Word Cloud: GOLDEN

Word Cloud Resized

by NONA BLYTH CLOUD

A poet with an MBA from the Stanford Business School who became a Vice President at General Foods and marketed Kool-Aid? Doesn’t sound very promising, does it?

Even more damning, he’s written literary criticism, in books and articles like An Introduction to Fiction, Can Poetry Matter? and Disappearing Ink: Poetry at the End of Print Culture, in which he wrote:

The purpose of art is not to deny artifice but to manage it so well that it appears inevitable…

As long as humanity faces mortality and uses language to describe its existence, poetry will remain one of its essential spiritual resources. Poetry is an art that preceded writing, and it will survive television and video games. How? Mostly by being itself—concise, immediate, emotive, memorable, and musical, the qualities most prized in the new oral culture, which are also the virtues traditionally associated with the art…

The problem won’t be finding an audience. The challenge will be writing well enough to deserve one. Even if there are fewer readers, people will be listening.

Dana Gioia (1950 –  ) isn’t your typical Ivory Tower academic, but he’s not a “man of the people” either. His look at the current massive cultural shift from “literary poetry,” which is meant to be viewed by a reader on the printed page, to “popular poetry” which is recited aloud for an audience, as in Rap or at poetry slams, makes for interesting reading. For those of us who do still read.

I have always straddled the line between written and spoken verse. I love books and the written word, but my background is in theatre, not academia, so I respond more to poets who use rhythm and resounding words meant for the ear than poets who focus on laying out a poem on the page for a reader’s eye. I often read a poem aloud to get the feel of it in my mouth, as well as listening for its subtler meaning.

Dana Gioia is also a Californian, so we share its landscape, one that is not commonly found in literary poetry. There’s something about the West Coast – all the miles of chalk desert and lush forest, the rugged coastline and bright-sand beaches, and always the biggest thing under our sky, our ever-never-changing Ocean – that calls for waves of sound layered with silence.

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In this poem, Gioia makes you see it, but if you listen, you can also hear the waiting silence of our August:

California Hills in August

I can imagine someone who found
these fields unbearable, who climbed
the hillside in the heat, cursing the dust,
cracking the brittle weeds underfoot,
wishing a few more trees for shade.

An Easterner especially, who would scorn
the meagerness of summer, the dry
twisted shapes of black elm,
scrub oak, and chaparral, a landscape
August has already drained of green.

One who would hurry over the clinging
thistle, foxtail, golden poppy,
knowing everything was just a weed,
unable to conceive that these trees
and sparse brown bushes were alive.

And hate the bright stillness of the noon
without wind, without motion.
the only other living thing
a hawk, hungry for prey, suspended
in the blinding, sunlit blue.

And yet how gentle it seems to someone
raised in a landscape short of rain—
the skyline of a hill broken by no more
trees than one can count, the grass,
the empty sky, the wish for water.

California dry hills

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ON THIS DAY: August 11, 2016

August 11th is

Ingersoll quote lifting others

Ingersoll Day *

Play in the Sand Day

Presidential Joke Day *

Son and Daughter Day

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

Chad – Independence Dayinternational Flags

Japan – Mountain Day *

Sweden – Goteborg:
Way Out West Festival

United Kingdom – Hampton:
Boomtown  Fair

United States – Scranton PA:
The Peach Music Festival

Zambia –  Tripartite Election Day

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On This Day on History

3114 BC – The Mesoamerican Long Count calendar used by the Mayans begins

1833 – * Robert INGERSOLL born, “The Great Agnostic,” politician and famous orator, advocate for separation of church and state, free thought, and humanism. Gave the eulogy at his friend Walt Whitman’s funeral. 


robert-ingersoll-quote churches divide upon politics


1860 – First successful American silver mill opens in Virginia City NV

MORE! – for The Beatles Help! and Presidential Joke Day, click 

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ON THIS DAY: August 10, 2016

August 10th is

Lion called Christian

Lazy Day

National S’Mores Day

Smithsonian Charter Day

World Lion Day

“I was not the lion, but it fell upon me to
give the lion’s roar.” – Winston Churchill

HR 3546 / S 2541
The Big Cat Public Safety Act puts an end to back yard
breeding and exploitation of big cats and their cubs in America.
In U.S. – Please ask your members of congress to champion this bill

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

Brazil – São Luís:international Flags
Bumba Meu Boi
(final week, folkloric festival)

Czech – Prague:
Brutal Assault Fest

Germany – Luhmühlen:
A Summer’s Tale Festival

Nicaragua – Managua:
Dejada de Santo Domingo de Guzmán

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On This Day in HISTORY

1519 – Ferdinand Magellan’s five ships embark from Seville to circumnavigate the globe

1675 – The foundation stone laid for the Royal  Observatory Greenwich in London


royal-observatory-greenwich


1793 – The Musée du Louvre officially opens in Paris

MORE! The Smithsonian, FDR,  Candid Camera and Madonna, click

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On the Cover of the Rolling Stochastic Terrorism

By ann summerscpxz_5zwcaagzjy_1_

So whenever threats come up and/or actual events, this term gets tossed around: stochastic terrorism is an imprecise idea that while easily uttered and sounding scientistic, does not contain sufficient objectivity in a democracy that demands actionable expectation of intended, likely and imminent violence. Did Trump incite violence or more technically incite (stochastic) terrorism and did he do it via media? Are we becoming the unwitting agents in the continuation of violence.

In Wilmington, N.C., on Tuesday, Mr. Trump said: “Hillary wants to abolish—essentially abolish the Second Amendment. By the way, if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do folks. Although the Second Amendment people—maybe there is, I don’t know.”

In a general election campaign, Mr. Trump’s loose talk is treated differently. Donald Trump is the presidential nominee of a major political party. He is one of two people in this country with a realistic chance of becoming commander-in-chief of the world’s most powerful military. His words have greater weight and consequence. What was entertaining is understandably being called unpresidential.

blogs.wsj.com/…

And Trump’s own response…

When is the media going to talk about Hillary’s policies that have gotten people killed, like Libya, open borders, and maybe her emails?

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Posted in 2016 Election, Art, Crime, Free Speech, Jurisprudence, Law Enforcement, Media, Political Science, Politics, Presidential Elections, Propaganda, Society, Terrorism, Terrorists, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

ON THIS DAY: August 9, 2016

August 9th is

BookHeart2

National Book Lover’s Day*

National Veep Day

Rice Pudding Day

International Day of World’s Indigenous People

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

China – Hong Kong:
Qi Xi Festival (7 Sisters)international Flags

Grenada – Carnival Tuesday

Singapore – National Day

South Africa – Women’s Day

Sri Lanka – Kandy:
Esala Perahera (Tooth Fest)

Suriname: Dag der Ihheemsen
(Indigenous People’s Day)

United States – Providence, RI:
Rhode Island International Film Festival

Zimbabwe – Defense Forces Day

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On This Day in HISTORY

1173 – Construction begins on cathedral campanile, now called Leaning Tower of Pisa


Leaning-Tower-Of-Pisa


1483 – First Mass celebrated in the Sistine Chapel in Rome

1790 – Columbia returns to Boston from 3 year voyage, first ship to carry American flag around the world

1831 – First steam locomotive leaves Schenectady for Albany in New York state

1854 – Henry David Thoreau publishes Walden

1859 – Nathan Ames patents the escalator

MORE! For Mary Poppins, Betty Boop, and “Smokey the Bear” click

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ON THIS DAY: August 8, 2016

August 8th is

Bowling Daycats together

Dalek Day

Earth Over Shoot Day

Happiness Happens Day

International Cat Day

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

Cambodia – Kazantip Republic Festinternational Flags

Canada – (last day)
Salmo BC: Shambhala Music Festival

France – Lorient, Brittany
Festival Interceltique

Grenada – Carnival Monday

Tanzania – Wakulima ya Nane Nane

Zimbabwe – Heroes’ Day

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On This Day in HISTORY

1576 – Cornerstone laid for Tycho Brahe’s Uraniborg observatory on the island of Hven


Tycho Brahe’s Uraniborg observatory


1709 – Bartolomeu de Gusmão shows lifting power of hot air at the court of King John V of Portugal to get support for his airship project

1794 – Joseph Whidbey’s expedition searches for the Northwest Passage in Alaska

1844 – Brigham Young is chosen as new leader of the Mormons

1876 – Thomas Edison patents his mimeograph

MORE! For Wilbur Wright, Doctor Who, and Janis Joplin, click

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The Coffee Shop: Mad Englishman Near the Midnight Sun

The Coffee Shop is an open thread-style discussion forum for human interest news of the day.

—oooOooo–

Sea Wolf


There are several hosts, each host being responsible for picking a “theme of the day” and starting the discussion. But in an open thread, there’s no hard and fast rule about staying on topic, especially if you have a personal story burning a hole in your pocket trying to escape.

Pictures and videos are welcome in the comments.  If photos are used, please be sure you own the copyright. We would rather see your personal photos anyway, instead of random stuff copied from the internet.  Our only request is that if you use pictures or videos, take pity on those who don’t have broadband, and don’t post more than two or three in a single comment.

Coffee cup

This is an Open Thread. Grab your cup, pull up a chair, sit a spell and share what’s on your mind today.



This morning, I’m channeling our friend Joy of Fishes!

It must be a requirement that wildlife photographers are a bit mad. Then there’s the whole “Mad Dogs and Englishmen” thing. Put them together, and you get Bertie Gregory, star of NatGeo’s first You Tube series, shot on spectacular Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada.

Here’s the first episode:



I thought Sea Wolves were pirates — who knew?

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A Matter of TIME

time_travel spiral


We Homo Sapiens are the only inhabitants of Planet Earth who are obsessed with Exact Time. The rest of Earth’s creatures are only concerned with the Three “S” Time Telling System: the Stomach, the Sun, and the Seasons.

1)    Stomach: Am I Hungry? Time to Eat!
2)    Sun: Rising or Setting? Time to Sleep – or Get Up!
3)    Seasons:
a) Summer?  Time to Fatten up!
b) Fall?  Time to Gather Food – or Head South!
c) Winter?  Time to Slow Down – or Take a Nap!
d) Spring?  Time to Head North – or Wake up!


We’re getting closer to that time of year where it’s getting dark “earlier.” Even if you didn’t notice that, there are “Back to School” sales everywhere to remind you. But schools in the Los Angeles area are starting earlier every year – classes for most kids begin in August now. I wonder what that will do to the children’s biological rhythms in years to come?

There are two whole fields of study about this: Chronobiology, which is a study of our natural “internal clock,” and Medical Chronobiology, which basically studies the fallout from messing with our natural rhythms: “biological rhythm investigations of rhythm-dependencies in the kinetics and dynamics of medications-chronopharmacology- and chronotherapeutics-optimization of drug effects and safety by timing to rhythm determinants…..genetic and molecular mechanisms of biological timekeeping, melatonin and pineal gland rhythms, as well as on the chronobiology and chronotherapy of cardiovascular, pulmonary, ulcer and other diseases.”

http://www.researchgate.net/…

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ON THIS DAY: August 7, 2016

August 7th is

PortlandHeadLight-PortlandHarborMaine

Sea Serpent Day

National Purple Heart Day

Professional Speakers Day

National Lighthouse Day

Particularly Preposterous Packaging Day

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

International Assistance Dog Week
(first Day)international Flags

Columbia – Battle of Boyacá Day

Cote d’Ivoire – Independence Day

Germany – Berlin: (last day)
International Berlin Beer Festival

India: Naag Panchami
(why did it have to be snakes?)

Malaysia – Sarawak: (last day)
Rainforest World Music Festival

Sweden –
Visby: Medeltidsveckan
(Middle Ages Festival)

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On This Day in HISTORY

1420 – Construction of Santa Maria del Fiore dome begins in Florence, Italy


Cupola_di_santa_maria_del_fiore Firenze


1782 – General George Washington designates the first American military decoration, the Badge of Military Merit, for “any singularly meritorious action” now known as the Purple Heart for its shape and color

Purple Heart medal

1789 –  U.S. Congress approves  act for “establishment and support of Lighthouse, Beacons, Buoys, and Public Piers” – Two hundred years later, Congress designates
August 7th as National Lighthouse Day

1789 – U.S. Department of War established, later becomes Department of Defense

1819 – Simón Bolívar defeats the Spanish in the Battle of Boyacá

MORE! For Mata Hari, Garrison Keillor and Thor Heyerdahl, click

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ON THIS DAY: August 6, 2016

August 6th is

sandcastle

Fresh Breath Day

Hangover Day

Mustard Day

Sandcastle Day

Root Beer Float Day

Wiggle Your Toes Day

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WORLD FESTIVALS AND NATIONAL HOLIDAYS

Andorra – Andorra La Vella Fesitval

Bolivia – National Dayinternational Flags

El Salvador –
Celebración del Divino Salvador del Mundo

Jamaica – Independence Day

Japan – Hiroshima Day

Netherlands –
Amsterdam: Dekmantel Festival

United States –
Bangor ME:  Rise Above Fest
Happy Valley OR: Pickathon
Millmont PA: Bear’s Picnic

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On This Day in HISTORY

1538 – Bogotá, Columbia, is founded by Gonzalo Jiméniez de Quesada

1787 – Sixty proof sheets of the U.S. Constitution are delivered to Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia PA

1809 – Alfred Tennyson, future British Poet Laureate and Lord, is born


alfred-lord-tennyson-quote


MORE! For Lucille Ball, Voting Rights and Pink Floyd, just click

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