Sunday, September 19, 2010

Patience with others is love, patience with self is hope, patience with God is faith.

"I think Tomáš Halík has produced one of the best and most beautiful responses to the new atheism, in his recent book Patience with God (Doubleday 2009). His argument is that the real difference between faith and atheism is patience. Atheists are not wrong, only impatient. They want to resolve doubt instead of enduring it. Their insistence that the natural world doesn't point to God (or to any necessary meaning) is correct. Their experience of God's absence is a truthful experience, shared also by believers. Faith is not a denial of all this: it is a patient endurance of the ambiguity of the world and the experience of God's absence. Faith is patience with God. Or as Adel Bestavros puts it (in the book's epigraph): patience with others is love, patience with self is hope, patience with God is faith."

From Benjamin Myers' excellent blog, Faith and Theology

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Street art - three pieces

One of the nice things about walking around Philadelphia is that there is lots of art - in fact, I think there is a law that every new building must include public art. Here are three that I walk past every morning.



This emaciated naked running man is in front of the new Drexel law school building. I like it, but it seems all too easy to conclude that this is an example of someone being pursued by lawyers - unless it is supposed to represent a first-year law student, feeling as though he is running desperately just to stay alive.



Also in front of the Drexel campus, Mario the Magnificent, their mascot. Perhaps it's good luck to see a dragon every morning!

And this abstract sculpture, which looks to me like the skeleton of Snuffleupagus. This morning he is eagerly greeting the morning sun, pointing his yellow nose toward its rays.


Sunday, September 12, 2010

As if with an awkward partner


Walt Whitman Bathing

After his stroke, he would walk into the woods
On sunny days and take off all his clothes
Slowly, one plain shoe
And one plain sock at a time, his good right hand
As gentle as a mother’s, and bathe himself
In a pond while murmuring
And singing quietly, splashing awhile
And dabbling at his ease, white hair and beard
Afloat and still streaming
Down his white chest when he came wading ashore
Naked and quivering.
Then he would pace
In circles, sometimes dancing
A few light steps, his right leg leading the way
Unsteadily but considerately for the left
As if with an awkward partner.

He seemed as oblivious to passersby
As he was to his bare body, which was no longer
A nursery for metaphors
Or a banquet hall for figures of self-praise
But a bedroom or a modest bed in that bedroom
Or the covers on that bed
In need of airing out in the sunlight.

He would sit down on the bank and stare at the water
For an hour as if expecting
Something to emerge, some new reflection
In place of the old.
Meanwhile, he would examine
The postures of wildflowers,
The workings of small leaves, holding them close
To his pale eyes while mumbling inaudibly.

He would dress then, helping
His left side with his right as patiently
As he might have dressed the wounded or the dead,
And would lead himself toward home like a dear companion.


David Wagoner

Lovely, isn't it? That last line, especially.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Update on my Trollope project


Well, this has been slow.

Several months ago I assigned myself the (pleasant) task of reading through all of Anthony Trollope’s novels, in order. It took me much longer than I expected to read through Trollope’s first novel, The McDermots of Ballycloran.

Some of the delay was caused by other events going on in my life, and some was just procrastination. In fact, I finished a quite a few other books while slowly reading this novel.

One reason for the slowness is simply the fact that much of the novel is written in dialect, which is interesting but somewhat taxing. Here's an example:

"But any how, Father John, if you'd come back, and yer riverence wouldn't mind for the onst jist sitting it out -- jist dhrinking a dhrop at an odd time, or colloguing a bit with owld Mr. Tierney, till we get the Captain out of that, shure they'd never be doing anything out of the way as long as yer riverence is in it."

You can see how that sort of thing slows you down.

Upon finishing the book, I did a little research on the nets, and discovered lots of interesting stuff.

For one thing, the folks who live in Drumsna, Ireland, have a website that includes “The Trollope Trail.” You can actually go see Headford House, the ruins that inspired Trollope to write his first novel. The village has just begun an annual Anthony Trollope Summer School, and that sounds like a good thing to put on my wish list.

My takeaway from this rereading of Trollope's first novel (I first read it about ten years ago) is that if it were all he had written he would be quite justly forgotten, although historians, both literary and non-literary, might be quite interested in the work. I can also see that all the themes that Trollope explores so well in his major works are here - class, money, sanity and insanity, the vagaries of romantic love, family, and particularly the one I find so compelling - the way great kindness manifests itself in unexpected and expected places, and makes life, which would otherwise be so very unbearable and tragic, worth living.

"if we each thought of ourselves as a small “i” with a sweet little dot"

This article from the New York Times examines the possible effects of the fact that the English language is the only one that capitalizes the word for self - I. Or, in technical terms, we use the majuscule "I."

I don't know if all the analysis is warranted; it is, after all, an accident caused by the fact that the word is an abbreviation of the original ich, and the fact that one letter all alone looks like an accident on a printed page.

But it's an interesting idea - especially for bloggers.