Two years ago I had an idea.
I had spent months that year -- the centennial of the passing of the Canadian artist Tom Thomson -- researching and writing a book of letters. Thomson grew up in my hometown, Owen Sound, Ontario, and his life and times -- especially his final days because his demise remains shrouded in mystery to this day -- have always fascinated me.
On American Thanksgiving, 2017, I finished a woodland painting of my own -- in part inspired by my Owen Sounder forebear. A image of the painting can be found attached to my Twitter page.
The 2017 Dawn Times panel lies in the back of this image; in the foreground, is Dawn Times II.
A third panel is due, yes, in 2021... Perhaps just in time for the Tom Thomson book? Let's just see!
Next: Running for Your Life: Ginkgo Dreams
Running for Your Life: On Loving the Cold
OK, not exactly loving it.
Or is it?
What did Kierkegaard say about love?
“When one has once fully entered
the realm of love, the world — no matter how imperfect — becomes rich and
beautiful, it consists solely of opportunities for love.”
That’s what he said.
So, it is about love, isn’t it?
No matter how cold it is, I’ve stepped out the door for a
run every other of my adult life.
The truth is, severe cold gets to me in ways it never did,
say, 30 or 40 years ago. But I head out the door (the realm of love?) and start
to run, regardless of the temperature, the rain, snow.
Running for your love … Corny but, effective.
Next: Running for
Your Life: Dawn Times
Running for Your Life: Art?
Critic Colin Burrow in a recent London Review of Books (No. 21, “The Magic Bloomschtick”) writes this and I couldn't agree more:
First, let’s start with poetry from Emily Dickinson:
First, let’s start with poetry from Emily Dickinson:
The Poets light out Lamps –
Themselves – go out –
The Wicks them stimulate
If vital Light
Inhere as do the suns –
Each Age a Lens
Disseminating their
Circumference –
“(Dickinson) is doing what the best poets do, trying to think behind the words they’ve been given,
whether those words come from a newspaper, from an essay, from a hubbub on the
street, from a story told in church, or on their grandmother’s knee, from a
whisper in the ear from the muse, or from another poem.”
Next: Running for
Your Life: On Loving the Cold
Running for Your Life: Anonymous Heard From
If you read one book this election year, let it be “A Warning” by Anonymous.
Okay, you say. I can’t read another word about politics,
most especially about the circus surrounding the current president. It just
depresses me.
Suppress those thoughts, and read this book.
But if Anonymous were truly courageous, he or she (he and
she?) would not hide in anonymity and own the charges leveled in this stunning
account of the perilous state of our nation.
Hachette, the publisher of “A Warning,” obviously thought
differently. Its trust in the integrity of the message, the truth of what’s in
these pages, won out.
There are things about this book that the left doesn’t
like. (It is the work of a conservative true believer, not a unreconstituted
liberal.) And obviously there are things that the right doesn’t like about it.
But how about us individual, open-minded readers? I submit
that “A Warning” is the single-most important book to read for those who
seriously want to know what it’s like today in the inner sanctum of the Oval
Office.
And “A Warning” must be considered, given the stakes: As Anonymous
writes, we are currently finishing Season Three of the US presidency. Read this
book and just try to imagine what it will be like during the Final Season of late
2023. That, I find, unimaginable.
Next: Running for
Your Life: On Loving the Cold
Running for Your Life: “They Go Low, We Go High”
Here’s a thought that came to me when I was running on
Tuesday (Nov. 26).
Famously, Michelle Obama said of the Democrats enemies:
“When they go low, we go high.”
It’s hard to stress just how misguided that marching
order has been given the modern media world.
Will the Times EVER go low. Or CNN or MSNBC?
Will they ever consider the lesson of LaCorte News, the
brainchild of former Fox News dude Ken LaCorte.
An article in the New York Timers last weekend (Nov. 24)
characterizes the news site as one that has proven to be successful in
delivering extremist “news” to both the left and the right for a profit after
failing to find any business traction with more legitimate news sites.
Do progressives ever go low? I wonder. Progressive find
succor in the philosophes: Cicero, Aristotle – those who labored on theories
regarding the betterment of man.
Consider this from Aristotle:
“He who exceeds in confidence when it comes to frightening
things is reckless, and the reckless person is held to be both a boaster and a
pretender to courage.”
Our current brand of leadership ‘conservatives” jones for
philosophes of entirely different stripes. Say, Thomas Hobbes, for example: Hey, human nature makes for
a life that nasty, brutish and short. So in the time you have on earth, you
wanna get yours, Jack.
Also Machiavelli, who is given to suggest – although he didn’t
actually write these words – the end justifies the means. (He actually said, “One
judges by the results …”)
Guess what, Michelle, the go-lows have the edge. I can’t
begin to think that most thoughtful folks will be satisfied with another moral
victory in a presidential election, this time in November 2020.
Next: Running for Your Life: Anonymous Heard From
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