Gypsy Scholar
Brainstorming about history, politics, literature, religion, and other topics from a 'gypsy' scholar on a wagon hitched to a star.
Sunday, December 31, 2017
Saturday, December 30, 2017
Friday, December 29, 2017
Baseball Wisdom
"You can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar, but cheating don't make you no Major League material."
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
The Road to Hell is Paved: Longer Version
"The road to hell is paved with pretty good intentions, but there's about forty miles of bad road toward the end that's gone all to hell."
Labels: Hell
Tuesday, December 26, 2017
Boxing Day: Who's Favored by St. Pugnacious?
"All's fair in loving war."
Boxing Day: A holiday for thinking outside of the box . . .
Labels: Boxing Day
Monday, December 25, 2017
A New Christmas Cake and an Old Christmas Poem . . .
Christmas Cake
Christmas of 2017
Merry Christmas
to
All My Readers
I posted this pom several Christmases ago, but it's always topical this time of the year, and I deserve a day off, so here goes:
You can also find it on page 104 of my collected poems, Radiant Snow. If only there were eleven more days . . .A year brings now another Christmas nigh,Christmas Present
And were there still those twelve medieval days
To celebrate a dozen, courtly ways,
I'd greet this time without protesting sigh.
For hardly greeted is it fast foreby
And lost within that sempiternal maze,
Forever hidden from our baffled gaze,
Where every single Christmas past will lie.
And yet, one dozen Christmases to fete
Would soon be just as all forever gone
Into that same dark labyrinth of time.
Such is of every Christmas past the fate
Predictable: it ought to prompt a yawn,
But since I muse, this Christmas Present rhyme.
Labels: Christmas
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Don't Walk the Talk . . .
Wise Old Hillbilly
As a wise old hillbilly once advised me:
"Don't walk the talk if you cain't talk the walk."I'm still trying to figure out exactly what he meant by that!
My best guestimate is that he meant to say that you shouldn't do anything heroic unless you're able to brag about it.
Why?
Maybe because if you don't take credit, somebody else will.
Labels: Hillbillies
Saturday, December 23, 2017
Lucifer Possesses a Plant?
Reading Paradise Lost Herbivorously
But the Devil did have some help, from scientists, as one might have expected, for knowledge through experience (and thus also through experiment?) goes all the way back to the Plant of the Knowledge of Good and Evil:
To create their glowing plants, the MIT team turned to luciferase, the enzyme that gives fireflies their glow. Luciferase acts on a molecule called luciferin, causing it to emit light. (Anne Trafton, "Engineers create plants that glow," MIT News, December 12, 2017)We thus see that Lucifer is involved in this work of luminescent plants, as the two allusions to his name imply! But all will be for the best, as Mephistopheles tells us:
[Ich bin] Ein Teil von jener Kraft, / Die stets das Böse will und stets das Gute schafft.But the Devil could be lying . . .
[I am] Part of that power / that incessantly wills to do evil but unceasingly achieves the good. (Goethe, Faust, 1335-6)
Labels: Faust, Goethe, John Milton, Paradise Lost
Friday, December 22, 2017
Another Think Coming . . .
Another Issue to Point Out Outright, Alright?
From the folks who brought us the "I·SEOUL·U" city slogan comes this poster of Seoul utilized to attract tourists by emphasizing the city's charm, elegance, and sophistication through misspelling the last day of the week as "Saterday" (as previously noted), but even more noteworthy are those who put this celebration together, namely, those folks on the Organizing Committee of the SEOUL CHRISTMAS FESTIVAL 2017, the ones who indeed flinched not before the task of ensuring that we tourists be "subjected" to whatever that same committee has come up with as its concept of entertainment!
I showed my students this poster and got a good belly laugh out of them.
Labels: Holiday
Thursday, December 21, 2017
Vampire in my dream?
Watching over us, indeed!
Rather, surveilling us!
I was thrashing about in a dream the other night, kicking out at an evil creature threatening me and my family, a ghost of some sort, a spectral vampire - and if I'm not mistaken, specifically, The Big Hominid, spiritual alter ego of Kevin Kim!
My wife shook me awake and asked, "What are you doing?"
"Well," I said, and I began to laugh, "I was fighting 'The Ghost of Kevin Kim.'"
My wife must have stared at me in the darkness, but she said nothing, and I fell back asleep, probably to again take on my heroic role as a good, glorious knight in quest of monsters to slay . . .
Labels: Religion, Stuff and Nonsense
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Postmodern Values: Rights of Time Passages
"A broken clock is right twice a day."
"Right" about what?
Right about now.
Right you are!
But no clock is ever right because every working clock is either fast or slow, and a stopped, broken clock preserves those moments in potential. Thus is every broken clock never current, but always errant.
Labels: Postmodernism
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
Gender-Biased Wisdom
"All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy" may have its truth, but why does this proverb assume Jack's gender identity is male, namely, a "boy," when we can see for ourselves in the playing card above that this Jack is clearly into gender-bending, what with the pencil-thin mustache and the long, blond curls?
Labels: Identity
Monday, December 18, 2017
My Good Intentions . . .
Only recently did I learn that books shipped to South Korea don't reach their addressee unless the addressee's official ID number is included, which explains why I wasn't receiving the various books that I'd ordered or that friends had sent to me.
When I finally knew of this need for my ID, I ordered the book you see above, a book I'd promised to review, and which I will review as soon as I can see enough light beyond the end of this semester's dark tunnel . . .
Labels: Friends
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Friday, December 15, 2017
Postmodern Proverbs: Marriage of Convenience
"The road to hell is paved with good intentions . . . and also bad intentions."
Moral: The Cat's Paw
Hermeneutic of Dissuspicion: Know left from right, but let not your left hand know what your right hand is doing.
Conclusion: The Entirety is Incoherent.
Labels: Ethics, Gnosticism, Marriage
Thursday, December 14, 2017
Postmodern Proverbs: Early Science as Moral Reckoning
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Postmodern Proverbs: Value of Images
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Monday, December 11, 2017
Sunday, December 10, 2017
Postmodern Proverbs: Moccasin Wisdom Updated
Water Moccasin
"Don't judge a man until you have walked 1.60934 kilometers in his shoes."
Labels: Serpent
Saturday, December 09, 2017
Bliss-Fool Words of Encouragement
"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, and ends with a single step - just not the same step, unfortunately!"
(And don't walk down the middle of the road, or you'll get hit from both sides!)
Labels: Holy Wisdom
Friday, December 08, 2017
Lamé Identified . . .
I always wondered what lamé meant. Now I know. Kind of heavy-metal without the heavy . . .
Labels: Fashion
Thursday, December 07, 2017
Peeling Unappealing Apples Or Offering Outrageous Oranges
A Case of Apples and Oranges?
"A little bite of knowledge is a dangerous thing."
Labels: Forbidden Fruit
Wednesday, December 06, 2017
Contrast of Wisdoms
Korean Proverb: "We have two ears and one mouth, so we should listen more than we speak."
Jeffery's Corrective: "We have two ears and one mouth, so we should speak twice as much to catch up."
Labels: Holy Wisdom
Tuesday, December 05, 2017
Monday, December 04, 2017
Identify This Bird, Please
Some Bird or Other
Sun-Ae Hwang
My wife drew this bird and didn't have time to look up the English name, but I said no problem, that someone online would let me know . . .
Labels: Birds, Sun-Ae Hwang
Sunday, December 03, 2017
Robert D. Stevick on Sung-il Lee's Beowulf
Robert D. Stevick
I cited Stevick yesterday in words of high praise for Lee's Beowulf, but let me add a few more, these on how perfect Lee's translation choices have been. According to Stevick:
Nothing gets in the way [of the poem]. The commonest impediments to successful translation have been theories of this and that, High Principles to be upheld, or just romantic notions about "olde tyme" English poetry. Sometimes it is a choice to imitate the general sound of the original text -- two half-lines separated by syntax but linked by alliteration. The one successful instance came many, many years ago from Charles W. Kennedy, but even this text [by Kennedy] tends to accelerate unfittingly as the rhythm continues unrelenting. Sometimes it is a decision to imitate the blank verse of the Renaissance. Sometimes it may be choice of a verse-form such as nine-syllable lines defended by reasoning rather than readability. Sung-Il Lee's translation is not trammeled in any ways like these. The syllable-count is unpredictable: it is instead the phrasings that embody the verse rhythms. (Robert D. Stevick, "Foreward," in Sung-il Lee, Beowulf in Parallel Texts, Cascade Books, Eugene, Oregon, 2017, p. ix)Just the other day, I was discussing with Bill Vallicella the virtue of counting syllables vs. the virtue of measuring phrases. We didn't use exactly those terms, but that's what we were getting at. Stevick clearly comes down on the side of phrasings . . .in this instance, anyway.
Labels: Beowulf, Literary Criticism, Sung-Il Lee
Saturday, December 02, 2017
Lee Sung-il's Beowulf
Lee Sung-il
Several weeks ago, Lee Sung-il - emeritus professor of Yonsei and expert in the English language from Old English onward - sent me a copy of his translation of Beowulf. I was already aware of the greatness of his achievement, having heard him read several lines at a medievalist conference some years back.
I'm no expert on Beowulf, but I have published a couple of articles on this ancient 'Anglo-Saxon' text, so I can perhaps be allowed a point of view in claiming that Lee's is the best modern rendering of this epic poem that we have.
But don't just listen to me. Here's what the expert Robert D. Stevick wrote in his forward to the translation:
Why read this translation of Beowulf? Because there isn't a better one to be found.This text isn't just the translation. It's Beowulf in Parallel Texts, the Old English original on the left-hand page, Lee's translation on the right-hand page. The cover looks like this:
Go forth, therefore, to purchase it, and read . . .
Labels: Beowulf
Friday, December 01, 2017
For the Big Hominid . . .
Bohemian Waxwing
Sun-Ae Hwang
Kevin asked for more art, so here's another bird, one I think I haven't posted here before.
Labels: Birds