oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
Not for That City
By Charlotte Mew
Not for that city of the level sun,
Its golden streets and glittering gates ablaze—
The shadeless, sleepless city of white days,
White nights, or nights and days that are as one—
We weary, when all is said , all thought, all done.
We strain our eyes beyond this dusk to see
What, from the threshold of eternity
We shall step into. No, I think we shun
The splendour of that everlasting glare,
The clamour of that never-ending song.
And if for anything we greatly long,
It is for some remote and quiet stair
Which winds to silence and a space for sleep
Too sound for waking and for dreams too deep.
oursin: George Beresford photograph of Marie of Roumania, overwritten 'And I AM Marie of Roumania' (Marie of Roumania)

I was niggled, irked, peeved, etc, by this article at the weekend, which can't seem to make up its mind which side to come down on: is it the case that:

A whole lot of women my age (75) live independent lives and are quite happy not to step into the treacherous swamp of the dating jungle. Besides, the odds are stacked against our sex. By this time, to be honest, possibilities are thin on the ground. The men in question have either copped off with a younger model or become too stuck in their ways.

or, conversely, is it so that:
However decrepit a man is, however bald and boring and drunk and incapacitated*, he’ll always find a willing woman to take him on. It’s just a fact of life. Nursing is deep in our DNA. And she’ll probably be younger. That’s the brutal truth.

No, really, which, or is this just about touting her new book?

After all, we are hearing an awful lot about Teh Wymmynz B giving up on MENZ, wo wo world b coming to an end, etc etc, though women well into their senior years going either way are not going affect BIRFR8, are they? which seems to be embedded in a lot of the woezery.

No, really, duckies, I saw something lately that the annual birthrate had dropped to its lowest since records began (1939, rly) and I was merrily channeling dear AP Herbert, one of my HEROES for divorce law reform (1937 probably about as far as anyone could push it at that date) and giving a Parliamentary speech in verse about exactly this Jeremiahing about Population in Decline in 1937:

They pulled down all the houses where the children used to crowd
And built expensive blocks of flats where children weren't allowed;
So if father got a job there wasn't anywhere to dwell,
And everybody wondered why the population fell.
Five hundred brand-new motor cars each morning rode the roads,
And flashed about like comets or sat motionless as toads;
Whichever course they took they made the public highway hell,
And everybody wondered why the population fell.

So I am very much about, hello, let us look at why people are not going in for progeny at the present moment, and deal with that, hmmmmmmm?

Okay, am myself part of 'grizzled couple' in which I have a person to unscrew recalcitrant bottle-tops and deal with gasmen/plumbers etc, and he has someone to do computer and phone support. Among all the other various shared domestic responsibilities. Maybe I am not the audience for this kind of thing....

*ETA I.e. Not even good for what Dame Rebecca claimed as pretty much the sole benefit of the male sex: 'one sometimes needs help in moving pianos'.

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

I do not think it can be denied that we are currently in what can be deemed a Waste Land, hmmm?

This seems a bit too appropriate: King diagnosed with cancer, Buckingham Palace says.... not prostate cancer, but was discovered during his recent treatment for an enlarged prostate.

I sat upon the shore
Fishing, with the arid plain behind me
Shall I at least set my lands in order?

***

In the realm of time immemorial: in recent spam I lately heard from 'An age old Digital Marketing Agency operating over 10 years in the global market having its main office at AZ, USA. We exist for such a long only because we follow ethical business practices'.

***

Manchester University Press is having a sale with some amazing knockdowns (but still not that book on birth control sigh) (UK and Europe only alas). Princeton University Press is also having a sale.

Ouanqueres

Jun. 8th, 2023 05:52 pm
oursin: My photograph of Praire Buoy sculpture, Meadowbrook Park, Urbana, overwritten with Urgent, Phallic Look (urgent phallic)

Okay, being a historian of Ye Heinous Synne of Onan, I was alternately chortling and boggling over this

Evolutionary biologists have traced the origins of masturbation to ancient primates that predate the first humans by tens of millions of years.

(Did they have - Hairy Palms? we wish to know: For Science.)

Brindle and her colleagues delved deep into the history of the behaviour in the hope of understanding the origins of what at first glance seems an evolutionary conundrum. From an evolutionary perspective, masturbation appears costly, distracting, wasteful, even risky. To reconstruct the history of the act, the scientists pulled together hundreds of publications, questionnaire responses and personal notes about masturbating primates from primatologists and zoo keepers. They then mapped the information on to primate evolutionary trees, revealing how the activity reached back through time.

Without, it seems, consulting the substantial historiography of the subject!!!!

We note that 'Historically, biological studies have neglected females, giving the authors little good data to go on. For males, however, there are at least hints.'

Why does there have to be a reason? I seem to recall hearing/reading once (Journal of Saw It Somewhere Studies?) that genetic traits which do not convey any positive disadvantage may go on being replicated even if they do not convey any advantage. Surely this also applies to behaviours?

(Will point out that self-abuse does not actually cause consumption, insanity and wasting away though worrying about it has deleterious effects.)

As the research deals with primates (and not any animals which may be observed committing frottage against objects) using hands to manustrupate themselves, I will allude (because I can) to the works of the Rev Sylvanus Stall, who wrote much-circulated manuals of sex advice in the late C19th, in which he pointed out that the Deity had given Man hands, with which he could build cathedrals, write symphonies, etc etc, but woe, woe, alas, alack, with these hands he could also impiously and impurely pollute his body with sinful self-abuse.

'Tes the way of nature.

The notion that to everything there must be A Purpose (in this case EVOLUTION) reminds me of those economists who think that everything is driven by rational economic considerations, the assumption that hobbies are just waiting to become side-hustles, and people coming along assuming that other people are just longing for clueless tech-bros to help them monetise the fun things they do by offering something that they don't actually want.

I think it is reasonable to mention Fleur Adcock's 'Against Coupling':

No need to set the scene,
dress up (or undress), make speeches.
Five minutes of solitude are
enough—in the bath, or to fill
that gap between the Sunday papers and lunch.

Sometimes there is no deep existential meaning.

oursin: The Delphic Sibyl from the Sistine Chapel (Delphic sibyl)

Is this a thing peculiar to generations of women, that that keep having to rediscover things as if for the very first time, this thing has never ever happened before?

All the rage: the rise of the menopause novel

Okay, will concede that, maybe, I am not going to do a deep dive into the works I was reading 30-40 years ago by M Drabble, D Lessing, A Lurie, and a number of other novelists perhaps less renowned, but I am pretty sure that The Middle Years/Later Life/No Longer A Young Woman Affronting Her Destiny was pretty much something that was being written about then. (And I can think of at least one mystery series with a menopausal protag, who is sensibly aiming for a PI license rather than getting some cute cosy job and having crimes fall over her: DB Borton's Cat Caliban, recommended.) But I do wonder whether these people going There Is Nothing Writ About This actually read.... or what they read if they read....

And maybe these works possibly did not have a load of gruesome clinical details pertaining to The Change -

- but honestly, I am getting A Bit Paranoid about all this Woezing over the dire things that happen to women over a significant portion of time in the middle part of their lives -

Er, have we not had a long history of women being dismissed and dissed because It Is Weird Stuff To Do With The Humourz Out Of Balance???? and their time of life, whatever time it is?

I am not saying Grin and Bear It, Smile and Sing Under All Difficulties, but I think this discourse of Menopause as massively disruptive/disabling life event can go in some problematic directions.

I will concede that as far as these things go, I did not suffer the absolute tsunami of symptoms that are recorded by some women, even if, for all I know, everyone around me thought I was Grendel's Mother With PMT for several years. But I had Other Stuff Going On at the time. Even so, I recall my mother saying something similar to me (though perhaps it was more on the lines that she had So Much Stuff Going On that she didn't have the time/attention to notice).

I am given something of a grue when I read this:

“Women over 40 make up 25% of the population of adults in America. This is a huge potential market that’s been completely neglected and ignored. Just from a business standpoint, it’s a smart step.” In publishing terms, as is well known, women buy far more novels than men, and they don’t stop reading once they hit 40.

Also of course, women, unlike men, will read across a far wider range and do not have to look constantly into a mirror?

Take it away, Edna

Say what you will, and scratch my heart to find
The roots of last year's roses in my breast;
I am as surely riper in my mind
As if the fruit stood in the stalls confessed.

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

In an Artist's Studio
By Christina Rossetti

One face looks out from all his canvases,
One selfsame figure sits or walks or leans:
We found her hidden just behind those screens,
That mirror gave back all her loveliness.
A queen in opal or in ruby dress,
A nameless girl in freshest summer-greens,
A saint, an angel - ; every canvas means
The same one meaning, neither more or less.
He feeds upon her face by day and night,
And she with true kind eyes looks back on him,
Fair as the moon and joyful as the light:
Not wan with waiting, not with sorrow dim;
Not as she is, but was when hope shone bright;
Not as she is, but as she fills his dream.

O dear, yes, Ms Rossetti: one can tell that you had some acquaintance among the Pre-Raphaelites. Did they get it?

oursin: C19th engraving of a hedgehog's skeleton (skeletal hedgehog)

The Hardy Tree Of St Pancras Has Fallen.

A solitary robin perches on the mutilated stump and sings.

Do we not, actually, think that the whole tree legend being almost certainly spurious is in itself somewhat Hardyesque? Okay, he does have a real connection with Old St Pancras Churchyard and sorting it out when the Midland Railway was being driven through it, but the story about him and the gravestones round the tree is really almost too ben trovato, hmmmm?

Though I will concede that the tree finally toppling due to a parasitic fungal infestation has an appropriate resonance.

I am trying to remember which Hardy novel it is in which somebody dies because a tree is felled, or falls over in a storm, with further consequences to do with inheritance.

And because it's never not macabrely funny, Hardy's poem, The Levelled Churchyard.

oursin: George Beresford photograph of Marie of Roumania, overwritten 'And I AM Marie of Roumania' (Marie of Roumania)

(Dorothy Parker, Comment.)

I cam across this this morning, and I'm not sure I'm addressing any of the arguments therein rather than using it as the springboard to articulate various niggles and peeves of my own.

E.g. the historical tendency to other romance readers - (okay, I really ought to go back and read Dyhouse on this, but this is off the top of my head) - in the early C20th/interwar period this was fairly classed, as 'shop-girls'/'servant girls', etc - not sure if that continued but the studies that started coming out around the 70s were positioning them as frumpy housewives - and now there is this generational thing of 'not your grandma's romance' -

(Your grandma was hoovering up Jackie Collins and bodice rippers and doubtless dissing on her mimsy predecessors who read Mills & Boon and B Cartland, no?)

But anyway, it's about not being like Those Uncool People/'Other Girls'

Even though you're already pretty much at the bottom of the reading hierarchy, aren't you, if you are a) female and b) reading for pleasure, enjoyment and the comfort of a happy ending.

I'm not sure there's any genre that men read that has this kind of sneeriness invoked about it - I suspect, thinking about it, that there have been generational issues around e.g. spy thrillers, and post WW2 there was, 'no longer your stiff-upper-lipped heroes of Empire', and a bit later on you got Le Carre and Cold War grimyness vs Jame Bond glamour, but not, I think, to the same degree, and not dissed.

Nothing like the dissing on the classic Golden Age mystery by Chandler, e.g., which was fairly gendered, ahem. (We think Miss Marple knew What Evil Lurked In the Hearts of Men without, you know, having to trek down those ol' mean streets, she saw Enough Of That Sort Of Thing in St Mary Mead.)

Maybe Westerns? don't really know about Westerns, have vague sense that around the 70s there was some attempt at The New Western (in book rather than movie form).

Go and see what the women are up to, and tell them to stop (and, of course, there are women quite happy to police other women in this fashion, alas).

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
I've memorialised with poetry concerning various wars over the years: this year I thought I'd go with the ongoing struggle between capital and labour, the haves and have-nots. This isn't a rousing cry of resistance (sorry) but it is, I think, a moving work about somebody struggling on the front line and realising that it is a war.

Thirty Bob a Week

John Davidson (1857-1909)

I couldn't touch a stop and turn a screw,
And set the blooming world a-work for me,
Like such as cut their teeth -- I hope, like you --
On the handle of a skeleton gold key;
I cut mine on a leek, which I eat it every week:
I'm a clerk at thirty bob as you can see.

But I don't allow it's luck and all a toss;
There's no such thing as being starred and crossed;
It's just the power of some to be a boss,
And the bally power of others to be bossed:
I face the music, sir; you bet I ain't a cur;
Strike me lucky if I don't believe I'm lost!

For like a mole I journey in the dark,
A-travelling along the underground
From my Pillar'd Halls and broad Suburbean Park,
To come the daily dull official round;
And home again at night with my pipe all alight,
A-scheming how to count ten bob a pound.

And it's often very cold and very wet,
And my missus stitches towels for a hunks;
And the Pillar'd Halls is half of it to let--
Three rooms about the size of travelling trunks.
And we cough, my wife and I, to dislocate a sigh,
When the noisy little kids are in their bunks.

....

They say it daily up and down the land
As easy as you take a drink, it's true;
But the difficultest go to understand,
And the difficultest job a man can do,
Is to come it brave and meek with thirty bob a week,
And feel that that's the proper thing for you.

It's a naked child against a hungry wolf;
It's playing bowls upon a splitting wreck;
It's walking on a string across a gulf
With millstones fore-and-aft about your neck;
But the thing is daily done by many and many a one;
And we fall, face forward, fighting, on the deck.

Davidson also wrote the anti-war War Song, which, given his dates, cannot be as one might imagine about the Great War, but war in general, or maybe the conflict in South Africa.

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
Badger
John Clare (1793-1864)

The badger grunting on his woodland track
With shaggy hide and sharp nose scrowed with black
Roots in the bushes and the woods, and makes
A great high burrow in the ferns and brakes.
With nose on ground he runs an awkward pace,
And anything will beat him in the race.
The shepherd's dog will run him to his den
Followed and hooted by the dogs and men.
The woodman when the hunting comes about
Goes round at night to stop the foxes out
And hurrying through the bushes to the chin
Breaks the old holes, and tumbles headlong in.
When midnight comes a host of dogs and men
Go out and track the badger to his den,
And put a sack within the hole, and lie
Till the old grunting badger passes bye.
He comes and hears—they let the strongest loose.
The old fox hears the noise and drops the goose.
The poacher shoots and hurries from the cry,
And the old hare half wounded buzzes bye.
They get a forked stick to bear him down
And clap the dogs and take him to the town,
And bait him all the day with many dogs,
And laugh and shout and fright the scampering hogs.
He runs along and bites at all he meets:
They shout and hollo down the noisy streets.
He turns about to face the loud uproar
And drives the rebels to their very door.
The frequent stone is hurled where e'er they go;
When badgers fight, then every one's a foe.
The dogs are clapt and urged to join the fray;
The badger turns and drives them all away.
Though scarcely half as big, demure and small,
He fights with dogs for bones and beats them all.
The heavy mastiff, savage in the fray,
Lies down and licks his feet and turns away.
The bulldog knows his match and waxes cold,
The badger grins and never leaves his hold.
He drives the crowd and follows at their heels
And bites them through—the drunkard swears and reels.
The frighted women take the boys away,
The blackguard laughs and hurries on the fray.
He tries to reach the woods, an awkward race,
But sticks and cudgels quickly stop the chase.
He turns again and drives the noisy crowd
And beats the many dogs in noises loud.
He drives away and beats them every one,
And then they loose them all and set them on.
He falls as dead and kicked by boys and men,
Then starts and grins and drives the crowd again;
Till kicked and torn and beaten out he lies
And leaves his hold and cackles, groans, and dies.
Some keep a baited badger tame as hog
And tame him till he follows like the dog.
They urge him on like dogs and show fair play.
He beats and scarcely wounded goes away.
Lapt up as if asleep, he scorns to fly
And seizes any dog that ventures nigh.
Clapt like a dog, he never bites the men
But worries dogs and hurries to his den.
They let him out and turn a harrow down
And there he fights the host of all the town.
He licks the patting hand, and tries to play
And never tries to bite or run away,
And runs away from the noise in hollow trees
Burnt by the boys to get a swarm of bees.

I feel Clare is a particularly appropriate poet to cite in present circumstances:

With an admiration of nature and an understanding of the oral tradition, but with little formal education.... born into a peasant family.... the work he did out of financial necessity consisted largely of manual labor such as gardening, ploughing, threshing, or lime-burning.

oursin: Animate icon of hedgehog and rubber tortoise and words 'O Tempora O Mores' (o tempora o mores)

Okay, this is totally in the tradition of guy who went to live off in a hut in the woods Without Evil Technology and Civilisation, writing columns about it for The Guardian, like huts grow out of the ground perhaps, and writing implements and paper are entirely Nature's Way, not to mention actual writing?

Somebody tweeted about this, woezing about how it was child abuse (of course bringing up children in some kind of bubble is Wrong but goodness knows there are people doing that without going to that extent and trying to do it by books bans etc) -

- but what struck yr hedjog was this photo of Their Primeval Children Uncorrupted By Technology not merely wielding bows and arrows, but with what looks like a camper-van in the background?

Folding chairs.

Kids are wearing clothes and shoes.

The simple rustic life includes candles (okay, maybe they are going to make them themselves out of beeswax or tallow? - I am over here with my cynical face on) but typewriters? O, come on! at least it should be quill pens and making your own ink from oak galls or whatever the local substitute might be.

I guess what this dingbat means is 'cut off from the evil world of the internet'?

I think this is another of those 'this thing we didn't have When I Was Young' (that thing, which in those days people were deploring as Deth of Sivilyzashun, because it was A Thing that was not around when They Were Young) being posited as End Tiemz, let us go back to that simple natural epoch a few decades ago when we all lived in harmony with unspoilt nature...

Happy those early days! when I
Shined in my angel infancy.
....
When on some gilded cloud or flower
My gazing soul would dwell an hour,
And in those weaker glories spy
Some shadows of eternity[.]
Henry Vaughan in C17th at least saw that vision as the effect of childhood simplicity.

oursin: C19th engraving of a hedgehog's skeleton (skeletal hedgehog)

But I was really, really, surprised, reading a report on Mystery of Waterloo’s dead soldiers to be re-examined by academics to see no reference to the allegations (if no more than that) that after the battle, scavengers were going among the corpses and removing their teeth, for which there was a considerable market.

(I assume that scavengers were anyway going about the battlefield generally to glean any pickings they might, before burial details got to them.)

The term 'Waterloo teeth' (as a rather generic one) was definitely a thing in the early to mid-nineteenth century: The BDA {British Dental Association] Museum has several sets of 'Waterloo' teeth in its collection - some of these are teeth taken from dead soldiers after the Battle of Waterloo, which were made into dentures.

Others were taken by resurrectionists who dug up corpses, a lucrative business. Of course contamination was an issue with the only method of sterilising being boiling water. Although this practice was more common in the earlier nineteenth century, Waterloo teeth were still appearing in dental supply catalogues of the 1860s, shipped across in barrels from the American Civil War.

Apparently people also used to sell their teeth - there is an instance in Les Miserables? I am told - as well as hair.

Wilfred Gibson's WW1 poem Comrades about the ghosts of Waterloo in Flanders.

oursin: Fotherington-Tomas from the Molesworth books saying Hello clouds hello aky (fotherington-tomas)

So, thinking about poems and poetry -

Okay, this is maybe not One of the Great Poems of All Time, and I'm not even sure it's one of my as it were poetic touchstones, but I am fond of it for an entirely adventitious reason, which is that I first heard it when my father used to quote the opening lines -

- slightly wrong, i.e. 'Beyond the East the mountains, beyond the West the sea/And East and West the wanderlust that will not let me be'.

But anyway, I eventually found the actual poem in an anthology somewhere - I'm not sure if it was actually in any of the various anthologies we had about the house:

Wander-thirst by Gerald Gould
BEYOND the East the sunrise, beyond the West the sea,
And East and West the wander-thirst that will not let me be;
It works in me like madness, dear, to bid me say good-bye;
For the seas call, and the stars call, and oh! the call of the sky!

I know not where the white road runs, nor what the blue hills are;
But a man can have the sun for a friend, and for his guide a star;
And there's no end of voyaging when once the voice is heard,
For the rivers call, and the roads call, and oh! the call of the bird!

Yonder the long horizon lies, and there by night and day
The old ships draw to home again, the young ships sail away;
And come I may, but go I must, and, if men ask you why,
You may put the blame on the stars and the sun and the white road and the sky.
Gould himself sounds like rather a good egg - hanging out with Lansbury and the Fabian set and Mrs Fawcett and the constitutional suffragists, and Victor Gollancz. I feel I should already know about him!

So I should - What that doesn't mention is that his wife was Barbars Ayrton Gould, the daughter of Hertha Ayrton!!!

It is perhaps ironic to be hymning wander-thirst when I've hardly been out for such ages and have no particular intentions of venturing forth in the very foreseeable future.

oursin: The Delphic Sibyl from the Sistine Chapel (Delphic sibyl)

If, with dire things, there is no disputing precendency 'twixt louse and flea (actually, Dr J was wrong about Christopher Smart, but I don't think he had ever had a chance to read 'For I will consider my cat Jeoffry', which was discovered in 1939), I think it's possibly even more difficult to hierarchise one's favourite things.

Okay, have been revisiting Old Posts and in days bygone there were 'Compile Your Top Ten [Fav Authors/Poets/Etc]' and yr [personal profile] oursin was going, well, maybe if one had separate list by genre or century or something?

(By which you may gather that I am not in the camp of Uncle Matthew in The Pursuit of Love and sequels who had never bothered reading another book after the transcendant experience - 'bloody good' - that was White Fang.)

I am large, I contain multitudes (see what I did there?) and I could not possibly, even after much thought, designate one absolutely favourite line/passage of poetry.

On the other prickly paw, I do not see any harm in the least in thinking upon favourite things, unlike that lady who appeared to be castigating - well, we don't know quite whom, maybe there was subtweeting going on - somebody, or people in general, for being concerned about fiction at This Present Moment.

Honestly, people can be concerned about more than one thing, and maybe they are taking a brief break from engaging with the troubles of the world in a meaningful and practical fashion - rather than spending their time woezing at people 'why are you doing [X], why aren't you doing [Y]' - by reading/writing/talking about fiction?

It's a really soppy song, but sometimes One's Favourite Things are indeed a comfort.

oursin: Frankie Howerd, probably in Up Pompeii, overwritten Don't Mock (Don't Mock)

Apparently it is not yet confirmed whether a historical monument - The Konigshaven bridge in Rotterdam, known to locals as the De Hef - is going to be dismantled in order to permit the passage of a 'superyacht' built in Rotterdam for Jeff Bezos.

On account of apparently nobody thought to think that one through during the process...

And, my dearios, I am reminded of another instance of shipbuilding hubris, where, one suspects, the demands of the commissioning authority overrode the practical fellows in the shipyard.

Yes, it's the cautionary tale of the Vasa, which capsized into Stockholm Harbour in 1628 after what must be a recordbreakingly short maiden voyage of twenty minutes.

The shipwrights were in fact Dutch - leaders of the pack in that respect in C17th Europe - and the head of the project, Henrik Hybertsson, probably fortunately, died before the ship was actually completed.

The final blame, one cannot help thinking, rests with King Gustav II Adolf:

It was the king who ordered the ship, which carried an unprecedented 64 bronze cannons, to be built–and who watched in horror as it sunk.
....
An archaeologist who has studied the remains of the ship in great detail thinks it sank because the gun deck was far too heavy–the result of its having been designed and built by someone with no experience building such a well-armed ship.... It didn’t help that the king rushed the building process.
O for the pen of a William McGonagall to have commemorated this event. His famed, or perhaps notorious, verses on the Tay Bridge Disaster is not only a harrowing unintentionally hilarous account of the disaster but also includes advice for avoiding its repetition:
[Y]our central girders would not have given way,
At least many sensible men do say,
Had they been supported on each side with buttresses[.]

However the king's and the Swedish Royal Navy's loss has, we may contend, been a great boon to archaeologists and historians.

oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)

This poem by William Empson has been much on my mind...

Missing Dates Slowly the poison the whole blood stream fills.
It is not the effort nor the failure tires.
The waste remains, the waste remains and kills.
....
It is the poems you have lost, the ills
From missing dates, at which the heart expires.
Slowly the poison the whole blood stream fills.

***

But. to counteract that gloomy mood: Ginger doesn't suggest picking yourself up and dusting yourself off, or even offer sage counsel on what to do when there may be troubles ahead; but just, for a moment, Let Yourself Go:

And here is her solo tap sequence:

oursin: Photograph of a statue of Hygeia, goddess of health (Hygeia)

And given the present circumstance, I'm going with a very long and still unconcluded war, in fact, one that is only in certain of its phases a matter of remembrance rather than a present matter.

The War Against Disease.

Thomas Nashe, In Time of Pestilence:

ADIEU, farewell earth's bliss!
This world uncertain is:
Fond are life's lustful joys,
Death proves them all but toys.
None from his darts can fly;
I am sick, I must die—
Lord, have mercy on us!

Rich men, trust not in wealth,
Gold cannot buy you health;
Physic himself must fade;
All things to end are made;
The plague full swift goes by;
I am sick, I must die—
Lord, have mercy on us!

A couple of stanzas from Kipling's 'Natural Theology':

How can the skin of rat or mouse hold
Anything more than a harmless flea?
The burning plague has taken my household.
Why have my Gods afflicted me?
All my kith and kin are deceased,
Though they were as good as good could be,
I will out and batter the family priest,
Because my Gods have afflicted me!

My privy and well drain into each other
After the custom of Christendie...
Fevers and fluxes are wasting my mother.
Why has the Lord afflicted me?
The Saints are helpless for all I offer—
So are the clergy I used to fee.
Henceforward I keep my cash in my coffer,
Because the Lord has afflicted me.
Perhaps Dr Robert Levet could not do much, given it was the C18th, but he turned up and cared for the sick, in his humble quotidien way:
When fainting Nature called for aid,
And hovering Death prepared the blow,
His vigorous remedy displayed
The power of art without the show.

In Misery’s darkest cavern known,
His useful care was ever nigh,
Where hopeless Anguish poured his groan,
And lonely Want retired to die.

No summons mocked by chill delay,
No petty gain disdained by pride,
The modest wants of every day
The toil of every day supplied.
Sir Ronald Ross discovers the vector of malaria (and was really not a great poet):
This day relenting God
Hath placed within my hand
A wondrous thing; and God
Be praised. At His command,
Seeking His secret deeds
With tears and toiling breath,
I find thy cunning seeds,
O million-murdering Death.
I know this little thing
A myriad men will save.
O Death, where is thy sting?
Thy victory, O Grave?
And given that he has been a subject of discussion sround these parts recently, JBS Haldane's 'Cancer's A Funny Thing': '[T]hanks to modern surgeon’s skills,/It can be killed before it kills.'

oursin: A C19th illustration of a hedgehood, with a somewhat worried expression (mopey/worried hedgehog)

In the poem 'Spring Voices' which is (I suppose) about suburban timidity:

The small householder now comes out warily
Afraid of the barrage of sun that shouts cheerily
Spring is massing forces, birds wink in air
Battlemented chestnuts volley green fire.
But really, however much I feel that I am sitting here gazing into the contemporary equivalent of the Lady of Shalott's magic mirror, I'm not sure I'm so that sick of shadows that I want to go rushing recklessly out quite yet?

I was anticipating, yes, that once I was double-vaxxed I could start venturing out to do those things that have been neglected over these many months like dental hygienist visit (recent nudging email apropos of), eye-test, etc.

And now there is all this, hmmm, maybe we won't un-lockdown just yet and, err, case numbers are rising, and ooops, infectivity of the new strain even when vaxxed -

Is there anything that pressing to step outside the door for?

It would, I concede, have been nice to spend a little time in libraries looking stuff up for the paper I've just been working on, but I managed work-arounds, plus, the things I would have been looking up would have been fairly small minor things and when people are desperately booking time-slots to get in serious research time...

It's not so much the dentists/opticians/libraries that are the issue, anyway - it's the public transport and getting there and how does one be in the world anymore anyway.

oursin: Drawing of hedgehog in a cave, writing in a book with a quill pen (Writing hedgehog)

I.e. looking back over this week it was one in which there were several signs that I am by no means entirely irrelevant.

Right at the beginning of the week I participated in a virtual class to convey some of my knowingz about archives and research for a younger colleague's students.

I have been asked by two journals to referee articles on really rather distinctly different topics.

I have also been asked to be the reader for a book manuscript on a subject which falls, I suppose, with My Sphere of Expertise.

Somebody who asked me to be a supporting reference for a competitive research fellowship has got it, so I daresay my opinions count for something.

And looking at the details of the micropayments kindly consolidated for me by the ALCS, I remain amazed not just at the range of my works that people are consulting (what, that chapter in that Really Obscure Edited Volume?) but that the older work is still getting quite an outing.

wotthehell wotthehell
there's a dance in the old dame yet
toujours gai toujours gai

oursin: Drawing of hedgehog in a cave, writing in a book with a quill pen (Writing hedgehog)

Saying, o, here am I, a lorn lone forgotten old hedjog, no academic demands on my plate -

And I was actually thinking of reviving my old academic blog, as I occasionally do, because there are various things I don't think I'm ever going to turn into Propah Academyk Paperz that I'd quite like to get out there -

So then not only am I reminded of those things for the web project -

- I get asked to referee a journal article Within My Sphere of Expertise -

- and my essay for the edited volume comes back with a general aura of editorial approval but More Wordage to play with to expand various parts, yay!!

***

In other news, partner is now also booked for vaccine!

***

It is probably too late to remind dr rdrz to have their haggis, bashit neeps and champit tatties in the house for tonight if they don't already: but maybe you can at least raise a glass of whisky and toast the Great chieftain o' the pudding-race.

March 2024

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