in the world. In addition, he has had
the mound covered with lapis lazuli, which is intensely green, so
that trees and rock alike are as green as green can be and there is
no other colour to be seen. For this reason it is called the
Green Mound. On top of this mound, in the middle of the
summit, he has a large and handsome palace, and this too is entirely
green. And I give you my word that mound and trees and palace
form a vision of such beauty that it gladdens the hearts of all
beholders. It was for the sake of this entrancing view that
the Great Khan had them constructed, as well as for the refreshment
and recreation they might afford.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
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Patrick: Lagniappe
When the Great Khan learnt that Nayan was a
prisoner, he commanded that he should be put to death. And
this was how it was done. He was wrapped up tightly in a
carpet and then dragged about so violently, this was and that, that
he died. Their object in choosing this mode of death was so
that the blood of the imperial lineage might not be spilt upon the
earth, and that sun and air might not witness it.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Here is another strange custom which I had
forgotten to describe. You may take it for a fact that, when
there are two men of whom one has had a male child who has died at
the age of four, or what you will, and the other has had a female
child who has also died, they arrange a marriage between them.
They give the dead girl to the dead boy as a wife and draw up a deed
of matrimony. Then they burn this deed, and declare that the
smoke that rises into the air goes to their children in the other
world and that they get wind of it and regard themselves as husband
and wife. They hold a great wedding feast and scatter some of
the food here and there and declare that that too goes to their
children in the other world. And here is something else that
they do. They draw pictures on paper of men in the guise of
slaves, and of horses, clothes, coins, and furniture and then burn
them; and they declare that all these become possessions of their
children in the next world. When they have done this, they
consider themselves to be kinsfolk and uphold their kinship just as
firmly as if the children were alive.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
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Patrick: Lagniappe
[T]he doves, spiralling down in the funnel made
by trees which were coming out all over in a yellow green through
chestnut sheaths the colour of a horse's coat, settled one after
another each outside the door to his quarters and after strutting
once or twice went on quarrelling, murdering, and making love again.
--Loving by Henry Green
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Of Oxford itself (which by this time he must
have come to know better than any other city) he wrote to another
correspondent:
This Examination [the Honour School of Literae
Humaniores] is an experience. We are doing Ancient History,
Logick, Roman History, Translation. The papers are perfectly
appalling. The vilest, vulgarest scripts, the silliest
spelling, infinitives split to the midriff. I asked Hardy what
was to be done with these crimes against fair English and he
answered sedately, 'Pass them over with silent contempt.'
I find that silent system admirable altogether.
This is why.
Whatever is of good, a man must get not from a
teacher, but from his own toil.
The man who wants to write Good English will,
ultimately, write good English, and his work will have the supreme
merit of being rare.
So this mighty Alma Mater of Oxford does well
not to teach the preservation of unsplit infinitives. She
teaches you how to teach yourself, and that is all, and all is
everything, and there is nothing more.
--The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons
[N.B.: You see, Baron Corvo was just
ahead of his time. Nowadays he would make an admirable school
board trustee as he lectured perplexed parents on the value of
teaching their children not vulgar knowledge but how to gather the
rosebuds of knowledge while they may--to teach a man to fish and
other such pish posh. In my view, not teaching someone how to
write but to allow that person instead to muddle along in the muck
of his own errors is akin to allowing a golfer with a splice to go
on practicing until he has perfected it (the slice, that is, off to
the right, over there, lodged in the solarium, after knocking out
that octogenarian).]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Fr. Rolfe returned to Oxford, not yet
dispirited. And, since man must rest his hopes on something,
he began to have hopes of Hubert's Arthur.
[It] is an awful piece of work [he wrote].
But it will be unlike any book ever written. And it will pay.
I go on very slowly and keep on rewriting. I'm just beginning
to know the people in it: but I alter so radically as the thing
grows that I shan't let it be seen till it's done. And I am
not going to do any one single thing beside till it is done.
Mark me well.
Some of his postcards are very funny:
Have you any objection to Lady Maud de Braose
being shut up in a dungeon, and fed wit the tails of haddocks, two a
day, till she, saltish, perishes of pure displeasure? They can
sing her requiem on the eleventh day.
--The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
"And that charge is now corroborated by the
story of the prisoner. My lord Bishop," said the friar with
finality, turning to the great gilt throne, "this matter requires
further investigation."
"Why?" asked the Bishop mildly. "Is it
not an accepted principle in witchcraft proceedings that were doubt
exists, one should convict. The Church's point of view is
happily summed up in the well-known phrase: 'Burn all; God will
distinguish His own.'"
--The Unfortunate Fursey by Mervyn
Wall
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Patrick: Lagniappe
"If the accused should be found not guilty
after the evidence has been considered," conceded the friar, "we
will start again at the beginning and accept his plea of guilty.
First witness."
--The Unfortunate Fursey by Mervyn
Wall
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Lalun is a member of the most ancient
profession in the world. Lilith was her very-great-grandmamma,
and that was before the days of Eve, as everyone knows. In the
West, people say rude things about Lalun's profession, and write
lectures about it, and distribute the lectures to young persons in
order that Morality may be preserved. In the East, where the
profession is hereditary, descending from mother to daughter, nobody
writes lectures or takes any notice; and that is a distinct proof of
the inability of the East to manage its own affairs.
--On the City Wall from Soldiers
Three and Other Stories by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'Fog av fightin'. You know, Sorr, that,
like makin' love, ut takes each man diff'rint. Not I can't
help bein' powerful sick whin I'm in action. Orth'ris, here,
niver stops swearin' from ind to ind, an' the only time that Learoyd
opins his mouth to sing is whin he is messin' wid other people's
heads; for he's a dhirty fighter is Jock. Recruities sometime
cry, an' sometime they don't know fwhat they do, an' sometime they
are all for cuttin' throats an' such-like dirtiness; but some men
get heavy-dead-dhrunk on the fightin'.
--With the Main Guard from
Soldiers Three and Other Stories by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The farmhouse itself no longer looked like a
beast about to spring. (Not that it ever had, to her, for she
was not in the habit of thinking that things looked exactly like
other things which were as different from them in appearance as it
was possible to be.) But it had looked dirty and miserable and
depressing, and when Mr Mybug had once remarked that it looked like
a beast about to spring, Flora had simply not had the heart to
contradict him.
--Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Mr Mybug was very pleased with himself.
This was his idea of romance, Flora could see. She knew from
experience that intellectuals thought the proper - nay, the only -
way to fall in love with somebody was to do it the very instant you
saw them. You met somebody, and thought they were 'A charming
person. So gay and simple.' Then you walked home from a
party with them (preferably across Hampstead Heath, about three in
the morning) discussing whether you should sleep together or not.
Sometimes you asked them to go to Italy with you.
Sometimes they asked you go to Italy (preferably Portofino) with
them. You held hands, and laughed, and kissed them and called
them your 'true love'. You loved them for eight months, and
then you met somebody else and began being gay and simple all over
again, with small-hours' walk across Hampstead, Portofino
invitation, and all.
It was very simple, gay and natural, somehow.
--Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
In the evening, she proposed that the three of
them should visit the Pit Theatre, in Stench Street, Seven Dials, to
see a new play by Barndt Slurb called Manallalive-O! a
Neo-Expressionist attempt to give dramatic form to the mental
reactions of a man employed as a waiter in a restaurant who dreams
that he is the double of another man who is employed as a steward on
a liner, and who, on awakening and realizing that he is still a
waiter employed in a restaurant and not a steward employed on a
liner, goes mad and shoots his reflection in a mirror and dies.
It had seventeen scenes and only one character. A pest house,
a laundry, a lavatory, a court of law, a room in a leper's
settlement and the middle of Piccadilly Circus were included in the
scenes.
--Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
[N.B.: Okay, okay, it's not funny now
since reality has trumped satire--but keep in mind it was written in
1932.]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
For it is a peculiarity of persons who lead
rich, emotional lives, and who (as the saying is_ live intensely and
with a wild poetry, that they read all kinds of meanings into
comparatively simple actions, especially the actions of other
people, who do not live intensely and with a wild poetry. Thus
you may find them weeping passionately on their bed, and be told
that you - you alone - are the cause because you said that awful
thing to them at lunch. Or they wonder why you like going to
concerts; there must be more in it than meets the eye.
--Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
One of the disadvantages of universal education
was the fact that all kinds of persons acquired familiarity with
one's favourite writers. It gave one a curious feeling; it was
like seeing a drunken stranger wrapped in one's dressing gown.
--Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons
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Patrick: Lagniappe
I had, moreover, a sort of grudge against my
book for not being a different book which no one could write.
Ideally, Screwtape's advice to Wormwood should have been balanced by
archangelical advice to the patient's guardian angel. Without
this the picture of human life is lop-sided. But who could
supply the deficiency? Even if a man - and he would have to be
a far better man than I - could scale the spiritual heights
required, what 'answerable style' could he use? For the style
would really be part of the content. Mere advice would be no
good; every sentence would have to smell of Heaven. And
nowadays even if you could write a prose like
Traherne's, you wouldn't be allowed to, for the canon of
'functionalism' has disabled literature for half its functions.
(At bottom, every ideal of style dictates not only how we should say
things but what sort of things we may say.)
--Foreword to The Screwtape Letters by
C.S. Lewis
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Patrick: Lagniappe
I live in the Managerial Age, in a world of
'Admin'. The greatest evil is not now done in those sordid
'dens of crime' that Dickens loved to paint. It is not done
even in concentration camps and labour camps. In those we see
its final result. But it is conceived and ordered (moved,
seconded, carried and minuted) in clean, carpeted, warmed and
well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and cut
fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their
voice. Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is
something like the bureaucracy of a police state or the offices of a
thoroughly nasty business concern.
--Foreword to The Screwtape Letters by
C.S. Lewis
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The literary symbols are more dangerous because
they are not so easily recognised as symbolical. Those of
Dante are the best. Before his angels we sink in awe.
His devils, as Ruskin rightly remarked, in their rage, spite and
obscenity, are far more like what the reality must be than anything
in Milton. Milton's devils, by their grandeur and high poetry,
have done great harm, and his angels owe too much to Homer and
Raphael. But the really pernicious image is Goethe's
Mephistopheles. It is Faust, not he, who really exhibits the
ruthless, sleepless, unsmiling concentration upon self which is the
mark of Hell. The humorous, civilised, sensible, adaptable
Mehistopheles has helped to strengthen the illusion that evil is
liberating.
--Foreword to The Screwtape Letters by
C.S. Lewis
[N.B.: C.S. Lewis is a great writer, but
he really needs to stop using "really." It rarely adds
anything to a text other than emphasis. Really.]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The Greeks did not believe that the gods were
really like the beautiful human shapes their sculptors gave them.
In their poetry a god who wishes to 'appear' to a mortal temporarily
assumes the likeness of a man. Christian theology has nearly
always explained the 'appearance' of an angel in the same way.
It is only the ignorant, says Dionysius in the fifth century, who
dream that spirits are really winged men.
In the plastic arts these symbols have steadily
degenerated. Fra Angelico's angels carry in their face and
gesture the peace and authority of Heaven. Later come the
chubby infantile nudes of Raphael; finally the soft, slim, girlish
and consolatory angels of nineteenth-century art, shapes so feminine
that they avoid being voluptuous only by their total insipidity -
the frigid houris of a tea-table paradise. They are a
pernicious symbol. In Scripture the visitation of an angel is
always alarming; it has to begin by saying 'Fear not'. The
Victorian angel looks as if it were going to say 'There, there'.
--Foreword to The Screwtape Letters by
C.S. Lewis
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Patrick: Lagniappe
The door opened, and when he let the curtain
fall he realized how dark it had become. Anna walked stiffly
towards him and said, 'There you are. You've got what you
wanted.' Her face looked ugly in the attempt to avoid tears;
it was an ugliness which bound him to her more than any beauty could
have done; it isn't being happy together, he thought as though it
were a fresh discovery, that makes one love - it's being unhappy
together.
--The Ministry of Fear by Graham
Greene
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Patrick: Lagniappe
People talk about love at first sight, about
the way that men and women fall for each other immediately, but
there is also such a thing as friendship at first sight.
Although Luke and Alex had said little to each other there was an
immediate ease and sympathy between them.
--Paris Trance by Geoff Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
We shook hands. He had the handshake of a
thin person who has learned how to make a good impression by shaking
hands firmly even though that strength always feels as if it is made
up of bones and nerves. He knew there was a way of getting an
intensity of feeling into shaking hands but he had not learned how
to do it. He was one of those people who have to learn
everything. I say 'one of those people' and I am not sure why.
Perhaps because, as I got to know him better, he came to seem so
emphatically himself, so individual. Perhaps it is from people
like this that we come to an understanding of types.
--Paris Trance by Geoff Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
It is hard to say, difficult to preserve those
first impressions because they are being changed by second - and
third and fourth - impressions even as they are registering as
impressions. Even when we recall with photographic
exactness the way in which someone first presented themselves to us,
that likeness is touched by every trace of emotion we have felt up
to - and including - the moment when we are recalling the
scene.
--Paris Trance by Geoff Dyer
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Patrick: Lagniappe
There are various reasons for this change.
When society had a hierarchy of orders, the nobleman, deeply
conscious and proud of his rank, did not feel jealous of the man of
letters; he conversed with him on familiar terms, because talent did
not encroach on his rank or offend his vanity. Then too, in
that century of spleen, that century in the image of Louis XV, a
century in which the aristocracy found life ready-made for them and
exhausted it all too quickly, the emptiness and nothingness of mind
were incalculable, and the distraction offered by an intelligent
man, the pleasure provided by conversation, were highly prized.
A man of letters was a rare bird, whose intelligence and verve
tickled delicate, sophisticated minds. Easy-going hospitality,
a friendly welcome, flattering attentions did not strike
eighteenth-century society as too high a price to pay for the
pleasure of a writer's company.
But the bourgeoisie stopped all that. The
grand passion of the bourgeoisie is equality. The man of
letters offends it because a man of letters is better known than a
bourgeois. He arouses a hidden rancour, a secret jealousy.
Moreover, the bourgeoisie, an enormous family of active people,
doing business and making children, has no need of intellectual
intercourse: it is satisfied with the newspaper.
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 11 May 1859
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Matia told us all this, and this too.
There exist--this is a fact, she has seen one herself, taken along
by another midwife--there exist imitation women, complete in every
detail, with all the charms and uses of real women: manikins with
flesh which you can push in and which comes out again, a tongue
which darts in and out for five minutes, eyes which roll, hair which
you would swear was the real thing, and moistness and warmth where
you would expect to find them, on sale at the manufacturer's for
15,000 francs, for the use of religious communities or rich sailors.
This one was for a ship whose name Maria has forgotten; but there
are others to suit all pockets, down to male and female parts in
gilded boxes which cost only 300 francs. Maria told us that
the one she saw was a wonderful sight. It was nearly finished;
there were only the toes-nails which still had to be stuck on.
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 6 May 1858
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Overheard at the next table at Broggi's:
'I've met his mistress.'
'But that's his wife!'
'He introduced her to me as his mistress, to
rehabilitate her. . . .'
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), 5 March 1858
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Prayer of my cousin Villedeuil:
'O Lord, let my urine be less cloudy, let the
little flies stop stinging me in the backside, let me live long
enough to make another hundred thousand francs, let the Emperor stay
in power so that my dividends may increase, and let the rise in
Anzin Coal shares be maintained.'
His housekeeper sued to read this out to him
every night, and he would repeat it with his hands clasped.
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), Undated 1854
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Patrick: Lagniappe
She also told me that one day, leaving the
house of a lover who had thrown her out and whom she adored, she
said to the cab-driver who had brought her: 'Take me to a brothel.'
And he retorted coldly: 'Which one?'
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), Undated 1853
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Patrick: Lagniappe
De Lurde and Siméon,
another important government official, were talking together very
seriously. Somebody who had interrupted them said: 'You are
busy, I'll leave you.' 'Yes', he was told. 'We were
discussing whether one should wear one's decorations on a visit to a
brothel or not. I say one shouldn't; Siméon
says one should. He says that if you do, they give you women
who haven't got the pox.
--Pages from the Goncourt Journal (ed.
and tr. by Robert Baldick), August 1852
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Constitutional dilatoriness, an inability to
carry anything though from beginning to end without the intervention
of a thousand experiments and afterthoughts, had always been part of
Leonardo's character, and we must recognise it as a disease of the
will similar to that which ruined the magnificent intellect of
Coleridge. 'Di mi se mai fu fatta alcuna cosa' - tell
me if anything was ever done - this was the first sentence which
flowed from Leonardo's pen in any vacant moment. 'Di mi se
mai', 'di mi se mai', again and again, dozens of
times, we find it on sheets of drawings, among scribbles or
mathematical jottings, or beside the most painstaking calculations,
till it becomes a sort of refrain, and a clear symptom of his
trouble. With Leonardo, of course, the shrinking of the will
was only intermittent and was largely cancelled by the super-human
energy of his mind.
--Leonardo da Vinci by Kenneth Clark
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Patrick: Lagniappe
To him landscape seems to have represented the
wildness of nature, the vast, untamed background of human life; so
the resemblance of his mountains to the craggy precipices of Chinese
painting is no accident, for the Chinese artists also wished to
symbolise the contrast between wild nature and busy organised
society. Yet between Leonardo and the Chinese there is also a
profound difference. To the Chinese a mountain landscape was
chiefly a symbol, an ideograph of solitude and communion with
nature, expressed in the most correct and elegant forms which the
artist could command. To Leonardo a landscape, like a human
being, was part of a vast machine, to be understood part by part
and, if possible, in the whole. Rocks were not simply
decorative silhouettes. They were part of the earth's bones,
with an anatomy of their own, caused by some remote seismic
upheaval. Clouds were not random curls of the brush, drawn by
some celestial artist, but were the congregation of tiny drops
formed from the evaporation of the sea, and soon would pour back
their rain into the rivers. Thus, Leonardo's landscapes,
however wildly romantic his choice of subject matter, never take on
the slightly artificial appearance of the Chinese. To realise
the deep knowledge of natural appearance behind them, we have only
to compare the background of the 'Mona Lisa', in some ways the most
romantic of all, with the caricature of Leaonardo's landscape in
such a schoolpiece as the 'Resurrection', in Berlin, where the
mountains are arranged like the scenery in a toy theatre.
--Leonardo da Vinci by Kenneth Clark
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Patrick: Lagniappe
I think that Leonardo's theories of light and
shade led him to push his chiaroscuro a little further than his
sensibility alone would have warranted. We shall see an
example of this when we come to examine the second version of the
'Virgin of the Rocks'. The Paris picture shows Leonardo's
natural feeling for darkness in the general setting, but the figures
themselves are lit by more or less diffused rays: in the London
picture the light comes from a single source and is concentrated on
the heads so that a large part of each is in shadow. The
result is a loss of colour and transparency which reminds us
disagreeably of Leonardo's followers; for whatever the effect of
chiaroscuro and contrapposto on Leonardo himself, on his imitators
it was disastrous. He had provided them with a style, the true
meaning of which they could not understand, and one which was
peculiarly dangerous to mediocrities. A bad picture in the
quattrocento style still has the merit of bright decorative
colour; even its crudities may be a source of charm. A bad
picture in the style of Leonardo is a horror of black shadows and
squirming shapes.
--Leonardo da Vinci by Kenneth Clark
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Patrick: Lagniappe
We have now reached what is commonly held to be
the climax of Leonardo's career as a painter, the 'Last Supper'.
It is a point at which the student of Leonardo must hesitate,
appalled at the quantity of writing which this masterpiece has
already evoked, and at the unquestionable authority of the
masterpiece itself. And almost more numbing than this
authority is its familiarity. How can we criticise a work
which we have all known from childhood? We have come to regard
Leonardo's 'Last Supper' more as a work of nature than a work of
man, and we no more think of questioning its shape than we should
question the shape of the British Isles on the map. Before
such a picture the difficulty is not so much to analyse our feelings
as to have any feelings at all. But there are alternatives to
the direct aesthetic approach. We may profitably imagine the
day when the 'Last Supper' did not exist, and Leonardo was faced
with a blank wall and an exacting patron.
--Leonardo da Vinci by Kenneth Clark
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'Tis so with couples: they do make up
differences in all manner of queer ways,' said the bark-ripper.
'I knowed a woman; and the husband o' her went away for
four-and-twenty year. And one night he came home when she was
sitting by the fire, and there-upon he sat down himself on the other
side of the chimney-corner. "Well," says she, "have ye got any
news?" "Don't know as I have," says he; "have you?"
"No," says she, "except that my daughter by the husband that
succeeded 'ee was married last month, which was a year after I was
made a widow by him." "Oh! Anything else?" he says.
"No," says she. And there they sat, one on each side of the
chimney-corner, and were found by the neighbours sound asleep in
their chairs, not having known what to talk about at all.'
--The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy
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Patrick: Lagniappe
And yet to every bad there is a worse.
--The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy
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Patrick: Lagniappe
[S]he was determined to be loyal if he proved
true; and the determination to love one's best will carry a heart a
long way towards making that best an evergrowing thing.
--The Woodlanders by Thomas Hardy
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Patrick: Lagniappe
You should know that all the great lords who
are of the lineage of Chinghiz Khan are conveyed for burial to a
great mountain called Altai. When one of them dies, even if it
be at a distance of a hundred days' journey from this mountain, he
must be brought here for burial. And here is a remarkable
fact: when the body of a Great Khan is being carried to this
mountain--be it forty days' journey or more or less--all those who
are encountered along the route by which the body is being conveyed
are put to the sword by the attendants who are escorting it.
'Go!' they cry, 'and serve your lord in the next world.' For
they truly believe that all those whom they put to death must go and
serve the Khan in the next world. And they do the same thing
with horses: when the Khan dies, they kill all his best horses, so
that he may have them in the next world. It is a fact that,
when Mongu Khan died, more than 20,000 men were put to death, having
encountered his body on the way to burial.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Another province, also subject to the Great
Khan, is Uighuristan. It is a large province containing many
cities and towns. The chief city, which is called Kara Khoja,
has many other cities and towns dependent on it. The people
are idolaters, but they include many Christians of the Nestorian
sect and some Saracens. The Christians often intermarry with
the idolaters. They declare that the king who originally ruled
over them was not born of human stock, but arose from a sort of
tuber generated by the sap of trees, which we call esca;
and from him all the others descended. The idolaters are very
well versed in their own laws and traditions and are keen students
of the liberal arts. The land produces grain and excellent
wine. But in winter the cold here is more intense than is
known in any other part of the world.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
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Patrick: Lagniappe
In this country originate the precious stones
called balass rubies, of great beauty and value. They are dug
out of rocks among the mountains by tunnelling to great depths, as
is done by miners working a vein of silver. They are found in
one particular mountain called Sighinan. And I would have you
know that they are mined only for the king and by his orders; no one
else could go to the mountain and dig for these gems without
incurring instant death, and it is forbidden under pain of death and
forfeiture to export them out of the kingdom. The king sends
them by his own men to other kings and princes and great lords, to
some as tribute, to others as a token of amity; and some he barters
for gold and silver. This he does so that these balass rubies
may retain their present rarity and value. If he let other men
mine them and export them throughout the world, there would be so
many of them on the market that the price would fall and they would
cease to be so precious. That is why he has imposed such a
heavy penalty on anyone exporting them without authority.
--The Travels of Marco Polo (tr.
Ronald Latham)
[N.B.: Although written at the beginning
of the fourteenth century, this book might have been written today
as it aptly describes the modern diamond trade.]
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Patrick: Lagniappe
It is as Kevin said long ago: crime begins in
egotism: inordinate vanity. A normal girl, even an emotional
adolescent, might be heart-broken that her adopted brother no longer
considered her the most important thing in his life; but she would
work it out in sobs, or sulks, or being difficult, or deciding that
she was going to renounce the world and go into a convent, or half a
dozen other methods that the adolescent uses in the process of
adjustment. But with an egotism like Betty Kane's there is no
adjustment. She expects the world to adjust to her. The
criminal always does, by the way. There was never a criminal
who didn't consider himself ill-done-by.'
--The Franchise Affair by Josephine
Tey
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'But', someone had objected, 'there have been
monsters of vanity and selfishness who were not criminal.'
'Only because they have victimised their wives
instead of their bank,' Kevin pointed out. 'Tomes have been
written trying to define the criminal, but it is a very simple
definition after all. The criminal is a person who makes the
satisfaction of his own immediate personal wants the mainspring of
his actions. You can't cure him of his egotism, but you can
make the indulgence of it not worth his while. Or almost not
worth his while.'
--The Franchise Affair by Josephine
Tey
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Patrick: Lagniappe
For Robert, being old-fashioned, believed in
retribution. He might not go all the way with Moses - an eye
was not always compensation for an eye - but he certainly agreed
with Gilbert: the punishment should fit the crime. He
certainly did not believe that a few quiet talks with the chaplain
and a promise to reform made a criminal into a respect-worthy
citizen. 'Your true criminal,' he remembered Kevin saying one
night, after a long discussion on penal reform, 'has two unvarying
characteristics, and it is these two characteristics which make him
a criminal. Monstrous vanity and colossal selfishness.
And they are both integral, as ineradicable, as the texture of the
skin.. You might as well talk of "reforming" the colour of one's
eyes.'
--The Franchise Affair by Josephine
Tey
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Patrick: Lagniappe
'Hooray! More power to him. I begin
to like the boy. You put a few wedges into that split, Rob -
casual-like - and see that he marries some nice stupid English girl
who will give him five children and give the rest of the
neighbourhood tennis parties between showers on Saturday afternoons.
It's a much nicer kind of stupidity than standing up on platforms
and holding forth on subjects you don't know the first thing about.'
--The Franchise Affair by Josephine
Tey
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Patrick: Lagniappe
It is very hard to keep count of time in the
Gate, and, besides, time doesn't matter to me. I draw my sixty
rupees fresh and fresh every month. A very, very long while
ago, when I used to be getting three hundred and fifty rupees a
month, and pickings, on a big timber-contract at Calcutta, I had a
wife of sorts. But she's dead now. People said that I
killed her by taking to the Black Smoke. Perhaps, I did, but
it's so long since that it doesn't matter. Sometimes when I
first came to the Gate, I used to feel sorry for it; but that's all
over and done with long ago, and I draw my sixty rupees fresh and
fresh every month, and am quite happy. Not drunk happy,
you know, but always quiet and soothed and contented.
--The Gate of the Hundred Sorrows from Plain
Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
It is a curious thing that, when a man hates or
loves beyond reason, he is ready to go beyond reason to gratify his
feelings; which he would not do for money or power merely.
--The Bisara of Pooree from Plain
Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Bronckhorst was not nice in any way. He
had no respect for the pretty public and private lies that make life
a little less nasty than it is. His manner towards his wife
was coarse. There are many things--including actual assault
with the clenched fist--that a wife will endure; but seldom a wife
can bear--as Mrs Bronckhorst bore--with a long course of brutal,
hard chaff, making light of her weaknesses, her headaches, her small
fits of gaiety, her dresses, her queer little attempts to make
herself attractive to her husband when she knows that she is not
what she has been, and--worst of all--the love that she spends on
her children. That particular sort of heavy-handed jest was
specially dear to Bronckhorst. I suppose that he had first
slipped into it, meaning no harm, in the honeymoon, when folk find
heir ordinary stock of endearments run short, and so go to the other
extreme to express their feelings. A similar impulse makes a
man say, 'Hutt, you old beast!' when a favourite horse nuzzles his
coat-front. Unluckily, when the reaction of marriage sets in,
the form of speech remains, and, the tenderness having died out,
hurts the wife more than she cares to say. But Mrs Bronckhorst
was devoted to her 'Teddy' as she called him. Perhaps that was
why he objected to her. Perhaps--this is only a theory to
account for his infamous behaviour later on--he gave way to the
queer, savage feeling that sometimes takes by the throat a husband
twenty years married, when he sees, across the table, the same, same
face of his wedded wife, and knows that, as he has sat facing it, so
must he continue to sit until the day of its death or his own.
Most men and all women know the spasm.
--The Bronckhorst Divorce-Case from Plain
Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
How he kept his oath, and what it cost him in
the beginning nobody knows. He certainly managed to compass
the hardest thing that a man who has drunk heavily can do. He
took his peg and wine at dinner; but he never drank alone, and never
let what he drank have the least hold on him.
--In Error from Plain
Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
We are a high-caste and enlightened race, and
infant-marriage is very shocking, and the consequences are sometimes
peculiar; but, nevertheless, the Hindu notion--which is the
Continental notion, which is the aboriginal notion--of arranging
marriages irrespective of the personal inclinations of the married,
is sound. Think for a minute, and you will see that it must be
so; unless, of course, you believe in 'affinities.' In which
case you had better not read this tale. How can a man who has
never married, who cannot be trusted to pick up at sight a
moderately sound horse, whose head is hot and upset with visions of
domestic felicity, go about the choosing of a wife? He cannot
see straight or think straight if he tries; and the same
disadvantages exist in the case of a girl's fancies. But when
mature, married, and discreet people arrange a match between a boy
and a girl, they do it sensibly, with a view to the future, and the
young couple live happily ever afterwards. As everybody knows.
--Kidnapped from Plain
Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
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Patrick: Lagniappe
Inventors seem very much alike as a caste.
They talk loudly, especially about 'conspiracies of monopolists;'
they beat upon the table with their fists; and they secrete
fragments of their inventions about their persons.
--A Germ-Destroyer from Plain
Tales from the Hills by Rudyard Kipling
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WHAT WE'RE READING
Patrick:
- Ill Met by Moonlight
by W. Stanley Moss
- After Virtue by
Alasdair MacIntyre
- Nineteen Eighty-Four
by George Orwell
Kathryn:
- Kafka on the Shore
by Haruki Murakami
- Masters of Atlantis by Charles
Portis
RECENT READS
Patrick:
Kathryn:
IN THE QUEUE
Patrick:
Kathryn:
- Story by Robert McKee
- Consilience by Edward O. Wilson
LITBLOG BIBELOTS
SUGGESTED LINKS
Patrick:
The Reading
Experience (a smart and witty litblog)
Invisible Adjunct (a sad
and poignant blog written in ravishing prose by an anonymous adjunct
professor ultimately denied tenure; she left the site up as a
well-visited tombstone)
The Dickens Page (Dickens, Dickens and more Dickens)
About Last Night (Terry Teachout rocks!)
OS
Shakespeare (All things Shakespeare--and it's free!)
Kathryn:
Arts
and Letters Daily
Internet Movie
Database Literary trivia:
First Line Quiz
Movie reviews:
Rotten Tomatoes
Photo.net: Fish
around in "Top-rated photos."
Things My
Girlfriend and I Have Argued About: Want a good laugh?
More earnest chain email propagating misinformation?
Send the sender to
Snopes.com.
An animated primer on
The Internet
vs. Real Life; takes a long time to load. New
Orleans Links
NOLA.com
WWOZ radio
Jazz Fest
Parasol's for po boys
Maple Street Books
Basin
Street Records
Mardi Gras 2005
Austin Links
Mother Egan's Irish Pub
Austin City Limits Music Festival
Salvage
Vanguard Theater
Book People |