I will incline mine ear to the parable, and shew my dark speech upon the harp
from Psalm 49
Monday, December 21, 2009
Take it up to the next level
Do you or some of your co-workers utilize -- I mean, use -- these jargonistic terms?
Labels:
maximize your impact
Sunday, December 20, 2009
On a happier note!
Enbrethiliel gives us a characteristically cheery post for her Sacerdotal Sunday: about the Curé of Ars; about "sin detection" and running shoes; about smiling at the thought of returning to dust, and other good things.
And yes, on Ash Wednesday, I wish I could hear the priest say to me, in "sexist" iambic Elizabethan: "Remember, man, that thou art dust, and unto dust thou shalt return."
And yes, on Ash Wednesday, I wish I could hear the priest say to me, in "sexist" iambic Elizabethan: "Remember, man, that thou art dust, and unto dust thou shalt return."
Labels:
enbrethiliel,
year of the priest
Saturday, December 19, 2009
More unpleasantness
Anti-Christian graffiti mars the site of the Last Supper. Graffiti and so forth.
Via Catholic and Enjoying It!
Via Catholic and Enjoying It!
Labels:
tolerance and sensitivity
Trashing Pope Pius XII
The American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League can, and should, shut their faces.
Friday, December 18, 2009
Thomas Merton, great Christian pacifist
The race situation is certainly ugly and out of hand, and I see it as pretty hopeless. But it was to be expected. Too bad it tends to nullify all the good work and all the sacrifice of Martin Luther King and his followers. But if the country insists on practicing terrorism in Viet Nam then it deserves to get a taste of it at home. Only the ones who get it aren't the ones who deserve it.
Thomas Merton to James Laughlin, letter, August 1, 1967. From Thomas Merton and James Laughlin: Selected Letters (W. W. Norton & Co., 1997), p. 326 [italics mine]
Thomas Merton to James Laughlin, letter, August 1, 1967. From Thomas Merton and James Laughlin: Selected Letters (W. W. Norton & Co., 1997), p. 326 [italics mine]
Labels:
if Hate's a game
Sunday, December 13, 2009
John Ashbery
For those readers that are interested, here is Helen Vendler's review of John Ashbery's latest collection, Planisphere.
Via The Provincial Emails.
Via The Provincial Emails.
Labels:
John Ashbery
Saturday, December 12, 2009
Wednesday, December 09, 2009
Review in Poetry
In the latest issue of Poetry magazine, I value Christina Pugh's notice about Marilyn Hacker's and Heather McHugh's latest books, not merely because we have the art of poetry sagely and sanely considered, and not merely because the reviewer considers the work of two very different poets with equal ease and aplomb -- but because of this paragraph, a withholding of praise in an otherwise laudatory summation :
At times, though, Hacker’s cosmopolitanism has adversely affected her formal choices. Like so many others these days, she has fallen under the spell of the ghazal, and the book contains too many of them. This Persian form has become the multicultural flavor of the month for many poets who are formally-minded, and it’s a very tough nut to crack in English. Hacker is no more immune to this linguistic weakness than anyone else, as shown in lines like the following: “I might wish, like any citizen to celebrate my country/but millions have reason to fear and hate my country.” In short, there are some poems here that read like outtakes from Poets Against the War (“the war goes on and on and on and on”).
Labels:
ghazal is pronounced guzzle
30th anniversary
McNamara's Blog reminds us of the anniversary of the death of Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen; the occasion falls today.
Labels:
Fulton J. Sheen
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Eminem faking it
Now, I like the talentless Mr Mathers about as much as I like the bubonic plague. But this is ridiculous. Apparently, gay activists are criticizing the rapper's use of the phrase "fake it" to describe some gay pop stars. You see, "fake it" sounds an awful lot like an anti-gay slur.
Is there any way we can banish both Mathers and these insane activists to Antarctica for the rest of their lives?
Is there any way we can banish both Mathers and these insane activists to Antarctica for the rest of their lives?
Dream of a bibliophile
Dreamt of acquiring books at low or no cost by Adrienne Rich, Charles Baudelaire, and St Bernard of Clairvaux as translated by Thomas Merton. Now that's a motley crew!
Tuesday, December 01, 2009
Quotation : Mary Oliver
If God exists he isn't just butter and good luck.
Mary Oliver, from "At the River Clarion," in Evidence (Beacon Press, 2009), p. 51
Mary Oliver, from "At the River Clarion," in Evidence (Beacon Press, 2009), p. 51
Labels:
butter and good luck,
mary oliver
From The Cloud of Unknowing
Anyone who desires to regain the purity of heart lost through sin and to win that personal wholeness beyond all pain must patiently struggle in the contemplative work and endure its toil whether he has been a habitual sinner or not. Both sinners and innocents will suffer in this work although obviously sinners will feel the suffering more. And yet it often happens that some who have been hardened, habitual sinners arrive at the perfection of this work sooner than those who have never sinned grievously. God is truly wonderful in lavishing his grace on anyone he chooses; the world stands bewildered before love like this.
And I believe that Doomsday will actually be glorious, for the goodness of God will shine clearly in all his gifts of grace. Some who are now despised and held in contempt (and who are even perhaps inveterate sinners) shall on that day reign in splendor with his saints. And perhaps some of those who have never sinned grievously and who to all appearances are pious people, venerated as gods by other men, shall find themselves in misery among the damned.
My point is that in this life no man may judge another as good or evil simply on the evidence of his deeds. The deeds themselves are another matter. These we may judge as good or evil, but not the person.
via Magnificat, November 2009, pp. 332-3, meditation for Tuesday the 24th
And I believe that Doomsday will actually be glorious, for the goodness of God will shine clearly in all his gifts of grace. Some who are now despised and held in contempt (and who are even perhaps inveterate sinners) shall on that day reign in splendor with his saints. And perhaps some of those who have never sinned grievously and who to all appearances are pious people, venerated as gods by other men, shall find themselves in misery among the damned.
My point is that in this life no man may judge another as good or evil simply on the evidence of his deeds. The deeds themselves are another matter. These we may judge as good or evil, but not the person.
via Magnificat, November 2009, pp. 332-3, meditation for Tuesday the 24th
Monday, November 30, 2009
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Another country heard from (times three)
Three of the four Massachusetts Democrats in contention for the US Senate seat vacated by the death of Senator Edward Kennedy sound off about the controversy involving Kennedy's son Patrick and his bishop.
Why don't they just shut up?
Why don't they just shut up?
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