De Amerikaanse dichter, librettist en essayist Scott Cairns werd geboren op 19 november 1954 in Tacoma, Washington. Zie ook alle tags voor Scott Cairns op dit blog.
Adventures in New Testament Greek: Nous
You could almost think the word synonymous with mind, given our so far narrow history, and the excessive esteem
in which we have been led to hold what is, in this case, our rightly designated nervous systems. Little wonder then
that some presume the mind itself both part and parcel of the person, the very seat of soul and, lately, crucible for a host
of chemical incentives—combinations of which can pretty much answer for most of our habits and for our affections.
When even the handy lexicon cannot quite place the nous as anything beyond one rustic ancestor of reason, you might
be satisfied to trouble the odd term no further—and so would fail to find your way to it, most fruitful faculty
untried. Dormant in its roaring cave, the heart’s intellective aptitude grows dim, unless you find a way to wake it. So,
let’s try something, even now. Even as you tend these lines, attend for a moment to your breath as you draw it in: regard
the breath’s cool descent, a stream from mouth to throat to the furnace of the heart. Observe that queer, cool confluence of breath
and blood, and do your thinking there.
Draw Near
προσέλθετε
For near is where you’ll meet what you have wandered far to find. And near is where you’ll very likely see how far the near obtains. In the dark katholikon the lighted candles lent their gold to give the eye a more than common sense of what lay flickering just beyond the ken, and lent the mind a likely swoon just shy of apprehension. It was then that time’s neat artifice fell in and made for us a figure for when time would slip free altogether. I have no sense of what this means to you, so little sense of what to make of it myself, save one lit glimpse of how we live and move, a more expansive sense in Whom.
Scott Cairns (Tacoma, 19 november 1954)
De Amerikaanse dichteres Sharon Olds werd geboren op 19 november 1942 in San Francisco. Zie ook alle tags voor Sharon Olds op dit blog.
The Daughter Goes To Camp
In the taxi alone, home from the airport, I could not believe you were gone. My palm kept creeping over the smooth plastic to find your strong meaty little hand and squeeze it, find your narrow thigh in the noble ribbing of the corduroy, straight and regular as anything in nature, to find the slack cool cheek of a child in the heat of a summer morning— nothing, nothing, waves of bawling hitting me in hot flashes like some change of life, some boiling wave rising in me toward your body, toward where it should have been on the seat, your brow curved like a cereal bowl, your eyes dark with massed crystals like the magnified scales of a butterfly's wing, the delicate feelers of your limp hair, floods of blood rising in my face as I tried to reassemble the hot gritty molecules in the car, to make you appear like a holograph on the back seat, pull you out of nothing as I once did—but you were really gone, the cab glossy as a slit caul out of which you had slipped, the air glittering electric with escape as it does in the room at a birth.
Beyond Harm
A week after my father died, suddenly I understood his fondness for me was safe—nothing could touch it. In that last year, his face sometimes brightened when I entered the room, and his wife said that once when he was half asleep he smiled when she said my name. He respected my spunk—when they had tied me to the chair, that time, they were tying up someone he respected, and when he did not speak for weeks I was one of the beings to whom he was not speaking, someone with a place in his life. The last week he even said it, once, by mistake. I walked into his room and said "How are you," and he said, "I love you too." From then on, I had that word to lose. Right up to the last day, I could make some mistake, offend him, and with one of his old mouths of disgust he could re-skew my life. I did not think of it much, I was busy wiping his face and holding his cup and touching his shoulder. But then, a while after he died, I suddenly thought, with amazement, he will always love me now, and I laughed—he was dead, dead!
Sharon Olds (San Francisco, 19 november 1942)
De Amerikaanse schrijver en literaire biograaf Mark Harris (eig. Mark Harris Finklestein) werd geboren op 19 november 1922 in Mount Vernon, New York. Zie ook alle tags voor Mike Harris op dit blog.
Uit: Bang the Drum Slowly
"No doubt you have got a roomie for company," said I. "Oh yes," said she, "but she is on a flight to Mexico City," and she yawned, and I started telling myself it was insane to go on in a snowstorm, besides which what could I do when I got there and how much more sense it would make to get there in the morning fresh as a daisy, and on and on. But then I said to myself, "Henry, what a louse you are with a wife 3 months pregnant that you kissed goodby not 7 hours ago!" "I have got to make a couple phone calls," I said. I called Goose Williams. I could not of sold Goose anything, and I knew it, but if I didn't at least try I wouldn't of had the nerve to list the trip deductible. He used to hate me. His wife said he went out for a loaf of bread Sunday and was never seen since. "I do not know which is worse," she said, "having Harold home or having him away." "I wish to speak to him concerning insurance matters," I said. "Harold already cashed in all his insurance," she said. "He should not of done that," said I. "Harold should not of done a lot of things," she said, "and a lot more things he should of done he never quite tended to. Tell me, Henry," she said, "is Harold at the end of the trail?" I could not get used to her calling him "Harold." "Goose?" said I. "At the end of the trail? That is the most ridiculous thing I ever heard of." "Tell me the truth," she said. "He is at the end of the trail. He has not got as much as one full season left in him. He has got only his wife and his debts and his children, and all of them a pain and a burden to him," and I held the telephone away from my ear and looked out through the glass at the stewardess. She was twisted around on the stool, studying the seams of her stockings. "He will be 35 come August," she said. The stewardess twisted her body first one way and then the other, and I said to myself, "It is true that you have got a wife back home, but it is also true that you only live once, and furthermore she practically as much as invited you up." "I wish you was Harold," she said, "and Harold was you. How old are you, Henry?" I do not even think I answered. She begun crying a little, and I easied the phone back on the hook and slid the door open and started out. But right away I got these further pictures of Holly back home worrying about me and probably following me on the clock and no doubt picturing me rushing in one plane and out the other, and I quick closed the door again and called Joe Jaros and spoke to his wife.”
Mark Harris (19 november 1922 - 30 mei 2007) Scene uit een theateropvoering in Arlington, Virginia, 2014
De Vlaamse dichter, essayist en toneelschrijver Karel van den Oever werd geboren in Antwerpen op 19 november 1879. Zie ook alle tags voor Karel van den Oever op dit blog.
De nacht-trein
De trein rolt op de zwarte bol der aarde o, angst-versnelling van mijn hartstocht in de afgrond naar God. De gloeiende veeg van mijn vinger, fosforisch op de blauwe glaswand van een nacht; het grauw geraas van een levenslot aan de duistere bocht van een dennenbos waar God mij wacht. O, gij daverend hart der machien, en uw God-verloren vlucht, O, gij kreunende jacht van wiel na wiel, gij, gij, wroegende zucht die uit de schoorsteen viel; en de lange, angstige glijding der sporen die achter de aarde reeds het gerucht van de verre trein doen horen. De nacht-trein die gilt en loeit. Maar, de nacht-trein gloeit: traan van Laurentius in augustus-nacht, glimworm in een ver veld, goud-meteoor die onder de blauwe nacht-boog snelt. De nacht-trein zit vol mensen die dromen, waken, denken, wensen en vooral met pijn iets verwachten: zij rijden dagen, weken, nachten op de brandzwarte bol der aarde. - Is God nog ver? - zo denkt een somber man die uit het raampje staarde naar maan en ster.
Karel van den Oever (19 november 1879 – 6 oktober 1926) Cover
De Oostenrijkse dichter, schrijver en vertaler Christoph Wilhelm Aigner werd geboren op 18 november 1954 in Wels. Zie ook alle tags voor Christoph Wilhelm Aigner op dit blog.
Uit: Logik der Wolken
„Mehlschwalben häckseln und schneiden die goldfädig blaue Morgenluft. Scharen von Pappelsamen steigen auf vom Fluss, ziehen über die Dächer und fahren dann durcheinander wie leichtes Schneegestöber bei Sonne. Der bewaldete Hügel mit Sonnenkorona, gelbsprühende Baumkronen.
In einem großartigen Gewitter auf dem Hügel angekommen; riesige bleiche Risse durch dunkle Fladen, und ein Brummen von himmelhohen Bären. Regen, ungestümer Regen, scharfer Regen, darin die Mauersegler im Kreis flatterten, von Donnern umgerührt.
Dicker sumpfiger Nebel, darin Regen fließt. Während der Nacht einer Nachtigall zugehört, ein ungeübter Gesang ohne die großen Triller, war ein Naturtalent ohne Ausbildung. Dieser schwellende Regen, kalt und hart, in den Rinnen röchelt es, Regenrinnen aus Aluminium machen mehr Geräusche. Noch immer Nebel, darin Regenkompositionen mit erregt rufender Goldammer auf dem Leitungsdraht. Seit zweieinhalb Tagen nun Nebel, fett und unlöslich; dass da draußen was lebt ist nur durch Vogelstimmen angedeutet. Das Tal eingefettet, dick bestrichen, hier oben ist es nun hell mit schrundigen Wolken auf Laschblau“.
Christoph Wilhelm Aigner (Wels, 18 november 1954) Wels
Zie voor nog meer schrijvers van de 19e november ook mijn vorige blog van vandaag.
Zie voor bovenstaande schrijvers ook mijn blog van 19 november 2008, mijn blog van 19 november 2007 en ook mijn blog van 18 november 2006.
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