Look what I found!!! This is HUGE!
The British Library’s feature Turning the Pages
Oh, I am sooooo happy that we now have DSL. This is a treasure trove of exploration.
Look what I found!!! This is HUGE!
The British Library’s feature Turning the Pages
Oh, I am sooooo happy that we now have DSL. This is a treasure trove of exploration.
It’s peculiar, I know, but I’m fascinated with funeral music. I’ve been collecting selections for my own funeral for decades, beginning with my all time favorite: For All the Saints, by Vaughn Williams. After Ronald Reagan’s service I watched We Were Soldiers simply to hear the striking, majestic music in the recessional. I was saddened, indeed, when the paper came Tuesday and I realized that we had missed President Ford’s service.
We watched excerpts of the Washington Cathedral service Tuesday, pointing to people we recognized and remembering the political world of our high school days. I appreciated Tom Brokaw’s eulogy, how he mused on football as a metaphor for life. My heart lurched when Susan Ford Bales read from the book of James, her voice on the edge of control. But on the whole, we missed all the good music.
I started sniffing around the internet and found the program for the service. I love organ music and would like to collect more this year. I’m printing out the prelude and hunting down these pieces on Amazon to listen to parts. Marcel Dupré is a new composer to me, but I surely like what I’ve heard thus far.
Minnesota Public Radio has limited coverage of the funeral. If you are in for an exquisite, absolutely fabulous musical experience do this: Download the state funeral (takes less than a minute) and move the clip position to 42:45 so you can hear The King of Love My Shepherd Is.
The best way to listen to this is to open a new tab and follow along with the words on the program. The organ accompanies the singers the first two verses and then drops out as they sing Perverse and foolish, oft I strayed. The minimal, etherial harmonies on the next verse match the words In death’s dark vale perfectly.
The organ re-enters with the last verse in a triumphal reharmonization. Goosebumps! Major goosebumps!
It doesn’t get any better, musically speaking, this side of paradise.
One of the joys of looking and listening is discovering obscure connections.
I’m listening to a Teaching Company course on Johannes Brahms. I can’t say enough wonderful things about Professor Robert Greenberg’s music courses. Greenberg teaches in such a lively, entertaining manner that his subjects breath and pulse and truly come alive.
Brahm’s Quartet for Four Voices and piano, Op. 31, No. 2, Teasing, based on the poem Teasing by Josef Wenzig has the men singing several lines followed by the women’s response. Here are the lyrics:
It's true, my dear, I am now courting,
and I will establish you as my wife;
you will be mine, my dear, truly mine,
and even if you don't also want it.
"Then I'll become a dove with a white form -
I will fly from you, fly into the wood,
and so I may not be yours, may not be yours:
that hour will never come."
I have a flintlock that can fire quickly -
I'll shoot the dove down in the wood;
You will be mine, my dear, truly mine,
and even if you don't also want it.
"Then I'll become a little fish, a golden fish -
I'll spring into the fresh water;
and so I may not be yours, may not be yours:
that hour will never come."
I have however a net that fishes very well;
I will catch me this golden fish in the water.
You will be mine, my dear, truly mine,
and even if you don't also want it.
"Then I'll become a hare, full of swiftness -
and run in the fields, the broad fields.
and so I may not be yours, may not be yours:
that hour will never come."
I have however a hound that's smart and fine;
he'll catch me that hare in the fields.
You will be mine, my dear, truly mine,
and even if you don't also want it.
Are you a Margaret Wise Brown fan? (If not, you should be!) Do you recognize The Runaway Bunny?
The book continues in the same vein. It’s a delightful book to read aloud to a young child, making the little bunny’s voice high and squeaky and the mother’s voice calm and low. It captures the pull and push of budding independence and the security of a mother’s love. I sure like the theme much better in the context of a mother’s love than as talk between a man and a woman.
Who knew that you would find a German Lieder in classic children’s literature? Isn’t that just plain fun?
How do you respond to these quotes? Do you agree that we are hopeless without God’s mercy? Is enjoyment of food ominous? Is it wrong to eat for any other reason than to preserve health? Does his struggle strike a chord with you?
I find Augustine’s grasp of the heart issues involved with overeating very helpful. Dependence on God’s mercy, grace and strength is essential to controlling bodily desires. The second quote reminds me of the maxim “Do you eat to live or live to eat?” While I don’t view enjoyment of food as a menace, I know that the enjoyment factor is often the reason why overeating has stolen upon this servant.
I would love to come to a place where I eat in moderation six days a week (it is work in my mind – you know, being moderate) and feast on the Lord’s Day, celebrating His deliverance.
There is a lot to process in these words of Augustine. I’d love to hear your thoughts.
The first football game I watched this season was the Fiesta Bowl last night. I’m convinced that it is The Best football game I’ll ever see. Boise State (the good guys) beat Oklahoma 43-42 in overtime. Writers will be scrambling for adjectives to describe the range of emotions both teams experienced during the four hours of drama. 21 points were scored in the last 86 seconds of regulation play!! You can read a recap here. After the daring and dramatic two-point conversion, using a trick play, Boise State remained undefeated. Their QB grew up 1 1/2 hours away from our home, so there is some euphoria over a local boy turned hero.
The player who ran in the winning play, Ian Johnson, was being interviewed immediately after the game. A cheerleader was nestled under his arm, grinning and looking at the camera. My daughter-in-law looked at me and asked what I had been wondering, “Do you think that’s his girlfriend or just some cheerleader who wants more air time?” Next thing, as the nation is focused on him, he takes a knee and asks her to marry him!! “Uh, I can’t be sure, but it looks like she’s his girlfriend,” I replied.
So ends my sports blog. Tomorrow: Diet advice from St. Augustine.
We departed from the usual home-with-a-DVD style and celebrated New Year’s Eve at a party. This morning my husband told me that we were the oldest ones there. !!!!! My, my, my. We joined several families and took over a lovely restaurant which is closed during the winter season. A local young man invited a score of NSA (New Saint Andrews) students and grads to join in the festivities. Musicians, good ones, abounded and we had a great time of listening and singing, chatting, and game playing. Nourishing soups and crusty breads took the chill off the evening.
I met a young lady whose father is famous. Instead of the potentially wearisome question, “Are you so and so’s daughter?” I delighted in mentioning ever-so-casually, “Your aunt is my friend.” Her jaw dropped. It was the niece of Dana at Hidden Art. Now, I’m easily amused; but this is the closest I’ve gotten to meeting one of my online friends in real life (is IRL an acronym?). I know, a niece in Oregon in not the same as the aunt in Georgia. But it was a delightful connection and it was fun to be fans together of a lovely lady who, in my mind, is the hallmark of the modern gracious southern lady.
One of my resolutions this year is to improve my posture. Slumping is so unattractive; I tend to slump, especially at the computer. I recently learned a great tip from an intern choir director. Lift both hands straight above your head. Lower your arms but keep your shoulders and chest in the same position. It is a great posture refresher. A dear lady named Precious, who employed me to clean her house when I was in the 8th grade, used to admonish me, “Look at the third story, Carol! Keep your shoulders back and your chin up.” Can you recommend any other exercises for good posture?

Sung to the tune of Greensleeves, author unknown
The old year now away is fled, the new year now is entered;
Then let us now our sins downtread, and joyfully all appear.
Merry be the holiday, and let us run with sport and play,
Hang sorrow, cast care away, God send you a Happy New Year!
And now with New Year’s gifts each friend unto each other they do send;
God grant we may our lives amend, and that the truth may appear.
Like the snake cast off your skin of evil thoughts and wicked sin,
To amend this new year begin, God send us a Merry New Year!
Sophia Kramskaya Reading, 1863 by Ivan Nikolayevich Karmskoy
A humorous quote on reading lists from Emma by Jane Austen
CURRICULUM reading:
CHALLENGE reading
CULTIVATING reading
COMFORT AND JOY
CREATIVITY
CURIOSITY
CHILDREN’S BOOKS
Each year I like to read a book by Austen, Dickens, C.S. Lewis and David McCullough. Add to that list Anthony Trollope and Wendell Berry. I wish there was a G.K. Chesterton included on this list, but I don’t think I’m up to reading Calvin’s Institutes and Orthodoxy in the same year. I have a book of Chesterton’s essays that I can dip into to assuage my GKC thirst. Rosemary Sutcliff is one of my favorite children’s writers – I’m excited to plan to read five of her books this year.
I want to thank Janie at Seasonal Soundings for the inspiration to be more intentional in my reading. There is something accountable, shall we say, about putting into print your intentions. Like dear Emma, I’ve always been meaning to read more.
Do you have a book you’d recommend? The list can be amended, don’t you know…..
I’m quite excited about A Natural History of Latin. It seems an essential book for a homeschool parent wanting to know more about Latin. The intended audience is those not familiar with Latin; it’s very accessible. I’ll read more soon and give y’all some quotes.
The upright book to the left is Andrée Seu’s latest book, Normal Kingdom Business. If you’ve read her incredible writing in World magazine, you will enjoy Mindy Withrow’s interview of Andrée here. The upright book to the right is an unparalleled delight, Quotable Quotes,The Book Lover. At the lower bottom is Cordelia Underwood by Van Reid. If ever there was a modern day Charles Dickens with more humor than pathos, it would be Van Reid. I consider him one of the best kept secrets in modern fiction. The two oversized books, Italy, A Beautiful Cookbook and France, A Beautiful Cookbook are part of the “Beautiful Cookbook” series put out by Borders. These books are just stunning. I must show you more:
My husband is just like Alsace-Lorraine: solid, rugged, joyful!

There’s a good selection of Wendell Berry and Anthony Trollope. Scarlet Music is a historical novel about Hildegard of Blingen. George Grant wrote one line about Isaac and His Devils and that was incentive enough for me to order it! Tucked next to Wendell Berry is Dorothy Sayer’s The Mind of the Maker. Out in front is Kristin Lanvansdatter, George MacDonald’s Phantastes and two Dover books full of quotations.
The photo of my grandson Gavin deserves a close-up don’t ya think? It was a Christmas gift from my dear friend Katie.
These are garage sale bargains. My daughter in-law spied them, nudged me and pointed. There was no price indicated. I asked the owner and tears came to her eyes. “If you would like them, you can have them. None of my children wants them.” I gave her a token bill and took them. The blue set is the works of Dumas; the green set is Dickens. They aren’t the complete works but the type is readable and large enough for my eyes.
Finally, discoveries from our small, rural, local library. An unabridged reading of Jane Austen’s Emma on CD. And a lovely book discovered while walking the stacks. I’m a sucker for any book that begins with “Oxford Book of”. The Oxford Book of Ages is a collection of quotes for all the ages of our life. It would be a marvelous resource to have close by when you are sending birthday greetings.
I’m ready to start putting together my reading list for 2007 which I’ll post in the next few days.