02 December 2012
15 January 2012
Voyage To Bojador
Gil Eannes stood under the arch of the harbor master’s house, looking out at the silent sea and the ship that would carry him again into the unknown.
He had departed these shores twelve times before, intent on rounding Cape Bojador and crossing into what lay beyond the end of the world. Each time he had returned in failure, with no explanation for failure to offer Prince Henry. His failure was a mystery even to himself, locked away like a secret dream.
He had departed these shores twelve times before, intent on rounding Cape Bojador and crossing into what lay beyond the end of the world. Each time he had returned in failure, with no explanation for failure to offer Prince Henry. His failure was a mystery even to himself, locked away like a secret dream.
22 December 2011
01 December 2011
01 May 2011
A post with tables
This is a post with an image on the left, and text on the right, using a table to align things. There is not telling how this will work out in the end. But it is something that is worth trying, perhaps. And when it is all done, perhaps a checklist would be useful. · Something here, and something there · With other things to remember · And a reminder to do the post-mortem |
10 April 2011
Emily's Private Language
Emily Dickinson's gem-like poems are filled with the private language of a reclusive heart, and the imagination at work in that heart is all the more striking because it is so private. But even her letters show the kind of sparks and imaginative leaps that hint at a private vision of the world we live in -- or perhaps, a vision of the world we share, but can not see without imagination.
Here's something from a letter she wrote on the occassion of her mother's death:
Here's something from a letter she wrote on the occassion of her mother's death:
There was no earthly parting. She slipped from our fingers like a flake gathered by the wind, and is now part of the drift called "the infinite."(By the way, April is "Poetry Month", and Knopf is sending out a poem each day to celebrate that. Emily's letter was part of today's edition.)
We don't know where she is, though so many tell us.
I believe we shall in some manner be cherished by our Maker—that the One who gave us this remarkable earth has the power to surprise that which He has caused. Beyond that all is silence...
Mother was very beautiful when she had died. Seraphs are solemn artists. The illumination that comes but once paused upon her features, and it seemed like hiding a picture to lay her in the grave; but the grass that received my father will suffice his guest, the one he asked at the altar to visit him all his life.
I cannot tell how Eternity seems. It sweeps around me like a sea...Thank you for remembering me. Remembrance—mighty word ...
Lovingly, Emily
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