Friday, December 24, 2021

Season's Greetings

"The town decided something had to be done; Mr. Conner [the lawman] said he knew who each and every one of them was, and he was bound and determined they wouldn't get away with it, so the boys came before the probate judge on charges of disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, assault and battery, and using abusive and profane language in the presence and hearing of a female.  The judge asked Mr. Conner why he included the last charge; Mr. Conner said they cussed so loud he was sure every lady in Maycomb heard them"--To Kill a Mockingbird


I finally got booked for my Covid booster shot.  I'll be going to a Shoppers Drug Mart in the East End on Christmas Day tomorrow to get it!  I've been staying in just now because of the omicron scare, but Moira can go out because she's over 60 and got her booster shot weeks ago.


I've lapsed in reading Lapham's Quarterly in recent years, but we're still subscribed to it and I'm finally resuming it. (I'm still on the "Fear" issue from the summer of 2017.) No doubt I'll be reading it on the way to the shot place.


I've finished that enjoyable book about the California Gold Rush, and now I've started rereading Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird for my book club.  It's full of funny details about small town life in the South, but a great novel?  I have a feeling it's just a near-great one that came along at the right time.


The first chapter mentions that a polite way of saying that someone doesn't work is to say "He buys cotton." If anyone asks what I do, I buy cotton!


Last Friday my historical movie watch party showed Sharpe's Rifles, with Sean Bean as the antihero British soldier fighting Napoleon.  I shared it from britbox.com and I was afraid something might go wrong, but it went smoothly.  This week it's Lawrence of Arabia!


Just found an online piece suggesting that what makes Shakespeare's Macbeth so creepy is its liberal use of the article "the"! Like in the lines "It was the owl that shrieked, the fatal bellman, Which gives the stern'st good-night." Or the lines "Look like the innocent flower, But be the serpent under it."


Can't wait to get out and see the Steven Spielberg remake of West Side Story...

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

THE AGE OF GOLD

The boy (seeing his pursuer Robert Mitchum on the horizon): "Don't he never sleep?"--The Night of the Hunter


Next month my History Meetup is discussing the California gold rush of 1849, so I'm now reading HW Brands' The Age of Gold:  The California Gold Rush and the New American Dream.  It's a hugely entertaining book.  The first chapter talks about California's state at this time (Mexico had just ceded it to the USA), then it's about the different ways people got to California--Panama, Cape Horn, overland--then how gold got mined, and the next section is about how the state of California got formed...


I've returned to the Bloor HotDocs for the first time since the pandemic started!  I saw documentaries about Kurt Vonnegut and The Beach Boys' Brian Wilson respectively. (Wilson was a musical genius, writing songs that look simple at first glance, but are more complex when you think about them.)


I also went to the Paradise for the first time since the Festival Cinemas age over 15 years ago, and saw Charles Laughton's The Night of the Hunter yet again.  It works on more than one level, both a film noir and a fairy tale. (Someone in The New York Review of Books suggested a subtext of sexual hysteria.) It occurred to me that the early shot of Robert Mitchum's first victim, showing her feet alone, is a (conscious?) reference to the witch under Dorothy's house in The Wizard of Oz! Great cinematography by Stanley Cortez.


We've been watching Stephen Frears' A Very English Scandal.  Hugh Grant is a very creepy Jeremy Thorpe, especially his smile! (I recall the real Thorpe as a dour, unsmiling sort.)


Yesterday was mild and I went for a walk through the Distillery district with Camille, whom I met on ourtime.com . (I got her OK to mention her here.) I saw some statues and a fancy pond I don't think I'd seen before, and I got hot chocolate with whipped cream. Camille, I had a good time!

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

DUNE

Last Thursday I saw Denis Villeneuve's movie of (the first half of) Frank Herbert's sci-fi classic Dune with my friend John P. at the Scotiabank in 3-D.  It's the first time I went to the movies since Little Women over 18 months ago, and  we were the only two people in the theatre!  It was pretty spellbinding, a worthy adaptation of an epic novel I've read twice.


On Friday my watch party showed Ron Howard's 1930s boxing movie Cinderella Man, which I'd never seen before.  Half an hour before the end, just before the climactic fight, there was some glitch in the Google Play software and I had to turn off my computer and start everything again!  When I finally got back to my Zoom group, I wanted to show the rest of the movie but I couldn't enable the share feature, so I had to see the rest by myself. (The role of hosted had defaulted to someone else, I later figured out, and she was the one who had to enable it for me.) We might have had a very interesting discussion after the movie's end...


Our next History Discussion Group topic is the Philippines, so I'm now reading Luis H. Francia's A History of the Philippines:  From Indios Bravos to Filipinos.  I noticed that the war the Americans fought against Filipino guerrillas around 1900 was the same time as the British counter-insurgency of the Boer War.  It also occurred to me that in recent years there have been parallels between the Philippines and Brazil:  both emerged from dictatorship in the mid-1980s, and both are now dealing with a government with fascist tendencies.


I started the second season of The Handmaid's Tale, but I don't think I'll continue with it.  It's just too disturbing for me... (Moira's watching Succession, but rich people don't really interest me.)


I don't think I've mentioned that I didn't get cast in that Anne of Green Gables show.  But I did have a good time doing the audition, and I wish I could find other shows to go out for!

Sunday, November 14, 2021

SUNSHINE SKETCHES quotes

I thought I'd post some quotes from Stephen Leacock's Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town, which I recently finished.


It was the right kind of document too.  It began--"Whereas in the bounty of providence the earth putteth forth her luscious fruits and her vineyards for the delight and enjoyment of mankind--" It made you thirsty just to read it.  Any man who read that petition over was wild to get to the Rats' Cooler.


It just shows the difference between people. There was Myra who treated lovers like dogs and would slap them across the face with a banana skin to show her utter independence. And there was Miss Cleghorn who was sallow, and who bought a forty-cent Ancient History to improve herself:  and yet if she'd hit any man in Mariposa with a banana skin, he'd have had her arrested for assault.


And a little further down they passed the Shingle Beach, and Dr. Gallagher, who knew Canadian history, said to Dean Drone that it was strange to think that Champlain had landed there with his French explorers three hundred years ago; and Dean Drone, who didn't know Canadian history, said it was stranger still to think that the hand of the Almighty had piled up the hills and rocks long before that; and Dr. Gallagher said it was wonderful how the French had found their way through such a pathless wilderness; and Dean Drone said that it was wonderful also to think that the Almighty had placed even the smallest shrub in its appointed place.  Dr. Gallagher said it filled him with admiration.  Dean Drone said it filled him with awe.  Dr. Gallagher said he'd been full of it since he was a boy and Dean Drone said so had he.


One couldn't translate it, he said.  It lost so much in the translation that it was better not to try.  It was far wiser not to attempt it.  If you undertook to translate it, there was something gone, something missing immediately.  I believe that many classical scholars feel this way, and like to read the Greek just as it is, without the hazard of trying to put it into so poor a medium as English.  So that when Dean Drone said that he simply couldn't translate it, I believe that he was perfectly sincere.


He took his dying oath--not his ordinary one as used in the Licence cases, but his dying one--that he had not carried a can of kerosene up the street, and that anyway it was the rottenest kind of kerosene he had even seen and no more use than so much molasses.  So that point was settled.


Anyway, [Judge] Pepperleigh had the aptitude for passing sentences so highly perfected that he spent his whole time at it inside of court and out.  I've heard him hand out sentences for the Sultan of Turkey and Mrs. Pankhurst and the Emperor of Germany that made one's blood run cold.  He would sit there on the piazza of a summer evening reading the paper, with dynamite sparks flying from his spectacles as he sentenced the Czar of Russia to ten years in the salt mines--and made it fifteen a few years afterwards.  Pepperleigh always read the foreign news--the news of things that he couldn't alter--as a form of wild and stimulating torment.


And I don't mean that she was in the least exceptional or romantic, because all the girls in Mariposa were just like that.  An Algerian corsair could have come into the town and had a dozen of them for the asking, and as for a wounded English officer--well, perhaps it's better not to talk about it outside or the little town would become a regular military hospital.


Suicide is a thing that ought not to be committed without very careful thought.  It often involves serious consequences, and in some cases brings pain to others than oneself....  I don't say that there is no justification for it.  There often is.  Anybody who has listened to certain kinds of music, or read certain kinds of poetry, or heard certain kinds of performances upon the concertina, will admit that there are some lives which ought not to be continued, and that even suicide has its brighter aspects.


Any man who would offer to take a bribe or sell his convictions for money, would be an object of scorn.  I don't say they wouldn't take money--they would, of course, why not?--but if they did they would take it in a straight fearless way and say nothing about it.  They might--it's only human--accept a job or a contract from the government, but if they did, rest assured it would be in a broad national spirit and not for the sake of the work itself.  No, sir.  Not for a minute.


Here and there you might see Edward Drone, the Independent candidate, wandering round from farm to farm in the dust of the political buggies.  To each of the farmers he explained that he pledged himself to give no bribes, to spend no money and to offer no jobs, and each one of them gripped him warmly by the hand and showed him the way to the next farm.

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Fall cleaning

"Odd that you never knew, in all these years, that the train was there every afternoon, puffing up steam in the city station, and that you might have boarded it any day and gone home.  No, not 'home'--of course you couldn't call it home now; 'home' means that big red sandstone house of yours in the costlier part of the city. 'Home' means, in a way, this Mausoleum Club where you sometimes talk with me of the times that you had as a boy in Mariposa"--Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town


We were cleaning house last week--why do it in the spring when you can do it in the autumn?  On Tuesday I got a new bed. (The first I heard of it was on waking up that morning!) My old bed got thrown out and I'm now sleeping on a futon bed from the attic.  John had to dismantle it to take it down here and put it back together.  I rather like futons!


On Thursday we aired out the house.  That meant opening the windows all afternoon in rather cool weather, and my room got so cold that I had to wear a sweater!  We also removed the wall-to-wall carpeting in the attic.


Thursday night my book club discussed Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town.  It had a certain appeal for me because I come from a small town myself.  In December we'll be discussing a book of children's stories by Oscar Wilde, including "The Happy Prince" and "The Selfish Giant."


Friday night my historical movie watch party showed John Huston's 1966 epic The Bible... In the Beginning.  I had trouble staying awake!  They should have skipped the first half and gone straight into Abraham's story.


Finished How the Scots Invented the Modern World.  It was so fascinating that I've been doing something I never usually do and writing notes, listing all these important people and what they achieved in different categories...


This evening our MPP Jill Andrew was at her constituency office around the corner from my house handing out Hallowe'en candy!


Just now I have an unusually big headache!

Monday, October 11, 2021

Auditioning

"You have seen him, perhaps, playing poker in Peter Glover's room over the hardware store and trying to look as if he didn't hold three aces--in fact, giving absolutely no sign of it beyond the wild flush in his face and the fact that his hair stands on end"--Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town


There's a new theatre group in my neighbourhood called the Hillcrest Village Community Players, who next year will be staging the musical Anne of Green Gables. (I saw the Charlottetown Festival seasonal production four times when I was young.) A week ago I auditioned for them, singing the Donkey Serenade and reciting "The Hill" from Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology, only I did it translated into Scottish dialect as "Th' Brae"!  I also did an audition for the dance chorus, and part of the routine we were learning was skipping.  That skipping took me right back to watching the show in Charlottetown...


I went through the Scots poem again and again, first getting all the lines learned and then working on the feeling.  I even recited in front of a mirror!  When I was practicing my singing, I also brought out the old songs I learned when I was taking lessons from Giuseppe Macina.  I still like Schubert's "Wohin?" (where to?) about following a little brook.  At the time I had to sing it in a lower key, but now I've raised my range to two octaves and can do the original!


I did my singing audition a cappella, and for my first try the director gave me a starting note a lot higher than the score to test the upper limit of my range! (Cute trick.) But second time she gave me the right note.  I think I did pretty well.  


The callback is on Thursday, so I had to reschedule my History Meetup a day earlier, on Wednesday.  I have hopes for the role of Matthew, but I'm up for anything! (I doubt they'll be casting me as Gilbert, of course...)


Tonight we started watching the series The Handmaid's Tale on Crave TV.  It's pretty disturbing, all right.  The musical score got a bit too off-putting for me.

Thursday, September 30, 2021

Election Day

"At such hours, the Mariposa barber shop would become a very Palace of Slumber, and as you waited your turn in one of the wooden armchairs beside the wall, what with the quiet of the hour, and the low drone of Jeff's conversation, the buzzing of the flies against the window pane, and the measured tick of the clock above the mirror, your head sank dreaming on your breast, and the Mariposa Newspacket rustled unheeded on the floor.  It makes one drowsy just to think of it!"--Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town


It was Election Day last week.  My voting precinct got changed at the last minute, and maybe that's why I got sent to the front of the line!  My candidate had to quit the race after some social media post about Canadian vaccines ending up in Israel, but I voted for her anyway. (So sue me.) The result was like the 1977 Ontario election where Bill Davis' Big Blue Machine called a snap election in the hope of regaining a Conservative majority, but they only gained a handful of seats.


Once again, I did some figuring to see how the election would have turned out with the German-style mixed proportional representation that I favour.  In this system about 70% of seats would be A (first past the post like today); not less than 25% would be B (allotted so that A and B seats together would be as close as possible to the popular votes); and not less than 4% would be C (given to the leading party except if its A seats alone were greater than its rightful A and B share, in which case they would go to the other parties to bring them closer to their rightful share). The three territorial seats would be unchanged, with 2 Liberal and 1 NDP.


On the left I show the actual result for each province, on the right first A (assuming the same proportion as in the actual election, then B and C in brackets, then the sum of all three.


Newfoundland

Liberal             6    |    3 (1)    4

Conservative    1    |    1 (1)    2

NDP                       |       (1)    1


PEI

Liberal              4    |    2(1)    3    

Conservative           |      (1)    1


Nova Scotia

Liberal              8    |    5 (1)    6

Conservative    3     |    2 (1)    3

NDP                        |       (2)    2


New Brunswick

Liberal              6    |    4 (1)    5

Conservative     4    |    2 (1)    3

NDP                        |       (1)    1

PPC                         |       (1)    1


Quebec

Liberal            34    |    24 (4)    28

Conservative   10    |      7 (7)    14

NDP                  1    |      1 (7)    8

BQ                   33    |    24 (1)    25

Green                       |         (2)    2

FPC                          |         (1)    1


Ontario

Liberal             78    |    56            56

Conservative    37    |    26 (13)    39

NDP                   5    |      4 (14)    18

PPC                          |           (5)    5

Green                   1  |           (2)    2


Manitoba

Liberal                4    |    2 (2)    4

Conservative       7    |    5 (1)    6

NDP                    3    |    2 (1)    3

PPC                           |        (1)    1


Saskatchewan

Liberal                        |    (1)    1

Conservative       14    |    9      9

NDP                            |    (3)    3

PPC                             |    (1)    1


Alberta

Liberal                    2    |    1 (4)   5

Conservative        30    |    22       22

NDP                       2    |    1 (4)    5

PPC                              |        (1)    1


BC

Liberal                 15    |   11 (2)    13 

Conservative        13    |    9 (6)    15

NDP                     13    |     9 (4)    13

PPC                              |        (2)    2

Green                     1    |        (1)    1


The overall result:


Liberal                 159    |    108 (17)    125

Conservative        119    |      83 (31)    114

NDP                       25    |       17 (37)    54

BQ                         33    |        24   (1)    25

PPC                                |             (11)    11

Green                       2    |               (5)    5

FPC                                |               (1)    1


Under this system, the Liberals would have fewer seats, mostly in Ontario.  The Bloc Quebecois would also be reduced, while the Conservatives would be about the same.  The NDP would have most of the gains, the rest going to small parties.


The numbers don't quite add up, but it's too late at night to figure it out! 

Monday, September 13, 2021

Twenty years after

"Ethan looked at her with loathing.  She was no longer the listless creature who had lived at his side in a state of sullen self-absorption, but a mysterious alien presence, an evil energy secreted from the long years of silent brooding"--Ethan Frome


Saturday was the 20th anniversary of 9/11.  President Biden called for unity. (What's the Doddering Groper going to call for, disunity?) Did it really change America, or just bring out Uncle Sam's true face?  The American government may not have (or may have) been guilty of imperialistic hegemony in the Middle East before then, but there's no credible doubt that it's guilty now!  We still hear the calls to remember, yet Americans are encouraged to remember without learning, like the Bourbons.


I remember how my flight to England was delayed two days because of all the American planes landing in Toronto, which does seem pretty minor.  And I remember Americans asking "Why are we hated?" but unwilling to listen to any answer that didn't have a pro-American spin. (Which only leaves "They hate us for our freedoms...") I also remember ceremonies commemorating the three-month anniversary on December 11, which was a little much.


Twenty years later, Adolf Bullyani is finally discredited.  But back at the time, of course, the American press turned him into a hero because he'd said some reassuring things. That tells you everything about what's wrong with the mainstream news media!  They decide what the people want to hear and reward those who say it, just like with Reagan. (When Howard Dean raises his voice, on the other hand...)


Twenty years later, the Afghanistan and Iraq wars are both discredited.  But I remember all the liberals who supported the Afghanistan invasion to show how "balanced" they were, while hoping that Iraq wouldn't be next. (Who was naive?) In particular, Salon published an article titled "We Were Wrong," by a progressive apologizing for having opposed the Afghanistan invasion, like a heretic's official recantation.  And I remember born-again hawk Christopher Hitchens obtusely insisting that what Noam Chomsky said no longer mattered! (So who looks irrelevant now?)


The remarkable thing about the American response to 9/11 wasn't the predictable self-pity but the quick shift into self-congratulation! (Shortly afterward The New York Times quoted some American asking, "Why did they attack us when we're so good?" I smell doublethink...) The real winners, of course, were the corporations that made a killing from their piece of the taxpayers' billions that were spent on the military adventures that followed. No price is too high when you're "getting tough," right?


I guess I've said most of this before, but it bears repeating.  The Pentagon may misplace trillions and the CIA may keep dropping the ball, but the answer is always to give them even more money and power.  The USA's two-party system has produced a false consensus which endlessly benefits the Military-Industrial Complex.  Thank you, Ronald Reagan.


Meanwhile, it turns out that the local NDP campaign does have an office after all, so I'm doing some office work there.  Yesterday I finally finished Ethan Frome, with the book club coming up on Thursday.  I could have finished it a lot earlier, but I just prefer reading history to reading fiction!  I think that for our next book we'll read Stephen Leacock's Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Dog days

I've been feeling a bit lazy lately. Even writing to women on the Our Time dating site feels like a chore.


Well, Trudeau Jr. went ahead and did it!  He called a snap election when we still aren't finished with this pandemic.  The other week I went on an NDP canvassing run and even got to meet the local candidate Sidney Coles.  I'm doing another run tonight.


I finished Ghost Empire and my next history book will be Justinian's Flea, about how Justinian tried to restore the Roman Empire in the 6th Century AD but got thwarted by a devastating plague. (It was a consequence of increased international trade, like COVID-19.)


Our Short Story Meetup was just discussing Virginia Woolf and our next author will be Katherine Mansfield. (I should do To the Lighthouse in my Book Club.  I'm also thinking of Stephen Leacock.)


I recently saw a particularly good story on that anime One Piece.  It's a prequel about when Luffy and his blood brother Ace were young and getting started in mischief, along with a boy called Sabo, who resembled the Artful Dodger.


For the next two weeks my Friday History Meetup watch party will be showing Flags of Our Fathers and Letters From Iwo Jima, Clint Eastwood's two movies about the Battle of Iwo Jima, from the American and Japanese perspectives respectively.


In Saturday night's thunderstorm a couple of lightning bolts seemed really close!

Friday, August 13, 2021

Corn on the cob!

This time of year the supermarkets are selling really fresh corn at low prices!  Moira doesn't like corn on the cob herself, but she gets it for me unilaterally, blessings on her.


I've started reading Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome for my Book Club Meetup.  I'm also reading Ghost Empire, about Cavalier de la Salle, who claimed the Mississippi basin for France but whose attempt at colonizing Texas ended with his own men shooting him!  That's for next month's History Meetup, whose subject is New France.


Last week my historical movie watch party showed Ed Zwick's Legends of the Fall, which I hadn't seen before.  Didn't care for it:  the Brad Pitt character just seemed like a jerk to me.  The Italians seem to do this sort of family saga better than Americans:  see Padre, Padrone or Rocco and His Brothers.


This week we showed The Painted Veil, based on W. Somerset Maugham's novel about an unhappy medical missionary couple in China.  The story's a bit conventional, but the lead actors Edward Norton and Naomi Watts brought something convincing to their roles.


I've now written several haikus:


March, the year's best time!

From cold to cool, then to warm:

Ice and snow melting.


September passes,

Grey morning frost on green grass.

Winter will yet wait.


Old man plants a tree,

Its shade and fruit for others.

Greatest act of faith!


March Fundy spring tides,

Big brown chunks of dirty ice,

Highest in the world!


Wet snow, almost rain,

Big flakes good for snowballs but

Soon to be icy!

Monday, July 12, 2021

Hong Kong satire

"Rags was beginning to clear the table.  His cynical light eyes took in every detail of Finch's attire.  They said to the boy, as plainly as words: 'Ho, ho, my young feller!  You've decked yerself all up for the occasion, 'aven't yer?  You think you've made an impression on the lidy, don't yer?  But if you could only see yerself!  And just you wait till the fmaily catches you in your Sunday clothes.  There won't be nothink doing, ow naow!"--Jalna


Robbery scene: "Shit, you're just a boy!"

Blam! "That's just your knee!"

--The Wire

I've started reading A Concise History of Hong Kong.  But I also bought an Ebook by Larry Feign, who did the satirical Hong Kong comic strip The World of Lily Wong in the late '80s and early '90s for The South China Morning Post, until they dropped it because Beijing didn't like it. (Feign is a good name for a satirist...) In 1997 he revived the strip for the British press to cover the 100 days before the final handover to Chinese rule, and I've brought the reprint, titled Let's All Shut up and Make Money! which could be the Hong Kong motto.


But there's a catch.  It turns out that after I've read a few episodes, my Kobo software chokes and I get that spinning iris so the only thing I can do is turn the power off and restart!  I've solved the problem--I think--by only viewing one episode at a time, and quitting Kobo in between.  So now I have a system where I alternate between reading a section of the Concise history and an episode of the comic strip.


The neighbourhood was pretty noisy last night what with the Italy vs. England soccer game. (I had to close my windows and even pull down the shutter!) I heard a huge roar when Italy scored a goal.


I've finished the last episode of the last season of The Wire.  I think we'll try The Handmaid's Tale one of these days.