Skip to content

Category Archives: Comments on Life

Love.

14-Aug-13

Petrópolis “No specter assails us in more varied disguises than loneliness, and one of its most impenetrable masks is called love.” – Arthur Schnitzler, quoted by Clive James. I’ve been reading James’ Cultural Amnesia, a fine book; essentially excerpts from James’ commonplace-book with essays built around them, on a general theme.  Probably for personal reasons, my […]

Pros ton theon.

10-Sep-12

http://servuclean.com/category/janitorial-service/office-cleaners/page/4/ “Shams and reality are esteemed for soundest truths, while reality is fabulous.  If men would steadily observe realities only, and not allow themselves to be deluded, life, to compare it with such things as we know, would be like a fairy tale and the Arabian Nights’ Entertainments.  If we respected only what is inevitable and […]

Newman, and Burton.

08-Jul-12

I found this in Burton’s commentary to his Kasidah.  The exclamation point I am sure is Burton’s.  From Newman’s Apologia Pro Vita Sua: To consider the world in its length and breadth, its various history and the many races of men, their starts, their fortunes, their mutual alienation, their conflicts, and then their ways, habits, […]

The Intelligent Idle.

02-Jul-12

I did enjoy this piece in the Times quite a bit on busy-ness and idleness.  When I have thought about where I belong, and who “my people” are, the best answer I can come up with is that my people are “the intelligent idle,” or perhaps “the idle intelligent.”  I feel this used to be […]

The Richness of Human Life.

15-May-12

Two fifth grade students finished their tests later than the rest of the class and as a result their tests ended up in a different pile from everyone else’s, and when I got to grading them I figured I would skip the scantron – it was only two tests – and grade them by hand. […]

Individualism.

20-Apr-12

I love being around people, but so many are so dead-set on throwing their lives away on trivia that frequently the easiest way to have any experience of being alive is alone.  And yet no solution is more unacceptable than solitude.

Why The 19th Century Was So Lovely in the End.

17-Apr-12

Because, for all its problems, you can bet that even in a town like Tombstone, Arizona, “the rottenest place you ever saw,” in the 19th century someone somewhere in town had a bust of Goethe.

Disconnection.

02-Jan-12

One of the strange and unpleasant things about being away from my cabin is the fact that I can be contacted at any moment, and, being in need of employment, I have nothing particularly better to do; and so I find myself constantly opening my phone, or refreshing my computer screen, like a five-year-old trying […]

Regrets of the Dying.

02-Dec-11

I think we all know these things, and yet we see other people heading right for these same regrets, and are powerless to stop it. http://www.inspirationandchai.com/Regrets-of-the-Dying.html

Plutarch on Writing, History, and Virtue.

11-Nov-11

Reading a fair amount of Plutarch recently, the lives of Timoleon, Aemilius Paulus, Pelopidas, and Marcellus.  What a superb man.  Below is very nearly a summa of the highest, deeds-oriented (as opposed to eloquence-oriented) Classicism.  You can hear how much he shaped the writerly outlook on Montaigne fifteen centuries later – what a thought, that […]