Friday, July 18, 2025

Bad Poetry: Survive for Spite

Sometimes surviving is the best revenge,
especially when murder's been attempted.
I'll live to dance on your grave you have vowed
when homicide in self-defense has tempted.
Even when he's been led off in prison orange
while everyone hands you the martyr's crown
and you try to look modest, feeling proud,
with hands flat at your sides, with eyes turned down,
justice has not been done. Nor will it be.
Others had died before the fool met you.
If only they could join the dance, to see
young convicts line up, beat him black and blue,
justice might seem to sprout up like the tree
whose trunk he cut, and sprayed with poison, too.

This topic is too close to real life to provide much fun, actually, but I do thank the Poets & Storytellers United for proposing it. For the gruesome details, see the past six months of this blog. For the denouement, wait another year. 

Celiacs of the world, hang tough, and pray that Secretary Kennedy will be guided to hand us Bayer and Chemchina, on a silver platter, as neatly as he handed old Granola Greens the bans on food additives they've wanted since 1972.
 

Web Log for 7.17.25

Political, but light...

Ethics 


Rand at her clearest. But, perhaps, pessimistic. These conditions have sometimes been reversed.

Radio

Well, I laughed...


It's not that nobody in Gate City would ever want to listen to NPR out of Blacksburg or Floyd or wherever they broadcast from. It's that we have to be at least a hundred miles up the road before that signal comes in. Rural communities not only can't rely on NPR; many, perhaps most, of them can't listen to NPR. I grew up listening to the small local stations, WGAT, WKIN, WKPT, WJCW and later WDUF. Two of those still exist. Radio-locator.com says 34 radio stations can be heard in Gate City but I've never heard most of them. Maybe somebody in town has picked them up one night, probably not on two nights.

(Should "conservatives" listen to NPR? Why not? How many other radio stations do live interviews with authors? Where else would I ever have heard Amy Tan read excerpts from The Joy Luck Club? It's nice to have a car radio dial tuned to NPR...when the car gets into range.)

Television 


Maybe she needs glasses and hearing aids?

(Lens says the cartoon was drawn by Tom Stiglich. I ganked it from Joe Jackson's NSFW, sometimes R-rated site.)

 

Blogjob Book Review: Atlas Shrugged

(Reclaimed from Blogjob. After posting some other things that alluded to this book review, I noticed that I'd not reposted the actual review here...so here it is.)

Title: Atlas Shrugged
        
Author: Ayn Rand
        
Date: 1957
        
Publisher: Signet
        
ISBN: none, but click here to see it on Amazon
        
Length: 1074 pages
        
Quote: “We saw that we’d been given a law to live by, a moral law, they called it, which punished those who observed it—for observing it. The more you tried to live up to it, the more you suffered; the more you cheated it, the bigger reward.”
        
(Note: There's a shorter opinion piece about Atlas Shrugged at http://priscillaking.blogspot.com/2013/02/can-students-be-required-to-read-atlas.html ..)

Ayn Rand grew up in the middle of the Russian revolution. As an impressionable teenager, she saw firsthand how dictatorship, even in the name of Communist ideals, inevitably bred corruption, degradation, and inefficiency. In Atlas Shrugged, she imagined how the process might work if the United States adopted Communist ideals. The result is an evolution rather than a revolution (in contemporary terms), but it’s still bloody.
        
Atlas Shrugged is classic science fiction, where potential new developments in physics and chemistry form a large part of the plot. Rand’s focus was on the big industries of greatest economic interest in the early twentieth century—metal, mining, railroads, building, and the new fad for automobiles. Although the band of heroes who save the planet include an old college professor, a musician, a writer, and an actress, none of them get very many lines; the plot centers on a rich mine owner’s son, a metalworks owner who’s invented a new alloy said to be better than steel, a brother and sister who inherit a railroad, a genius physicist who's better known as a pirate, and a man who abandoned an automobile factory whose owners had decided to experiment with socialism. 
        
English was not Rand’s native language. As when reading Joseph Conrad, one doesn’t really expect clever turns of phrase (although Rand surprises readers with a few), or the nuances created by selecting the perfect word; one expects clichés, repetition, the laborious struggle for the right phrase that native speakers of English write their way through but try to prune back before publishing, and one is pleasantly surprised that the book is readable.
        
There are, of course, some near misses. I suspect that, when naming the woman she apparently perceived as a heroine, Rand was under the impression that “Taggart” is a Scandinavian name. It’s Irish, and the combination of “Dagny Taggart” grates on the ear. Of the three men with whom Dagny Taggart sleeps in the course of the plot, Hank Rearden gets by far the most attention, and the most sex scenes...and let’s just say that, as an Irish-American, I find it hard to imagine an Irish couple whose conversations would be so self-conscious, humor-impaired, and grim. Rand was married to an Irish-American and was probably trying too hard not to write about him.
        
Having mentioned Dagny Taggart, let me issue a fair warning. She is, if possible, harder to like than Howard Roark in The Fountainhead, and that’s saying a lot. Biology may prevent Dagny Taggart from committing outright rape, but she does what a woman can do in that direction. She ignores the lifelong friend who’s always loved her, breaks the mining heir’s heart, and wrecks the metal tycoon’s home merely because she “wants” him. While the metal tycoon is sacrificing the business he loves for the woman he loves, Dagny is preparing to dump him for the man she eventually decides she loves. When they finally flop down on the sandbags in an abandoned railway tunnel and get it on, Dagny expresses her lust for this man (well, in those days women weren’t supposed to speak first) by biting his arm, eliciting an even more “viciously painful” kiss, but what has really warmed her up for this moment is flouncing out of an evening party where a lot of rich men have been hanging on her word, in order to stand up, in her satin gown and velvet cape, and order a lot of laborers to toil all night doing their jobs in the old-fashioned way, which most of them would be too young even to know how to do, before she stalked out and waited for this man to follow. It’s not surprising that, although she plays the role of counsellor and grants a sort of absolution to her sister-in-law (“Taggart” means “priest”), Dagny has no female friends. What’s hard to believe is that, at the end of the book, she has any male ones.
        
Dagny is credible, and almost human, at the office, where she functions as an old-fashioned railroad man, while her patronizing elder brother degenerates in every scene. She does seem to enjoy running a railroad line—and, unlike the career women in romance novels, to know something about her business, although her knowledge depends on the fictional properties of “Rearden Metal.” Rand convinces us that Dagny loves railroading the way writers love writing.
        
Other science-fiction devices used in the story are weird new explosives that will remind present-time readers of neutron bombs (only without fallout or radiation), sonic weapons, unexplained breakthroughs in radio technology, and of course the “rays” that shield John Galt’s secret valley, “Atlantis,” from observation by the cruel outside world. Nevertheless, Rand was no scientist, and mainstream readers didn’t dismiss Atlas Shrugged as “merely” science fiction because the plot is mainly about the people; the technology could be changed to set the story either forward or back in history.
        
The story, in my opinion, self-sabotages in two main ways. The most obvious way is that, although it was written as a trilogy, it doesn’t work as a trilogy. The first third of Atlas Shrugged is stage-setting, and is likely to put readers to sleep if they don’t skip, skim, and miss things they’ll need to go back and look up later. You don’t want to know how many nights I read one or two pages of this tome to put myself to sleep.
        
A corollary factor here is that Atlas Shrugged is a story about middle-aged adults. Only two people who seem to be under thirty get speaking parts; both of them are perceived by the other characters as children. During the first third of the book, however, what we see are rich older people talking business and not trying very hard to understand their families. This does nothing to prepare young readers for the kind of adventures they typically look for in fiction, nor does it promise middle-aged readers the kind of adventures so many of us have claimed to want to see our age group having in fiction, although the characters eventually get those adventures. One can hardly blame any reader for putting down the book, saying, “Great Trollope’s ghost! If Silas Lapham had been as long as this...” Atlas Shrugged does not read like The Rise of Silas Lapham, at least not all the way, but one can understand how readers might expect that it will.
        
The other self-destructive tendency this novel has is Rand’s attempt to justify Dagny Taggart at her most repulsive. 1950's nice girls couldn’t, but contemporary nice girls probably can, forgive Dagny for using another man just to relieve her frustration before she decides she’s “in love” with John Galt. (Dagny has only heard of John Galt as a sort of cliché the laborers mention, not a living man, when she whimsically names a section of railroad after him.) Why not Eddie, who’s always been in love with her and never married anyone else? Why Hank, who is married? Because Hank is a conquest; Dagny made an emotional conquest of Eddie before either of them reached puberty, so by now she tends to forget that he’s a man. Hank’s brilliant mind and dedication to his business makes him a prize for Dagny.
        
Rand apparently wanted to believe that Hank has a right to cheat on his wife, Lillian. Lillian deteriorates, as the plot moves along, from a half-educated, shallow, virginal debutante into an embittered hag. Yes, but Hank had a lot to do with that. Of course the 1970's hadn’t happened yet; every daily newspaper in America hadn’t yet barraged every home with the “news” that very few women, probably including Dagny, would enjoy the kind of sex we see Hank and Dagny having. Still, Lillian makes it obvious, in her first scene, that she’s not satisfied. This was what contemporary audiences understood the waspish “gaiety” of her verbal abuse to mean. Therefore, if Hank were really as brilliant as she’s supposed to be, he should have figured out that she wants something from him, and set aside some small portion of his mental energy for figuring out what that might be. She’s not his equal because she’s not been brought up to be his equal; she’s been brought up to be his student, an empty page for him to write on. That was what her parents thought he would want. If he really were a man Dagny or any woman could admire, he would have accepted responsibility for finishing Lillian’s education, instead of blaming her for being ignorant about business, politics, and sex, and “falling in love” with Dagny. Which, as I think about it, I’m not sure I believe either; in real life, weren’t men like Hank usually scared of women like Dagny?
        
Before it’s over Hank will of course accuse Lillian of wanting to kill him. By that time she will, but, as a Nice Girl, the closest she comes to it is to have sex with another man, thereby, in a roundabout and contrived way, killing that man’s sweet young wife. (We first witness the wronged wife’s death as an accident, then hear that it’s been reported as a suicide.) Even before the Age of Therapy, was it not obvious that what this couple had was basically a communication problem?
        
Dagny, as unrepentant homewrecker, actually uses a radio talk show to proclaim that her adulterous fling with Hank “was the ultimate form of admiration for each other...I wanted him, I had him, I was happy,” thereby notifying Hank that his sacrifice for her honor has been worthless to her and the affair is now over. She's ruined his and Lillian's lives; now she's done with him. John Galt, who tells her this behavior was “noble,”  is not to be excused as merely another of the men who’ve been hopelessly “in love” with her for years. He is one of them, the lucky one if getting Dagny can be called luck, but he is speaking for Rand. This was the way Ayn Rand behaved in real life. In real life Rand didn’t dismiss younger men as “kids,” either. Though married, she “honored” her male students with sexual favors and the idea that their wives weren’t good enough for them anyway, then dropped them, sometimes after the divorce, as younger and cuter students came along. Nathaniel Branden, the last younger man to be so “honored,”  wrote at some length about how and why this notion of adultery as compatible with personal honor was a mistake.
        
Then there’s another minor flaw: the world of Atlas Shrugged is demographically unbalanced. (I’ve hesitated to include this paragraph in this review, because I’m not sure how significant it’s meant to be.) Africa and Asia (including Russia) don’t exist. The world consists of North America, South America, and western Europe. All the important people except Dagny are middle-aged Caucasian men. Even Europe has been mostly written off as a continent of passive people, whether their dictators call themselves Catholic, Fascist, or Communist. No character in the book is Asian, Native American, or even noticeably Jewish. No character is positively identified as African-American...but one of the baddies, Cuffy Meigs, has an African nickname, “bleary brown eyes,” and black curly hair. Meigs is the one whose irredeemable awfulness keeps the totalitarians from being able to destroy John Galt’s valley. Other characters, if described, have blond or red hair, blue or green eyes; D’Anconia talks like Tyrone Power’s version of a Spanish-American aristocrat, but he's not described. Rand didn’t completely buy into the racist thinking of the early twentieth century, and wasn’t as impressed by Hitler and Mussolini as many Americans were in the 1930s—she was, after all, Jewish—but if readers wanted to believe that melanin in the human complexion indicated a lower level of evolution, Rand wasn’t going to argue with them. She was a blonde. And she wasn’t trying to impress ethnic-minority readers.
        
Nevertheless, despite these flaws, Atlas Shrugged has some excellent features too. One thing I like is that, although John Galt and Ragnar Danneskjeld have been preparing for a real war against Jim Taggart, his friends, and their liberal-on-Communism philosophy, and although Hank and Dagny have been suffering psychological torture as they try to choose sides in the inevitable war, Rand finds a way to end the story without the war actually breaking out. John and Dagny won’t have to face off against each other, as they’ve feared, after declaring themselves “in love.” Lots of people have starved, killed each other in riots, or been killed as the industrial infrastructure of America has broken down, but all-out civil war hasn’t started. This plot development deserves celebration.
        
The best part in the book is the short story a laborer tells Dagny by way of explaining the cliché “Who is John Galt?” Perhaps this story should have been chapter one; as it is, it comes just after the halfway point. John Galt was, in youth, the brightest and bravest laborer in the automobile company that went socialist. The story is about what he walked away from: the way even small-scale, benign, and semi-voluntary dictatorship inevitably corrupts people and their work. (The same group dynamics can be observed in the families of “helicopter parents,” which Rand luckily hadn’t had and chose not to describe—there are no real children in this novel.) The story is compact and readable, and true. Rand had firsthand knowledge; by now many of us share that knowledge. 
        
The main plot of the book, which develops only in the second 500 pages, is that John Galt has a viable plan for ending the gradual totalitarian takeover of America by giving all the talented people a way to secede from America until America learns to want them back. In order to depict the philosophical conflict fully, Rand had to write it as an unlikely piece of science fiction, where the would-be dictators have gained enough power that the talented people have to rely on those “ray shields” to defend their secluded valley. If read as a metaphor for what needs to happen in real life, the thinking through the absurdity of altruism as a value, the recognition that the Highest Good for all does not require conflict between people, and thus the debunking and reintegration of collectivist morality, this primary plot can even be regarded as true.
        
This central idea could have been a great deal better written, and in fact it was. It was written in nonfiction form—the closest to it in book form, perhaps, being The Conscience of a Conservative. It had already been written in less direct forms—in the more idealistic versions of American history, in the actual histories of schools like Berea College, in the doctrines of several religious denominations, in the histories of various communes and communities, in a crude form even in the histories of the businesses that began when a clerk or department manager said “I’m not going to wait for the boss to retire; I’ll start my own store and run it my own way.” It had been written in children’s stories; there are recognizable undercurrents of the idea in Laura Ingalls Wilder’s Little House books, in most of Elizabeth Enright’s books, in Carol Kendall’s books and several other favorites of the early and middle twentieth century. Rand, an atheist, wouldn’t have appreciated the link being traced, but the idea of separating from others in order to help the survivors of the others’ self-destructive choices is actually biblical
        
As I read Atlas Shrugged and contemplate the paradox of Rand’s life, I can’t help wondering whether Rand just needed to have spent more years thinking, and reading English, before she began writing, or whether her work really was spoiled by her compulsive, reactionary atheism. There was room for love and joy in her philosophy. Why does it come through so badly? Partly because she chose to write about people whose joy in creativity took a different form from writing, which most writers and readers of books can understand, or music or painting, which are close enough that most writers and readers of books can at least imagine joy in those...but not only that. Rand spent so much energy railing against dysfunctional forms of “altruistic love” that she didn’t give herself much time to write about the glory of real love, although the reader who slogs through to the end of Atlas Shrugged will agree that the characters meant to be sympathetic do reach something like that kind of love in the end. The joy of friendship, partnership, synergistic work, seeing and feeling that what is good for one person really is what is good for the other person, pulsates through most of Atlas Shrugged, but it tends to be covered up by rants—especially rants against less perfect forms of love—and smut. When John and Dagny can enjoy a few minutes of intimacy at last, the attentive (and mature) reader understands that they symbolize a return to social connection after a period of separation, but on the literal level they seem to represent just another fling for a rich girl gone wrong.
        
Rand herself was described by biographers, sympathetic and otherwise, as having much in common with Dagny Taggart. She did stay married, even if it was an “open” (and childless) marriage. She did send money to her relatives who hadn’t been able to emigrate from Russia. She was hospitable, in her way, and had a large circle of loyal friends who have kept her books in print after her death in 1982. It was possible for some people to enjoy her company. Unlike Dagny, she even had a few friendships that weren’t based on sex, a few even with women. In her life as in her novels, she seemed to spend so much time railing against the kind of love she despised, the smother-mothering and guilt-tripping kind, that she found it difficult to say anything about the kind she probably did enjoy. Sad.
        
So, in conclusion...Atlas Shrugged is a severely flawed book by a severely flawed human being, but if you have a lot of time to kill and are old enough to stand those first 400 pages of society-gossip-type writing about off-putting people whose creative talents probably don’t resonate with you, you will eventually understand why some people love this book. I don’t love it. I don’t expect I’ll ever reread it. Rand spent eleven years writing it, and should probably have spent eleven more years revising it into something even libertarian feminist book lovers could be expected to enjoy. Nevertheless, by the time the plot gets moving, the last third of this novel is a satisfying read. Almost good enough to make up for the time you have to spend in the first two thirds to understand what’s happening in the last third.



Cherished Illusions

This is another poem that's fiction, inspired by a bunch of words someone threw out into cyberspace together. I don't know whether any of the talking heads at the various world peace conferences in different European cities used a binder in a color called "New Start yellow."

Anyway, the general idea is based in facts.


The ancient world knew the illusion
that life was peaceful. Water plied
prettily through clepsydra, inspiring
a melody of peace. Intrusion
of enemy troops--slash! smash! now firing
the walls round courtyards!--proved it lie.
Today the group confers a medal
for thought-work toward world peace. The speaker,
though Europe's bleak and Palestine bleaker
in prospect, stands and talks. And talks.
His paper proves him faithful fellow.
Even his binder's "New Start yellow."
A clerk records with mindful pedal:
politically correct, yet false. 

Thursday, July 17, 2025

Web Log for 7.16.25

In which your Auntie Pris takes up arms against the evil Microsoft "Update" Gremlins and ventures forth to reclaim some small fraction of her e-mail and blogroll, to find links and cute things for you...Well, the first thing that needs you attention, that I found, is not cute. It's an evil bill before Congress. Anyway, they're all in alphabetical order by topic, below... 

Communication, with Elected Officials, 101

1. They get masses of messages. The system is set up for that, and they do need to hear from their constituents, but short and simple are good. Postcards are better than letters. (The US Congress have received enough letters with nasty things in the envelopes that they now subject all letters to an automated process designed to destroy nasty things before anyone sees the actual letters, which means a letter may not arrive before the vote on the issue it addressed.) If you've kept a Twitter account you can send them a tweet instead of an e-mail. If your official seems to need a lot of facts and documents, put them below the basic yes/no message and resign yourself to the possibility that they may not be seen--unfortunately, the way the system works, "Do the majority of my constituents say yes or no?" often is more important to an official than "Why do people say yes or no to this?" It never hurts to let an elected official know that there are facts on your side, but it probably does more good to educate other citizens about the facts than to try to give a Congressman a crash course before tomorrow's vote.

2. Messages will probably be read, possibly by some dear little student intern. All messages to elected officials should be fit for delicately nurtured teenaged girls to read. Disagree and clobber them with facts, when necessary, but don't use bad language. 

3. Because of (2), there's no need to make messages fancy; try to make it easy for the student to file messages as pro-this or anti-that. Realistically, all the elected official is likely to have time to do is compare the numbers of messages from each side.

4. And many Washington offices still use phones, because they make it easy for Congressmen to tell who is or is not in their district, so if you still have access to one it's nice to give them the phone number. 

5. A lot of the messages elected officials get are "howlers," usually typed after it's too late for them to do any good even if the senders had mindfully intended to do good. Sometimes officials set up coping mechanisms like asking the student "What's the worst thing anyone's called me today?" By and large they ignore the howlers. Dare to be different. Even if the subject of your e-mail is "Vote NO on" something the official is likely to like, it never hurts to do a little preliminary research. (You're reading this on a computer, so you're part of the global elite who can do the research and write better letters than Schmoe Sixpack.) Has your official voted on similar bills before? What have the effects of per votes been? Is it possible to thank or congratulate person? It never hurts to sound more like an informed, sympathetic observer than like a slob who sends howlers to elected officials as a sort of emotional surrogate for upgrading to a better job.

6. Technically, even though residents of the other forty-nine States and St Croix Island may want to thank Marjorie Taylor Greene for her tweet (linked below), she's not supposed to read messages from outside her district while in Washington. But there's no rule against linking or copying her tweet into whatever you send to your US Rep.

Communication, with Family 

Are people my age really so bored by the young, so fast? 

I think what we have here is a politically motivated effort on the part of the commercial media to drive a wedge between demographic generations. Never mind that, although five years of war followed by the early Waste Age's economic boom did produce an identifiable baby-boom generation, there's been little consistency about subsequent generations; different families had different numbers of them. The adults in the US are clearly inclined to favor fiscal conservatism. The very young still think socialism might be able to work, at least long enough to get them entrapped in whatever dystopia the transhumanists might be able to achieve. So people with bad intentions want to turn the very young against their elders, to tell students that older people don't understaaand anything and don't caaaare any more and can be ignored...

What the older people in the TikTok video are saying is "We've finally been able to park and get off that hormone cycle! We gloat! We don't want to hear about your little emotional feelings any more!"

Well...Parking the hormone cycle and getting off is a wonderful feeling. Women who suddenly find ourselves free from four days of messiness and three days of anemia out of every month, especially, can hardly be blamed for rubbing it in, a little. More astute women at least complain feebly from time to time about their greying hair, so young people can live with their envy.

I'm not very sympathetic to young people with Trump Derangement Syndrome, but I do at least listen when they're honestly frustrated by the sluggish employment market or disappointed in love.


Economy, The

Fellow Americans, your US Reps need to know what's wrong with what somebody's tagged as the Genius Act. It's an evil Genius. Tennessee's Marjorie Taylor Greene sums it all up on one computer screen:


Fantasy, Sick, the Transhumanist 

In the 1980s we thought the Cold War was over, and we'd won, yaaaay. Wendell Berry and fans hoped that we could move on to a more useful Green-vs-Greedhead debate about how to use resources. Some people, however, dream of going beyond the old Marxist dream of Party bosses functioning as kings and everyone else as "proletarians" (like peasants, only without land). They want to function as God and let everyone else be their "creations."

I don't think it can work; I think there is a real God, Who takes a dim view of human hubris, and will make sure the transhumanist fantasy doesn't work. I think the question is whether we can recognize items from the transhumanist agenda and prevent them happening in a pleasant parliamentary way, or whether we'll fall for the bad ideas and suffer the destruction they'll bring.

Here's a documentary movie for those who absorb information from movies:


It explains why the value of, e.g., my old clunker of a fixer-upper truck has actually sextupled in the last three years. You want all machines you use to be "dumb." If it's "smartened" with a chip somewhere, leave it in the store and look for an old secondhand model that was chip-free. 

You may, as I am, be impressed by the efficiency with which new technology allows diabetics to monitor and treat their condition. Your main concern, like mine, be "What happens when the gadgets break down?" You should also be aware, though, of the probability that, when a critical number of active senior citizens are wired up with digital sugar/insulin monitors, someone might decide to free up funds for this expensive treatment from the budget by delivering fatal sugar or insulin shock.

Book Review: Hive

Title: Hive

Author: Jeremiah Ukponrefe

Date: 2020

ISBN: 9781777332914

Quote: "Another day on the job."

In this space opera of a future of barely feudal civilization, two agents of "the Collective" spend another day on the job at a village market, killing unarmed citizens. Opposition to "the Collective," they find, is better organized, with weapons, by at least three groups: the Libertarians, the Amish, and the Hive. The Libertarians and Amish bear no resemblance to any group of people called by those names today, but what the two agents infiltrate is the Hive, in which people seem to be joined in a hivemind dominated by one man. The two agents smash their way through, killing more people as they go, until they can kill that man and look forward to rewards from "the Collective."

If you like books where the idea of a fantasy world is created mainly by words being used to mean things they don't mean in the real world, and the point-of-view characters kill most of the people they meet. you might like this book.  

Vanishing Words

I just happened to see a column in the Powell Valley News about some endangered phrases the author's elders used to use. Part of our hillbilly dialect that outsiders never got quite right, because the point was that, before radio and television, people talked the way their elders did and there was not necessarily one consistent pattern of "dialect" even for an individual town. Which of these things, Steve Roark asked, have readers heard someone say? Do we ever  use any of them nowadays?

1. "Daub" for a quantity, probably in between a dab and a blob, of something daubed onto something else with a knife, like butter or jelly. "I like a daub of jelly on a biscuit." I've heard it, but not thought of it as regional, just as a word that sounds somewhere in between dab and blob, all of which are smaller than a glob. 

2. "The devil of" something: Possibly related to the Irish use of "devil of..." to mean "never a bit of...," but more often used to mean "a difficult," or even "a large." Heard on a record by Ralph and Carter Stanley where they told old jokes: "I don't know how to get to Little Rock, but there's a devil of a big rock down in Pap's old pasture." (Note that this was a comedy routine with men from Virginia making fun of people in Arkansas...but yes, I heard people say "the devil of" in that sense in casual conversation.) "I had the devil of a time trying to finish the project on the computer with all the Microsoft 'updates'." 

Also heard: "a devil's washboard," meaning a rough road. The Devil's Bathtub, a deep round pool in a mountain stream, was named before the Gate City Blue Devils but, so far as I know, it's a unique place name rather than a generic phrase.

"Blue devils" was an old slang phrase for alarm and despondency in the nineteenth century. Since all slang references to the Devil were classified as profanity, "blue devils" was politely abbreviated to "the blues," which then got to be the term for a genre of music felt to express that sort of mood. Then in the World Wars, first a French and then a Canadian military group were nicknamed "Blue Devils." Duke University's team was nicknamed in their honor and several high school teams wanted to be nicknamed by association with Duke University.

"The devils' own" (whatever) is extremely difficult and disagreeable, something that seems as if it were invented to torment human beings.

3. "Dew poisoning": Nobody I knew ever used this phrase seriously. Water-borne bacteria can cause infections and an infected skin would on the foot was blamed on walking through heavy dew. "Mountain Dew poisoning" would be a clever phrase for hypercaffeination or for the effects of drinking home-brewed alcohol, but it's not in general use in either sense. 

4. "Dinner" for the midday meal: Still used, though I've heard it explained in elitist terms that "dinner" meant the main meal, farm laborers ate their dinners at midday, while landowners and the bourgeoisie at their dinners after the day's work. In practice I think people say "breakfast, dinner, and supper" or "breakfast, lunch, and dinner" according to which their elders said. The job status thing may or may not be reliably correlated with the word usage.

5. "Dinner on the ground": a picnic. Roark associated it with Decoration/Memorial Day. I've heard it associated with summer "camp meetings" where members of various churches used to take up to a week of vacation time in or near woods, praying, studying the Bible, singing, catechizing converts, and mainly keeping cool during what was expected to be the worst heat wave of the summer. "All-day meeting with dinner on the ground." The original idea was that the meal was brought out in a hamper and set on a tablecloth, or sheet or blanket or whatever people had, spread on the grass, and people sat around the cloth to eat. "Dinner on the grounds," carried out from a restaurant or served from a vehicle or vehicles, eaten on the chairs or bleachers available, is more often seen and heard these days but it's a variant.

6. "Disgust-es" for "disgusts": Yes, some people make a point of enunciating the "sts" combination in this way. If something disgust-es you, is it more disgusting than something that merely disgusts you? I don't know; people I know don't make this distinction.

7. "Done" for "already" or "completely": I think all of my elders used this one, especially (with a hint that the phrase had once been considered funny) "They'd done done it." "I've done finished it." 

A variant form, also apparently considered funny at one time, was "He'd done'ready done it."

8. "Dog" or "dogged" used as a less offensive substitute for "damn/ed": Even my oldest elders thought of this as an outdated phrase most likely to be put in the mouths of fictional comic characters. Mark Twain's characters say "dog my cats!" and no doubt some people in the mid-nineteenth century really did. I grew up saying "darn/ed." I've felt funny about saying things like "that darned commercial" ever since I said it in front of a child I used to baby-sit, and the child repeated it in the presence of its mother, a church lady, who didn't dare to scold me (I didn't go to their church so couldn't be expected to know anything) but got up and spanked the child. (And anyway, darning is mending and ought to be used in reference to things that are worth preserving.) On the blog I say "dang," and, in contexts where it really is the proper usage, "not worth a daam"--the coin that was worth less than the cost of making it. In real life, before becoming an aunt, I sometimes said "damn/ed," but not often.

9. "Doins," "doings": Technically includes all the things people might have been doing, but used especially of a gathering. I've heard this one, less often over the years.

10. "Dope" for soda pop: Several older neighbors used to say this. It referred to the fact that the original formula for Coca-Cola included a bit of cocaine, which the company says hasn't been used since the 1890s. "Dope" then came to be used to mean an addict, or any stupid person ("The boys/girls at my school are a bunch of dopes"), and "Coke" came into use, probably peaking before I was born, to mean any soda pop. When a character in a 1950s novel went to the drugstore with friends or a date for "cokes" some of them were probably sipping Sprite or Grapette. 

11. "Drag up" or "draw up" a chair to join a group: More likely to be expressed as "take a seat" or "get (oneself) a chair," but not unknown. Probably less common because public gatherings are less likely to take place in a large room with folding chairs leaned against the wall, taken out and unfolded as people come in.

12. "Draw out" for "remove the infection": Less common because the treatment is less common.  A poultice containing a topical antiseptic, or something people hoped would work like one, was applied to an infected skin wound before injections of antivenin, antibiotics, or antihistamines became available.

13. "Dreamt" for "dreamed": Used when people want to sound quaint. Up into the nineteenth century we find some authors writing "he dreamed" but "she had dreamt," and others using "dreamt" as both simple past and past participle. "Dreamed" became more fashionable about a hundred years ago and used to be one of those words that identified people who were and were not following linguistic trends.

14. "Dreckly" for "directly," but used ironically in the sense of "at some unspecified future time, not necessarily in this year," in contexts like "I'll oil that squeaking hinge directly." Some people may have been more likely to mean "directly" in the original sense that they were moving in the direction of doing whatever-it-was when they said "di-rect-ly" instead of "dreckly," but this is uncertain. Many people who were attracted to this use of "directly" seemed to me to be procrastinators in any case.

15. "Druther" for "would rather": This was a status indicator but I'm not altogether certain how it worked. Generally the less educated said "ruther," those calling attention to their education said "rah-ther," but I'm not sure whether it was the middle class, the real flat-heeled aristocrats, or both who traditionally said "rather" like "lather." (One of my fence-sitting habits is alternating between saying "rather" like "father" and like "lather.") 

"Had one's druthers," meaning "had one's first choice," is sometimes found in written English and was sometimes used by my elders. 

16. "Dull as a froe": I've never heard this. I've never heard "froe" used in casual conversation. It was a tool used to split wood. Roark explains that it was traditionally dull-edged. My elders split wood with an axe, hax, hatchet, sometimes a chisel; they didn't have the specific old-time tools called froes. I did know that a froe was an old-time tool, but not one my elders used or talked about.

Both "froe," the tool, and "fro" meaning "from," were used before a curly hair style was called an "Afro" or 'fro." 

17. "Dusky dark": for dusky, crepuscular, twilight, gloaming, the time between sunset and dark; if people I knew used this they probably thought they were quoting a poetic phrase. About a hundred years ago there were a lot of songs sentimentalizing this time of day, the time when sweethearts were allowed a good-night kiss if they made it reasonably quick. My elders knew and sang a lot of those songs but their everyday word for this time of day was probably either "sunset" or "getting dark." 

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Status Update: Excursion with Ruminations

I went into town yesterday. This has become a rare occurrence rather than a daily commute. I hate to say it but I was in better condition when it was a daily commute; ninety-degree heat shouldn't bother me...

Ninety-degree heat, yes. At the Cat Sanctuary the sun beating down on the metal roof had raised the temperature on my front porch from about 75 to a little over 80 degrees Fahrenheit when I walked out the door. Not a mile further along, once I'd reached the paved highway, the dashboard thermometer of the person who offered a lift was reading 93 in the sun, 92 when the car passed through shade--and this I could believe. It was a lot hotter near the pavement than it was up on the hill, among the trees.

Local climate change is well distributed around the world but it is not global climate change. The temperature changes we're seeing are far beyond even the most alarming indicators of potential global climate change (which could happen, but I'm not likely to be here long enough to know whether it ever does). They are also very local.

I happened to be near a television set that was broadcasting the local weather news and forecast. The local weather news showed absolutely typical July weather, the weather of my childhood and, according to them, my grandparents' childhood, in the smaller towns surrounding Kingsport and Bristol: temperatures around 70, even lower at higher elevations overnight, rising up to 80 or 85 degrees Fahrenheit in the daytime. For Kingsport's weather station, which is still closer to the river than to the streets where Kingsporters actually live, overnight lows were in the 80s, the afternoon high at the weather station would be about 90, and the 90% humidity would make it feel more like 96 degrees Fahrenheit. Ten-degree difference. (Before the overpavement along Stone Drive, it was two or three degrees. Before the slum was built, it was five or six degrees.) Now remember that in Gate City I'd seen a ten-degree difference between my home, which is basically an orchard, and the paved highway. In Kingsport, around the slum, the actual temperature probably was over 100 degrees Fahrenheit.

The forecast was that it's going to be like this for at least another week.

While walking along Route 23 above Gate City, I heard sirens. Not enough sirens for a fire or police call. Only one vehicle was using only one siren, only intermittently. So someone was being taken to the hospital. Likely that would be some older person, out of condition, who'd pushed perself to work outside in the heat. 

I walked very, very slowly in the 93-degree heat. Well, I walked at the pace I usually use around the house, not hurrying, not dawdling, in between patches of shade, where I sat down and rested while the wind off the passing traffic dried off the sweat. I managed to get into town with unsoaked clothing. 

You get a choice, Gentle Readers. How deadly hot do you want summers to be? If you don't want your local summers to be hotter, let trees replace some of the existing construction and paving in your neighborhood. If you want to cash in on anybody's greedhead ideas about "housing," buckle up and brace for longer, hotter summers than you've ever survived before.

That television set was braying about a "need," not in Kingsport but further into Tennessee, for labor in a new quarrying project that was apparently an unwelcome surprise to local people. It was anticipated that people willing to work on this project would not be local and would not want to live in the neighborhood they were about to make ugly. During about an hour of television exposure I heard two commercial ads from different real estate speculators, and the talking head at the news department obligingly repeated and explained a line from the advertisement. Tennessee landowners could legally keep their houses while renting out their land to people who would use the land to build new "housing."

Y'all don't think your summers are hot enough already, in Tennessee? 

Even in Virginia it feels to me as if doing anything useful in this weather really requires gills. I want nothing to do with "housing." If people can't live in (or renovate) existing houses that become available when people die and their heirs want to be somewhere else, that may be an indication that nature intended those people not to move into my town.

I will hear no idiocies about this having anything to do with what people look like. I don't expect to spend enough time looking at them to care if their skins are fluorescent green and they have spiral fluorescent horns instead of fingernails. (Well, if they were that unusual-looking I might at least feel curious about whether they were actors making a movie about space aliens or young people trying to start a kicky rebellious fad that would differ noticeably from any older one. 

It's about how many people need to live in one place, and whether they can walk on gravel paths or think they need pavement and cars, and whether they can raise their own food in a sustainable way (not spraying, but eating, the "weeds"), and whether they can run a neighborhood biomass burner on waste without killing any trees or dumping any sewage in any condition into rivers, and whether they appreciate large farms as natural habitats for large extended families or want to ruin them with "housing" projects, i.e. slums.

Reversing the kind of climate change we can all see and feel and agree on does not require a global dictatorship at all. It requires local self-governing communities to say no to any proposed construction of new "apartment" or "town house" or "row house" buildings, to say that even temporary laborers deserve houses where each person has a room of per own and at least a plot of kitchen garden.

Book Review: Cursed Bones of Sergeant Boom

Title: The Cursed Bones of Sergeant Boom!

Author: Inka York

Date: 2023

Publisher: Inklore

Quote: "Despite the dog's small stature, and indeed despite his death and decay, he was still in possession of a mighty, rumbling bark..."

That's Sergeant Boom! (the exclamation mark is part of his name to make his gravestone easy to identify, though he doesn't seem to stay buried in it).

A character in this story visits the grave of Douglas Adams, presumably seeking inspiration. I can't say that this novel shows much. It's part of a series constructed from all the occult elements usually omitted from whimsical witch and vampire stories. All of the main characters are undead in one way or another; this is another fantasy/mystery where solving the mystery requires readers to keep track of who's able to do what. Some are long-undead British monarchs. Some can only send out feeble thought waves; some have bodies solid enough for mating or fighting. 

Both of the couples are male. There are no heterosexual couples or romances in this book. There's a daughter, now 130 years old, looking 30, and still bratty, and a sister, and passing reference to a wife who's not active in the story. Basically this is a story for men who are interested almost exclusively in other men.

I didn't laugh out loud, though a few throwaway references to history and literature did strike me as  mildly funny, or at least punny. (The homosexual characters don't indulge their emotions in the stereotypical "leave me alone, I'm insane but harmless" way, but one of the undead monarchs is indeed a "screaming queen." The main character is called Kane and his home base is a store called Kane & Fable.) I don't expect even its intended audience will rate this series up there with the works of Adams, Pratchett, or Neil Gaiman, but if you've collected all the novels of the dead British comic novelists of our time and are waiting impatiently for the next one from the surviving novelist, you might smile over this series.

Some Favorite Quotes from Books

This week's Long & Short Reviews question asks for reviewers' personal favorite quotes from book. This differs from the topics of book quote posts we did earlier in the year. Favorite quotes may make us laugh or think or remember reading the book. 

As before, the quotes I remember most clearly tend to be the ones I learned fairly early in life, so no apologies for quotes from children's books. They also tend to be the ones I share with family and close friends, so they've acquired layers of connotation over the years. I've shared a few memories that don't violate anyone else's privacy. "Favorites" is defined loosely enough to include anything I've quoted more than one time in a recent year. 

1. "All truth is safe and nothing else is safe; and he who {suppresses the truth]...is either a coward or a criminal or both."--John A. Stormer 

Stormer saw more danger in more things than living right-wingnuts seem to do. However, he was consistently pro-Christian and anti-violence. Today's "alt-right" could stand to rediscover his books. 

2, "Her face was so face-like in its expression as to be absolutely facial."--Stephen Leacock 

A person with astigmatism can see faces, but finds it easier to recognize voices. By the time the details of a face are clear to me I've probably been staring at the face too long. I don't have the kind of neurological problem with the mobility of faces that autistic people say they have. I just don't see faces as all that interesting. They look the way Leacock described them.

3. "Some say the world will end in fire, Some say in ice. From what I've tasted of desire I hold with those who favor fire. But if it had to perish twice, I think I know enough of hate To say that for destruction ice Is also great And would suffice."--Robert Frost 

4. "A is for Apples: Our farm has many." The whole family have said "Our farm has many" about so many things, for so long...! 

5. "It wants fire." 

"Do you mean that I should put more fire into my poetry?" 

"No--I mean that you should put more of your 'poetry' into the fire."--Quoted by many people, including Louis Untermeyer 

6, "We be of one blood, ye and I."--Rudyard Kipling 

7. "Stout hearts and true, hold fast what is ours!"--Girl Scout Manual 

8. "All those who loved the true and good, Whose promises were kept, With humble mind, whose acts were kind, Whose honor never slept, These were the free; and we must be Prepared like them to live."--Girl Scout Manual 

9. "Dare to be like Daniel! Dare to stand alone! Dare to have a purpose firm, and dare to make it known."--some Sunday School songbook (it used to be in several) 

10. "Hie dygel lond, Frecne fen-gelad, naessa genippu..." "They dwell in a darksome land, Wolf-cliffs wild and windy wildernesses..."--Beowulf

In Beowulf's time the sea-cliffs and beaches weren't pretty tourist attractions to stroll through on pleasant afternoons. They were where desperate people had to live because they were cheap--free shelter in caves, free fish if you could catch one. Where Grendel and his mother lived. In the poem exaggerations of their size and greed make them mythic figures of Evil; in whatever reality the story was based on I imagine they were desperate people, the mother originally outcast as much because she was ugly as because she was a single mother, the mother and son sharing genetic physical abnormalities exaggerated by malnutrition, living mostly on what they could steal from the settlement that cast them out. Sometimes, if they were hungry enough, people like that accepted the claim that they weren't human as an excuse to eat humans they'd dismembered or killed on a raid. 

Even in the Eastern States we have legends of people like that. If they were large and hairy the legends have cast them as cryptids. The one in my part of the world is a recent addition to this set of folklore, from the nineteenth century. Born a human child to human parents, for some reason he went feral, lived in the woods, was seen covered only in heavy European-type body hair, and threatened to eat humans. He was not, however, one of the half-dozen or so murderers and child molesters in local history. Like most local people he left people alone if they left him alone.

Anyway, one summer when I was home from college, a young relative said "I don't like poetry; it's too flowery and nicely-nice," and I quoted these lines and said "There are lots of different kinds of poetry. Some poems aren't nice at all," and the young relative was interested enough to read the rest of the "translation of Beowulf" in my old English Lit. book. But the quote has stuck in my mind as a figurative description of the mental condition of people who don't like poetry.

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Book Review: Holding Fast

Title: Holding Fast

Author: Susan Cole

Date: 2021

Publisher: White Bird

ISBN: 978-1-63363-538-8

Quote: "In a few weeks, we're going to move on Laughing Goat and go sailing."

This is reportedly a true memoir about a family who lived on a sailboat until one of them was lost at sea. It is narrated in a matter-of-fact way, not wordy and wooden like the products of ChatGPT or similar, but not showing any special quality of observation or insight that makes me wish I'd received the whole thing. What I received was a "sample," and if any writers think that sending out the first few chapters of a book is any way to get rave reviews, they are mistaken. I don't want to encourage this form of marketing books that, if published by anyone other than the writer, have not sold well. I will say that I received a "sample," read it, and would guess that the whole book would deserve three stars: not very bad, not extremely good, just the sort of story someone needed to tell for her own friends' and family's benefit.  

Petfinder Post: Drudge Is a Credit to His Late Parents

Drudge, the last of last spring's kittens staying here, was the son of a small, fluffy orange stray I called Borowiec, who died shortly after begetting him, and Serena's daughter Pastel, who died last winter.

Who knows whether somewhere their spirits, reunited, may be finding comfort in the thought that Pastel's early demise helped rally the neighborhood against the Bad Neighbor who has done all of us so much harm for so long.

Anyway, Drudge is now a year-old cat, still growing. Serena is a large female cat, ten or twelve pounds of solid bone and muscle; Pastel had a slimmer frame, looked more American rather than British, but she was also longer and taller than most American Shorthairs. Drudge, being male, might eventually be bigger than Serena but currently he's still smaller and thinner. 

Last spring he apparently considered doing what tomcats normally do--wandering off and getting lost, never a thought for his human or his family, who normally think "good riddance to rubbish"--and thought better of it. Since then he's proceeded to demonstrate that he's not a normal cat at all. 

He is gentle and protective with his little uncle, Serena's new kitten. They curl up together on my lap, morning and evening, when I sit on the steps and check in with them.

He hunts efficiently. Most male felines just aren't as good hunters as females; even lions do a lot of scavenging and stealing prey from other predators, when lionesses aren't feeding them. Drudge caught a big gray squirrel last Saturday. 

He is a patient, gentle, cuddly pet. He's always had an extraordinary ability to tolerate being tickled; where a normal cat invites people to tickle its ribs in order to grab their hands, Drudge always could just lie flat and purr, enjoying the attention. (So could Dilbert and Diego, his brothers. Presumably they got this trait from their father because it certainly did not run in their mother's family.) He has never intentionally scratched or bitten a human.

But since the tiny kitten has joined him on the porch, although he didn't start play-fighting when tickled, Drudge stopped purring.

"Have you lost your purr-box?" I said to him. "I miss your purr."

I had not been thinking of him as a Listening Cat. Like many cats, he responds to my voice so consistently that it's hard to tell whether he recognizes his name. 

But he understood some part of "I miss your purr," because, after jumping off my lap, he came back and sat on my lap upright, not rolling onto his back. I stroked down his back, then around his ears. He purred extravagantly.

Cats are notorious for the trait zoologists call "neoteny"--adult animals retaining juvenile or infantile behavior. The whole pet cat behavior repertoire of romping and snuggling with a human can be classified as neoteny. Sometimes when kittens join the family adult cats will tone down this behavior. Being around a juvenile of their species seems to remind them to model adult behavior for the young.

Drudge nonverbally "reported" that he has accepted the responsibility of being a good father-figure for his little uncle.

Normal cats, of course, grow up completely devoid of father-figures. Most tomcats ignore kittens. A few even try to chase them away or kill them, in the hope that the mother cat will then want to start some more--a behavior mother cats are famous for punishing. (Serena has, in fact, driven her kitten's father away, though it would be typical cat behavior if she let him come back after weaning her kitten.) Some social tomcats ignore kittens, too. 

Yet Drudge's six-greats-granduncle Mackerel was the son of a father who visited regularly and brought food to Mac's mother, and grew up to be that sort of father himself. When tomcats stray the traditional saying is "He'll come back when he's hungry enough." Mac went feral after being told that rabies vaccinations were the price of being a pet; he came back to visit his nieces and me, every few weeks, and every time I offered him food, and never once did he eat it. He was proud to say that he'd brought us food, if anyone wanted it. Rabbit, anyone? 

Drudge's great-grandfather Burr was another basically feral barn cat who had no use for humans, but did spend quality time with his mate, and, if he did eat while visiting his family, shared food nicely with kittens. 

Drudge may be another cat who follows the code of behavior for a Virginia gentleman better than some humans who were born into that position.

The animals shown below are probably normal cats and dogs, but they have "blue"-gray coats like Drudge's.

Zipcode 10101: Tamar from New York 


A lightweight (healthy weight at age three, just seven pounds) with a kittenish look, Tamar's big talking point, according to her web page, is a low adoption fee. She's been in the shelter long enough. They want her adopted soonest! She is known to get along well with other cats.

Zipcode 20202: Iggy & Pop from St Thomas island, via Alexandria 


Iggy is the one whose left eye has been diagnosed with corneal scarring. He's not completely blind and his vision seems to be improving, but the eye may always look "different." The brothers are close, and, since neutering is obligatory, will probably want to stay close all their lives. 

Zipcode 30303: Vanna from Fayetteville 


She is said to be a sweet, lovable three-year-old who gets along well with everyone. She has run up a substantial vet bill, which is reflected in her adoption fee. 

Zipcode 10101: Fiona from Austin via Rye 


Fiona is just a baby, only four months old. At the time of posting she weighed 7 pounds. She is expected to weigh 20 or 25 pounds when full grown. She could easily live another fifteen years, so the family should be prepared to make a long-term commitment.

Fiona is described as almost the perfect pet, cute, clever, agreeable, cuddle-tolerant, inclined to follow at someone's heel even when not on a leash. There are some issues. Baby gets anxious when left alone, and may cry and annoy neighbors. Baby gets overexcited around unfamiliar dogs, and may create social problems for her human at a dog park. She may outgrow those tendencies, though, and she does well with other dogs, cats, and children. They recommend her to families that have an older, friendly, well trained dog to be a role model. 

Her adoption fee adds up to $830. Of this, $230 is for transportation from Austin to New York. If you're closer to Austin, or will be, you can substract that amount. $200 is to pre-pay your vet to have her spayed when she's old enough. That leaves $400, which still seems a bit steep, but she is an especially pretty poodle.

Zipcode 20202: Frankie from DC 


At one year old, he weighs 48 pounds and likes to walk or run with humans. He is crate trained and house trained. "Guaranteed to keep you active," he'll be quiet and even snuggly after a good exercise session. He is described as friendly and funny, but I'd guess that anyone who messes with his human will be sorry. Terriers are tough, stubborn dogs and, though large for a terrier, Frankie is thought to have some pit bull ancestry. But the breed personality is affectionate and loyal when they're treated well.

Zipcode 30303: Anabella from Houston via Atlanta 


This 48-pound mutt has had an adventurous life already. Two years old, she was found abandoned in a cage with puppies. Puppies were adopted, mother dog spayed. She's comfortable with other dogs and has been crate and leash trained. She likes humans and seems to want to be someone's pet. Her adoption fee includes a vet bill. It does not include transportation from Houston to Atlanta, nor do her current caretakers want to take a road trip. If you want to visit Houston, you can shave more than half off the total cost of adopting this cute dog.