Daily Dose


From the Edge of the Sea, by Rachel Carson

UNDERLYING

"Underlying the beauty of the spectacle there is meaning and significance. It is the elusiveness of that meaning that haunts us, that sends us again and again into the natural world where the key to the riddle is hidden. It sends us back to the edge of the sea, where the drama of life played its first scene on earth and perhaps even its prelude; where the forces of evolution are at work today, as they have been since the appearance of what we know as life; and where the spectacle of living creatures faced by the cosmic realities of their world is crystal clear."

From The Marginal World

Daily Dose


From The Odyssey, by Homer, translated by Robert Fagles

SO

"... So,
keep your fists to yourself, don't press your luck, don't rile me up,
or old as I am, I'll bloody your lip, splatter your chest
and buy myself some peace and quiet for tomorrow."

From Book Eighteen, The Beggar-King of Ithaca

Daily Dose


From The Story of a Soul, by St. Therese of Lisieux, translated by Michael Day

FOR EXAMPLE

"If, for example, I find my brushes all over the place when starting to paint, or if a ruler or penknife has disappeared, II have to take strong hold of myself to resist demanding them back with asperity."

From Chapter Nine, Life in Carmel

Clerihew for an Irascible Wit


NIKOLAI LESKOV

Nikolai Leskov
Considered the cost of
Being bitterly funny
Well worth friends, family, and money.

Thursday, June 27, 2019

Clerihew of Gleeful Anticipation


RICHARD DAWKINS

Among the walk-ins,
Richard Dawkins,
Spotting a priest,
Thought, "The first shall be least."

Daily Dose


From The Daughter of Time, by Josephine Tey

IF

"'If your two sons had been murdered by your brother-in-law, would you take a handsome pension from him?'
'I take it that the question is rhetorical,' Marta said, putting down her sheaf of flowers and looking round to see which of the already occupied vases would best suit their type."

From Chapter 13

Daily Dose


From Collected Poems, by Alfred Noyes

HILLS OF YOUTH

Once, on the far blue hills, 
Alone with the pine and the cloud, in those high still places; 
Alone with a whisper of ferns and a chuckle of rills, 
And the peat-brown pools that mirrored the angels’ faces, 
Pools that mirrored the wood-pigeon’s grey-blue feather, 
And all my thistledown dreams as they drifted along; 
Once, oh, once, on the hills, thro’ the red-bloomed heather 
I followed an elfin song. 


Once, by the wellsprings of joy, 
In the glens of the hart’s-tongue fern, where the brooks came leaping 
Over the rocks, like a scrambling bare-foot boy 
That never had heard of a world grown old with weeping; 
Once, thro’ the golden gorse (do the echoes linger 
In Paradise woods, where the foam of the may runs wild?) 
I followed the flute of a light-foot elfin singer, 
A god with the eyes of a child. 


Once, he sang to me there, 
From a crag on a thyme-clad height where the dew still glistened; 
He sang like the spirit of Spring in that dawn-flushed air, 
While the angels opened their doors and the whole sky listened: 
He sang like the soul of a rainbow, if heaven could hear it, 
Beating to heaven, on wings that were April’s own; 
A song too happy and brave for the heart to bear it, 
Had the heart of the hearer known. 


Once, ah, once, no more, 
The hush and the rapture of youth in those holy places, 
The stainless height, the hearts that sing and adore 
Till the sky breaks out into flower with the angels’ faces! 
Once, in the dawn, they were mine; but the noon bereft me. 
At midnight now, in an ebb of the loud world’s roar, 
I catch but a broken stave of the songs that left me 
On hills that are mine no more.


Daily Dose


From The Lost Love, by Margaret Oliphant

EVERY

"Every man has his own report to make of this wonderful life which we live day by day unconsciously forming history unawares."

From Chapter One (first line.)

Daily Dose


From Empty Streets, by Michal Ajvas, translated by Andrew Oakland

FROM

"'From the moment I set out to find you, I've become enmeshed in so many stories,' I continued. 'I've learned about pirates, monsters living in underground lakes, prophets of strange sects, inventors of the typewriter, mysterious books, evil women who change into piles of waste paper, underwater statues, South American beautiful women terrorists, and men learned in bizarre sciences. I'd begun to believe you didn't exist.'"

From Part Two, Chapter Two

Daily Dose

From These Truths: A History of the United States, by Jill Lepore

SOUNDS FAMILIAR

"Harding's administration labeled its economic program a 'return to normalcy.' It's political program was a campaign against immigration, it's cultural program an aesthetic movement known as the Colonial Revival. Both looked inward, and backward, inventing and celebrating an American heritage, a fantasy of a past that never happened."

From Chapter Ten, Efficiency and the Masses

Daily Dose


From Unfinished Business, by Tamin Bayoumi

MORE PROMISING

"A more promising view about the origins of international crises is the tendency of all investors, including banks, to herd."

From Chapter 6

Daily Dose

From You Will Not Have My Hate, by Antoine Leiris, translated by Sam Taylor

SOMETIMES

"Sometimes the barriers fall. Quietly."

From The Master of Time

Daily Dose

From Death and the Dervish, by Mesa Selimovic, translated by Bogdan Rakic and Stephen M. Dickey

LOVE

"Love is probably the only thing in the world that does not need to be explained and whose reasons need not be discovered."

From Chapter 13

Daily Dose


From The Man Without Qualities, Volume One, by Robert Musil, translated by Sophie Wilkins

THESE DAYS

"These days, with everything in the world being talked about helter-skelter, when prophets and charlatans rely on the same phrases, except for certain subtle differences no busy man has the time to keep track of, and editors are constantly pestered with alarms that someone or other may be a genius, it is very hard to recognize the true value of a manor an idea; all one can do is keep an ear cocked for the moment when all the murmurs and whispers and shufflings at the editor's door grow loud enough to be admitted as the voice of the people."

From Chapter 77, Arnheim as the Darling of the Press

Daily Dose


From A Cat, A Man, and Two Women, by Junichiro Tanizaki, translated by Paul McCarthy

WAS

"Was it then, really such a back-breaking task to win over a cat?"

From page 64, this edition

Daily Dose


From The Bridge on the Drina, by Ivo Andric, translated by Lovett F. Edwards

LAST

"The last years of the nineteenth century, years without upheavals or important events, flowed past like a broad calm river before reaching its unknown mouth."

From Chapter XVI

Daily Dose


From No Exit and Three Other Plays, by Jean-Paul Sartre, translated by Stuart Gilbert

MUCH GOOD

"Zeus: Much good they do you, your pink cheeks. For all your roses, my good man, you're no more than a sack of dung."

From The Flies, Act II, Scene One

Daily Dose

From Pygmalion, by George Bernard Shaw

EASY

"I tell you, it's easy to clean up here. Hot and cold water on tap, just as much as you like, there is. Woolly towels, there is; and a towel horse so hot, it burns your fingers. Soft brushes to scrub yourself, and a wooden bowl of soap smelling like primroses. Now I know why ladies is so clean. Washing's a treat for them."

From Act Two

Daily Dose


From The House of the Spirits, by Isabel Allende

AT SIX

"Clara was in such a hurry to make her literate that at the age of five the little girl was already reading the newspaper over breakfast and discussing the news with her grandfather. At six she had discovered the magic books in the enchanted trunks of her legendary Great-Uncle Marcos and had fully entered the world-without-return of imagination."

From Chapter Nine, Little Alba

Daily Dose


From Portrait in Sepia, by Isabel Allende

NO INTENTION

"She had no intention of hiding her state; she exhibited it, indifferent to the disturbance she caused. In the street, people tried not to look at her, as if she had some deformity, or were naked. I had never seen anything like that, and when I asked what was the matter with the lady, my grandmother Paulina explained that the poor thing had swallowed a melon."

From Part Two, 1881 - 1896

Daily Dose

From Zorro, by Isabel Allende

SUDDENLY

"Suddenly the thought of his father struck him like a blow."

From page 162

Daily Dose


From The Virgin and the Gypsy, by D. H. Lawrence

AND AGAIN

"And again the bird of her heart sank down and seemed to die."

From Chapter Six

Daily Dose


From The Body Lies, by Jo Baker

IT WAS

"It was like that for weeks, quiet, work-filled, inward; and then it wasn't."

From Trinity

Daily Dose


From To Have and Have Not, by Ernest Hemingway

OUT

"'When Bee-lips comes in, tell him to wait for me,' Harry said and went out."

From Chapter 13

Saturday, June 8, 2019

Polyester Clerihew


JOHN WATERS

Among the auteurs
John Waters
Alone thought to combine
The divine Tab Hunter with Divine.

Daily Dose


From Mr. Know-It-All: The Tarnished Wisdom of a Filth Elder, by John Waters

PIA

"Pia Zadora was brave to make Hairspray with me at the pinnacle of her screen notoriety. I'm proud that I got her good reviews for her performance as a beatnick chick. Allen Ginsberg seemed offended when I asked him for permission for Pia's character to read 'Howl' out loud in the movie. Lighten up, Allen; I wasn't making fun of the poem or Pia. Both were iconic without irony in my book. Did I bring up your unrepentant membership in NAMBLA, the long-term pedophile's rights group? No, I did not. Don't be so judgmental. Pia never was."

From Accidentally Commercial

Friday, June 7, 2019

Clerihew pour le premier homme moderne


MICHEL DE MONTAIGNE

Michel de Montaigne
Still remains
By far the greatest essayist
To ever enter in the lists.

Daily Dose

From Working: Researching, Interviewing, Writing, by Robert A. Caro

TELL

"'Tell me those wonderful stories again.'
'I can't,' Sam Houston said.
'Why not?' I asked.
'Because they never happened.'"

From "Why Can't You Do a Biography of Napoleon?"