dual personalities

Month: March, 2015

Preaching to ourselves

by chuckofish

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Then at last we see what hope is and where it comes from, hope as the driving power and outermost edge of faith. Hope stands up to its knees in the past and keeps its eyes on the future. There has never been a time past when God wasn’t with us as the strength beyond our strength, the wisdom beyond our wisdom, as whatever it is in our hearts–whether we believe in God or not–that keeps us human enough at least to get by despite everything in our lives that tends to wither the heart and make us less than human. To remember the past is to see that we are here today by grace, that we have survived as a gift.

–Frederick Buechner (A Room Called Remember)

History is the open Bible

by chuckofish

History is the open Bible: we historians are not priests to expound it infallibly: our function is to teach people to read it and to reflect upon it for themselves.

(George Macaulay Trevelyan)

I had a wonderful time back east visiting daughter #2 in College Park, Maryland and driving all over the tri-state area. As planned we visited the Gettysburg National Military Park in Pennsylvania. It is awesome.

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We started our visit by viewing “A New Birth of Freedom,” narrated by (of course) Morgan Freeman, and the restored Gettysburg Cyclorama, which depicts Pickett’s Charge.  The film features wonderful graphics, which, for the first time, really gave me an idea of what was happening in the battle. There was also a lot of artillery noise and that made me think of the poor people who lived in the town of Gettysburg back in 1863 and how horrific it must have been for them. It would have been panic attack city for me locked in a basement or root cellar somewhere.  Anyway, after that emotional experience we trekked up to the Cyclorama, originally painted in the 1880s. It is really something to see.

We toured the park by car stopping frequently to check out particular spots.

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Daughter #2, not really a history person like her mother, was very indulgent. I think she enjoyed it all too.

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It was not at all crowded, but I can imagine in the summer it is. Spring break seems like a perfect time to visit.

The town of Gettysburg was very picturesque–lots of old buildings and a nice town square (which is now a circle/roundabout.) There is the college to see and also the Lutheran Seminary, which is part of the Gettysburg Battlefield’s “hallowed ground”–Seminary Ridge. We stayed at the Gettysburg Hotel on the circle (square), which I think is owned by the college and very nice.

The next day it was rainy so we drove to Frederick, Maryland, another lovely old town and had great luck at an antique mall where daughter #2 scored a great piece of vintage furniture. We had lunch in Frederick and then drove to Harper’s Ferry, another historic site and National Park, passing from Maryland to Virginia and West Virginia in a matter of minutes. It was thrilling to see the old town at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers–very dramatic scenery and lots of greenschist metamorphic rock formations. My favorite!

Harpers Ferry, c. 1865

Harper’s Ferry, c. 1865

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Seeing the site of John Brown’s raid on the arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, put me in the mood to watch Santa Fe Trail (1940) with Errol Flynn as Jeb Stuart and Raymond Massey as Brown. Of course, it is a highly fictionalized account of events, but very enjoyable fiction, and Raymond Massey is excellent as the zealous Brown. Maybe this weekend.

On Sunday we drove up to Baltimore with Nate to go to the Baltimore Art Museum which has a wonderful collection of American art and decorative arts, including some lovely export china.

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All right up my alley.

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We ate at the museum restaurant which was yummo. Nate drove me around Roland Park, which I have always wanted to do–I am after all a big Ann Tyler fan–and we saw a lot of Johns Hopkins and plenty of row houses. As Pigtown Design is always saying, “There is much more to Baltimore than The Wire!” We had forgotten that it was the St. Patrick’s Day weekend (curses) and the city was jammed with green-clad revelers, but we dealt.

So you can see my weekend included all the ingredients of a good time: historical sites, antique malls, college/university tours. And lunches at good restaurants. I had crab cakes twice!

For me the only downer was the stressful driving on congested east-coast highways, but daughter #2 has learned to be an aggressive, confident auto racer, so it was all okay.

P.S. Daughter #2 posted on our weekend and she covered everything and has better pictures than I, so check it out!

 

“It is something great and greatening…”*

by chuckofish

Mead

I’m back in flyover country and I’ll get back to the blog tomorrow. For now I’ll give you this photo of  General Mead at Gettysburg.

*Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain

Great Caesar’s Ghost!

by chuckofish

It’s the Ides of March and since you probably don’t need to worry about Brutus and his cohort knocking you off, you can spend the day enjoying Caesar’s Gallic Wars.

Caesar

It’s a fabulous read once you get a handle on the many, confusing Gallic names and the inter-tribal politics.  Not only does he write with lapidary precision, but Caesar was a genius at subtle self-promotion, political calculation and leadership. And he was also great at logistics. Count how many times he wrote “I secured the corn supply” — you’ll be amazed at how careful he was about food. He makes himself look good (in the 3rd person no less), but he also makes the Gauls and Germans seem like real people, who are smart, if hampered by a certain cultural backwardness (compared to the Romans that is). Caesar’s attention to ethnography suggests that he was really interested in everything new he came across.

If you’re not in the mood for De Bello Gallico, then you could try some of Cicero’s letters. He and Caesar had a deep friendship, albeit they ended up on opposite sides in the Civil War (you can also read Caesar’s account of that, but it’s not quite up to the Gallic Wars). Cicero was a cool guy.

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I remember our brother translating Cicero in Latin class and having deep conversations with our mother about him. It’s no wonder I ended up fascinated by the ancient world. How could I avoid it?

Of course, you can always opt for a more modern treatment like Shakespeare, but however you chose to do it,  remember Gaius Julius Caesar, one of the great, if more ambiguous, characters of western civilization.

Ave atque vale and all that… Have a good week!

More from the Nation’s Capital

by chuckofish

I’m standing in today for my dual personality, who is jet-setting to Maryland to visit her lovely daughter, so I thought I would share a few more pics from my own visit last weekend. On Saturday, son James and I met niece Susie and her beau, Nate, for lunch at Pizzeria Paradiso. It almost went off without a hitch, but I turned the wrong way Dupont Circle and walked what seemed like miles before I realized my mistake. Orienteering has never been my strong point. Suffice it to say that I arrived a little late but none the worse for wear (thanks to a call to son #2 who set me straight). Lunch was delicious and the company delightful!

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Despite having her oral exams postponed at the last minute due to snow (I mean, really. How cruel), my niece was amazingly relaxed. I wouldn’t have been.

DSC00913And my insistence on photo-taking didn’t even embarrass the younguns. Congratulations to Susie for passing her exams with ease on the following Monday! Now she gets to do the fun part — the dissertation.

My visit was full of culinary delights. After a brief afternoon visit to the overcrowded Smithsonian Museum of Natural History with James, the DH and I went over to my son’s apartment for a delicious home-cooked meal of lamb meatloaf and seasoned veg. Yum!

It was was also nice to see my son’s digs and catch up with apartment-mate, a fellow Cantonite, Madeleine.

DSC00916Don’t I look like a dutiful wife?. Anyhow, those are the highlights of my trip. The return journey was mercifully easy: temperatures rose and the windshield wiper fluid unfroze; the sun was out and there was only Sunday traffic.

I hope my dual personality travels safely and has a wonderful, wonderful time!

Way Back Wednesday

by chuckofish

Today is Johnny Appleseed Day! John Chapman was a real person,

Harper's Weekly 1871

Harper’s Weekly 1871

who became a legend through his travels as a pioneer nurseryman and missionary for the Swedenborgian Church.

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Among other things, he is remembered for singing the Swedenborgian hymn: “Oooooh, the Lord is good to me, and so I thank the Lord, for giving me the things I need, the sun and the rain and the appleseed. The Lord is good to me. Amen.”

When I was a Sunday School teacher back in the day, we sang this as a grace before our snack. We sang it a lot at home as well, because it is pretty catchy.

I made this counted cross stitch sampler for  my son when he was little and he has it hanging in his house.

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And do you remember this? I bet you do.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=484AJlOnOnc

So let’s raise a cup of apple juice to ol’ Johnny Appleseed tonight! Or maybe a glass of this.

Boones Farm Apple Blossom

 

Do they still make this stuff?

I guess they do.

“You’ve got brains in your head You’ve got feet in your shoes You can steer yourself any Direction you choose”*

by chuckofish

Mira in a boat

“There is a time in every man’s education when he arrives at the conviction that envy is ignorance; that imitation is suicide; that he must take himself for better, for worse, as his portion; that though the wide universe is full of good, no kernel of nourishing corn can come to him but through his toil bestowed on that plot of ground which is given to him to till. The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried.”

–Ralph Waldo Emerson (Self-Reliance)

Daughter #2 passed her oral exams with flying colors. We are very proud of her.

*Dr. Seuss

The photo is my grandmother Mira Sargent circa 100 years ago.

“It is spring again. The earth is like a child that knows poems by heart.”*

by chuckofish

buds

Yes, those are daffodil shoots–right on schedule. Last weekend church services were canceled all over the area and this weekend we enjoyed 60-degree days! The flora and fauna responds accordingly. Pretty amazing.

I had a busy week so I took it kind of easy on the weekend. I finished some books that I had been reading and I read up on ol’ Charles Darwin, about whom I knew not a lot. He was an interesting fellow. I understand natural selection. It is logical. But it doesn’t explain why there are elephants. Seriously, there must be a God.

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I had lunch with my girlfriends. I went to Ted Drewes with the OM.

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I watched the first chapter of that great old mini-series Shogun (1980) starring my cousin Richard as John Blackthorne.

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The Jesuits are the bad guys and Toshiro Mifune is in the cast as Lord Toranaga.

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What’s not to like? I will be watching the rest of it as the discs arrive from Netflix.

The boy and daughter #3 came over for Sunday night dinner. We barbequed!

Cute as ever

Cute as ever

Today daughter #2 takes her oral exams at the U. of Maryland. They were postponed from Friday because of the snow! Aaaargh. She has been handling the stress like the trouper that she is. Hopefully we will have good new for you tomorrow…

Have a great week!

*Rainer Maria Rilke

On the Road Again

by chuckofish

I’m posting this from snowy Washington DC, where my DH and I arrived on Thursday night after a grueling twelve and a half hour car trip that included one and a half hours stopped dead on Interstate 81, while a tractor-trailer crash got cleaned up. 2015-03-05 16.47.17

I guess the driver didn’t heed the ‘Slow down. Fries ahead” sign and took a corner too fast. I sure hope no one was badly hurt. The road conditions were pretty dicey. We put that hour and a half to good use, reading and taking selfies.

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Aren’t we a lovely pair? Things got progressively worse after the long wait. Our windshield wiper fluid froze and so we couldn’t clean off the dirty splash that the trucks kicked up to smear the windshield dangerously. It was like driving through a dense fog. When things got really bad, we had to pull over and splash water from our water bottles onto the windshield to clean it off. You can imagine that as we got closer to DC and it got dark the roads got worse, the traffic slowed down, and the windshield situation became more dire. I made my DH do the hard driving and he was heroic. Suffice it so say that by the time we arrived, we were both shaky and very tired.

But we bounced back on Friday and had a lovely day, he working at the Library of Congress and I touring the snow-covered memorials (followed by hours of grading at the hotel).

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At the Vietnam Wall, I found Harmon Polster, MIA (remains later recovered, now buried in Arlington), whose name I wore for several years in the 1970s on an MIA/KIA bracelet.  Capt. Polster was a pilot, whose plane went down in Laos. I was glad to pay my respects. Nearby are two small statue groups depicting soldiers of the Vietnam War and the nurses, who served from WWII to Vietnam.

DSC00887 DSC00900I thought the snow made them look even sadder.

I also visited the Korean War memorial, which is close by and very cool.

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Like the Vietnam Memorial, this one had a reflecting wall, but instead of names, it had etched portraits. Here’s my arty picture of it, in which you see the reflection of visitors looking at the above statues and the statues themselves all superimposed on the ghostly wall etchings.

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Of course, no trip to the Mall would be complete without a visit to see the formidable Abraham Lincoln. I found it all quite moving, albeit chilly. And my timing was perfect, since the first busloads of school children arrived just as I was getting ready to leave.

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Later that afternoon the DH and I met up with our son, James, who gave us a tour of the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America), where he works as the Assistant to the Chef. It’s a nice place. This is the lounge area, where they put on many receptions,

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and this is the dining room, complete with hand painted murals and trompe l’oeil architectural details.

DSC00904Afterwards we repaired to a nearby restaurant/bar, where we had a lovely time catching up on gossip and filling up on delicious food. Having subsisted on granola bars and free hotel breakfast (pretty yucky) since our arrival in town, Duncan and I were hungry!

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Today, while Duncan is at his conference, James and I will meet up with my niece, Susie, and her beau, Nate, for lunch, after which I hope to get to at least one of the Smithsonians. Then it’s to James’s apartment for a home-cooked meal. Stay tuned for more pictures and updates — if not tomorrow, then next week.  Here’s hoping the trip back is uneventful!

Have a wonderful weekend!

Friday movie pick

by chuckofish

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I read this book back in the 1980s and really liked it. It is the haunting story of Mary Bee Cuddy, a spinster pioneer in Nebraska, who takes it upon herself (because a man cannot be found to do it) to transport three women back East. The women have been driven insane by their terrible, tragic lives on the plains. Mary Bee enlists claim-jumping George Briggs to help her.

I have been waiting for Hollywood to make it into a movie ever since. Word was that Paul Newman had an option on it, but nothing came of that. Finally it was announced that Tommy Lee Jones was going to star in and direct it: “Soon to be a major motion picture.”

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But then…cue sound of crickets. Why does Hollywood do this? It was released last year with little or no fanfare and sunk like a rock (I guess) after a weak opening. Straight to DVD soon after. If it wasn’t for IMDB.com, I never would have run across it. But it is a really good movie! Hilary Swank gives an Oscar-worthy performance. Why was she overlooked? It is well-directed by Tommy Lee Jones–understated and well-paced.  The cinematography is beautiful. There are cameos by some excellent actors. Even Meryl Streep has a small role–I suppose she agreed to do it because Tommy Lee is a friend and her daughter got a part.

They changed a few things in the book–Lord knows why. I wouldn’t have. And, yes, the book is better. The book usually is. But I recommend this movie. It has stayed with me. It is my Friday pick.