Posted by
Rhonda Keith Stephens on Friday, May 30, 2008 8:06:42 AM
PARVUM
OPUS
Number
280
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Nature Trip
Drawing lessons, similes, metaphors, and analogies from
nature seems to be a built-in brain function, leading to poetry if you have the
talent, and prosy musings if you haven’t. After only a 5-minute turn in the
yard, I came up with three prosy musings.
||| The experimental hanging upside-down
tomato plant had all its leaves nipped off, probably by deer. But new leaves
are growing, which leads me to muse on the doggedness of life.
||| Dead is
conspicuously different, as in the dry snap of the dead grapevine. The vines
die in interesting shapes, and those shapes are fixed. I’m thinking of this as
a metaphor for our mental and maybe even emotional lives, not our bodies.
||| Masses of
Virginia creeper came up wild after Fred built an enclosed deck. The creeper
covers the screens every year, and would cover the door if we didn’t clip it
almost daily, but this year it’s spread further and higher. One patch is mixed
with the (live) grapevine, honeysuckle, and an aspiring oak. The Virginia
creeper likes to attach itself to surfaces, but in this spot the vines away
from the wall have nothing to touch, so some long tendrils are reaching out
horizontally over the grass. I don’t know how long they can reach before
drooping toward the ground. The oak probably won’t mature, at least not easily,
being crowded like that (besides which, Fred is going to prune it back). I’ve
never seen these grapevines produce edible fruit before and they won’t now
because they get little sun. The Virginia creeper could have the entire wall to
itself without the others. Honeysuckle grows wild everywhere around here and is
also very strong. The Virginia creeper and the honeysuckle met coming from two
different directions, and it’s a toss-up as to which will prevail. I think if
plants have any sense of life, they’re enjoying being tangled up in this sunny
spot, even if none will be as big as it would be alone.
Soon to appear in our yard will be
a plague of 17-year
cicadas (cicadas doesn’t sound as ominous as locusts). I
thought the big one was in 2004, but those were what they call a different
brood. The local cicada sage and College of Mount St. Joseph biology professor,
Gene
Kritsky, predicted a May 13 emergence using a computer model, but they’re
barely getting started. I haven’t seen one yet. Kritsky said,
But
then, we had the two cool weeks in April. That slowed things down. Otherwise,
owing to global warming, they would have emerged two weeks earlier than the
historical average.
(I guess he didn’t get the
memo about “climate change”.) The cicadas are later than usual because it’s
still cold for May, but they would have been earlier than usual because
of global warming. His computer model is obviously updated for global warming,
not for actual weather.
Disappeared
Disappear is an intransitive, not a transitive, verb.
This means that the action does not affect an object: He threw the ball out
of the park; he did not disappear the ball. I first heard the
transitive usage during Chile’s
Pinochet regime, when people “were disappeared”. This transitive usage also
seemed always to be passive, not active: the disappeared people, he
was disappeared, but not the government disappeared them.
I heard it
recently from one of my Chinese students, who told me that if he was caught
e-mailing something the government didn’t like, or bringing the wrong media
into the country, he could be disappeared (not, he could disappear).
Obviously
volition makes the difference, and perhaps that specific coinage was needed.
Recent editorials
about the Bodies Exhibition, which has been in a Cincinnati museum for months,
reminded me of my student. Some of those bodies might have been disappeared
people. They don’t look like they died of old age, and a 20/20 program says the
source of the bodies is suspect. (See youtube.com part 1 and part 2.)
Locally, a man named Harry Wu
spoke out against the exhibition.
I don’t
want to see the show. I know too many Chinese people. What if it were someone
you knew and loved, skin removed, organs and muscles plasticized, skeletons
playing baseball?
Briefs
||| In her entertaining Boston crime
novel, The Big Dig, Linda Barnes had her private investigator say, “I’d
tucked [a gun] secretively in my boot.” It should have been secretly. Secretive
describes a tendency of a personality; to do something secretively is to do it
in a secret manner, whether or not someone else sees. Secret means
hidden; to do something secretly means the action is concealed.
||| Not sure where I found this: Swarmy sense
of self-satisfaction. Should have been “smarmy” although “swarmy” has a
similarly creepy sound.
||| In a Found
shopping list: big axe stick. What is it? Hardware? An axe handle?
Anyway, I think “big axe” could be a genteel substitution for the common “big
a*s” anything.
Insults
David R. sent some classic insults, which must be passed on
for posterity. It would be a honor to be insulted so skillfully. I’ll feed them
to you a little at a time.
||| "He
is not only dull himself, he is the cause of dullness in others." ~ Samuel
Johnson
||| "He
had delusions of adequacy." ~ Walter Kerr
Deserve Victory
Dave DaBee posted an interesting reflection
on Memorial Day on his blog, and I replied referring to a World War II
poster of Winston Churchill pointing his finger to us like the famous Uncle Sam
picture, and ordering us to "Deserve
Victory!" We can and ought to prevail, as long as we try, not to live
down our worst moments eternally, but to live up to our highest ideals. This is
Dave’s medical blog, so note the photo of the old family burial plot and how
young everyone was at death. We are fortunate to have expectations of longer
life today.
My son Jude and virtual
daughter-in-law Kate posted a fine Memorial
Day tribute; Kate filmed, Jude introduced the story.
Finally, I want to remember Tony
Zollo, who was on the USS Intrepid aircraft carrier (my father’s ship) in WWII
in the South Pacific. On board, Tony Zollo was in a position to save all the
ship’s communiques and logs, though he wasn’t supposed to, and he used to
publish them in a newsletter, “The Mighty I”. He also wrote a book on the
Intrepid for its 50th anniversary, which you can find in the New York harbor museum shop. Mr.
Zollo died this year.
The Love That Dares to Speak Its Name and Yours Too
You probably know that the U.S. government and other
entities sometimes would not acknowledge Indians’ names, personal or tribal.
Sometimes it was merely because Europeans had difficulties pronouncing the
foreign names, and we still use their invented names, such as Nez Perce. In the
case of individuals, particularly children forced into boarding schools, the
intent was to eradicate Indian culture and autonomy, so names, religion, and
language were discarded. A Cherokee by any other name may smell as sweet, but
he may not be completely a Cherokee anymore.
If you
understand the significance of that, then you understand the California ruling
legalizing gay marriage, and why civil unions, which provided the same legal rights
to couples, didn’t satisfy the activists, including the judges of California
who overrode the majority vote in the state and forced instant cultural change
on the population. It’s important to control the language if you want to
control people, or demolish tradition.
Beatification by Photoshop
I’m not the only one who’s noticed the magazine covers
showing Obama with a halo. Some of them are collected on the obamamessiah blog. Why the
messiafication? To give him the power to forgive. He’s peddling the hope, if
you have faith in him, and charity is part of the economic package.
Safire
You can get an RSS feed to your home page from William
Safire’s column in the New York Times Magazine, “On Language”. Some old
ones are online; “Blargon”
(2006) is a good one. The newest one is “Emoticons”.
Go to the bottom of the page to find the RSS link.
______________________________________________
Trivium pursuit ~ rhetoric, grammar, and logic, or reading, writing,
and reckoning ~ Parvum
Opus
discusses language, education,
journalism, culture, and more. Parvum
Opus
by Rhonda Keith is a publication of KeithOps
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Proverbs 25:2; "Get wisdom! Even if
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Proverbs 4:7:
The poet Muriel Rukeyser said
the universe is not composed of atoms, but stories. The physicist Werner
Heisenberg said the universe is not made of matter, but music.
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