The arts are an even better barometer of what is happening in our world than the stock market or the debates in congress.— Hendrik Willem van Loon, died in 1944
Janko Brunovsky loved the Irish culture ...
As Bill Callahan wrote, “Everyone’s got their own thing that they yell into a well.”
The inequalities of capitalist economies are not exactly news. As my colleague Esther Bloom pointed out, “For centuries, a woman’s social status was clear-cut: either she had a maid or she was one.”“I had thirteen names. Each name was from a different generation, beginning with Father and going back from him. I was the first one in our village to have thirteen names. Our family was considered blessed to have such a history.”
ST PATRICK RID US OF THESE SNAKES: St. Patrick’s Day Meets Political Correctness
By all accounts, nineteenth-century Ireland—from which Irish immigrants to this country fled by the boatloads—was a remarkably dismal place even before the Great Potato Famine. As Gustave de Beaumont, traveling companion to Alexis de Tocqueville, wrote in the 1830s: “I have seen the Indian in his forests and the Negro in his chains, and thought, as I contemplated their pitiable condition, that I saw the very extreme of human wretchedness; but I did not know then the condition of unfortunate Ireland.”

‘I’m Not A Gay Writer, I’m A Monster. Gay Writers Are Too Conservative.’ Are American Readers Finally Ready For James Purdy?
Despite praise in his lifetime from Langston Hughes, Susan Sontag, Edward Albee, Gore Vidal, as well as – in later years – John Waters and Jonathan Franzen, Purdy … cast out by the US literary establishment,” which wasn’t ready for either his experimental style or his outré subject matter. (Nelson Algren called one of Purdy’s books “a fifth-rate avant-garde soap opera [about] prayer and faggotry.”) And Purdy’s delight in burning bridges didn’t help. – The GuardianReport: Rural Communities Do Better When They Develop Creative Industries

Rural counties that are home to performing arts organizations experiencedpopulation growth three times faster and higher household incomes (up to $6,000 higher) than rural counties lacking performing arts organizations. –Medium
Recovering from Cultural Dementia - The Catholic Thing
“But we do sing at Mass,” someone says. Yes and no. There are songs, but most of the congregation is silent or is murmuring, because the songs are for Mass entertainment, having been conceived in form and content after the patterns of mass entertainment.
No one remembers the words, because the poetry is bad or nonexistent, and no one remembers the melodies, because they are bad or because they never were written to be sung by an entire congregation and its full range of human voices.
What is forgotten is that great literature and art give great and last pleasure, pleasure that forms character.
Why Walking Helps Us Think
FINALLY, A FORM OF FASTING I MIGHT CONSIDER: No food, only beer: Fasting like a 17th-century monk.
WELL, THIS IS THE 21ST CENTURY, YOU KNOW: A drone builder claims he invented the smallest flying car in the world — the Koncepto Millenya.
Is fighting like cooking?
Why do we refer to “heads” of state and the long “arm” of the law? The “body politic” is deeply rooted in Western philosophy. And it may be a cure for what ails us
openculture.com – “If you know nothing else about medieval European illuminated manuscripts, you surely know the Book of Kells. “One of Ireland’s greatest cultural treasures” comments Medievalists.net, “it is set apart from other manuscripts of the same period by the quality of its artwork and the sheer number of illustrations that run throughout the 680 pages of the book.” The work not only attracts scholars, but almost a million visitors to Dublin every year. “You simply can’t travel to the capital of Ireland,” writes Book Riot’s Erika Harlitz-Kern, “without the Book of Kells being mentioned. And rightfully so.”…its exquisite illuminations mark it as a ceremonial object, and its “intricacies,” argue Trinity College Dublin professors Rachel Moss and Fáinche Ryan, “lead the mind along pathways of the imagination…. You haven’t been to Ireland unless you’ve seen the Book of Kells.” This may be so, but thankfully, in our digital age, you need not go to Dublin to see this fabulous historical artifact, or a digitization of it at least, entirely viewable at the online collections of the Trinity College Library. The pages, originally captured in 1990, “have recently been rescanned,” Trinity College Library writes, using state of the art imaging technology. These new digital images offer the most accurate high resolution images to date, providing an experience second only to viewing the book in person.”…
FINALLY, A FORM OF FASTING I MIGHT CONSIDER: No food, only beer: Fasting like a 17th-century monk.
WELL, THIS IS THE 21ST CENTURY, YOU KNOW: A drone builder claims he invented the smallest flying car in the world — the Koncepto Millenya.
Is fighting like cooking?
Why do we refer to “heads” of state and the long “arm” of the law? The “body politic” is deeply rooted in Western philosophy. And it may be a cure for what ails us
openculture.com – “If you know nothing else about medieval European illuminated manuscripts, you surely know the Book of Kells. “One of Ireland’s greatest cultural treasures” comments Medievalists.net, “it is set apart from other manuscripts of the same period by the quality of its artwork and the sheer number of illustrations that run throughout the 680 pages of the book.” The work not only attracts scholars, but almost a million visitors to Dublin every year. “You simply can’t travel to the capital of Ireland,” writes Book Riot’s Erika Harlitz-Kern, “without the Book of Kells being mentioned. And rightfully so.”…its exquisite illuminations mark it as a ceremonial object, and its “intricacies,” argue Trinity College Dublin professors Rachel Moss and Fáinche Ryan, “lead the mind along pathways of the imagination…. You haven’t been to Ireland unless you’ve seen the Book of Kells.” This may be so, but thankfully, in our digital age, you need not go to Dublin to see this fabulous historical artifact, or a digitization of it at least, entirely viewable at the online collections of the Trinity College Library. The pages, originally captured in 1990, “have recently been rescanned,” Trinity College Library writes, using state of the art imaging technology. These new digital images offer the most accurate high resolution images to date, providing an experience second only to viewing the book in person.”…
The Married Man ![]() |
THE BACHELOR ’e fights for one![]() But the married man don’t call it fun, ![]() For ’Im an’ ’Er an’ It ![]() ’E wants to finish ’is little bit, ![]() The bachelor pokes up ’is ’ead ![]() But the married man lies down instead, ![]() For ’Im an’ ’Er an’ a hit ![]() ’E wants to finish ’is little bit, ![]() The bachelor will miss you clear ![]() But the married man, ’e says “No fear!” ![]() Of ’Im an’ ’Er an’ It ![]() ’E wants to finish ’is little bit, ![]() The bachelor ’e fights ’is fight ![]() But the married man sits up all night— ![]() ’E’ll strain an’ listen an’ peer ![]() For the sake o’ the breathin’ ’e’s used to ’ear ![]() The bachelor may risk ’is ’ide ![]() But the married man will wait beside ![]() ’E’ll take your ’ome address ![]() Or if ’e sees there’s ’ope, ’e’ll press ![]() For ’Im an’ ’Er an’ It ![]() For ’e knows you wanted to finish your bit, ![]() Yes, ’Im an’ ’Er an’ It ![]() We’re all of us anxious, to finish our bit, ![]() Yes, It an’ ’Er an’ ’Im, ![]() The married man must sink or swim ![]() Oh ’Im an’ It an’ ’Er ![]() So I’d rather fight with the bacheler ![]() |