Month: June 2006

  • Fine Art Friday

    La Petite Lavandiere
    Victor Gabriel Gilbert (1847-1933)

    La Petite Vendeuse
    Victor Gabriel Gilbert

    Victor Gabriel Gilbert is a lesser known artist who painted a lot a scenes from Paris street cafes.  Why am I drawn to these pictures? I love the look of purpose on the little washerwoman's face.  I've never had a daughter (until my son married) - the learning of grown up tasks by practicing them as a child appeals to me.  Finally, I'm a sucker for  outdoor French market scenes, particularly the baskets of produce.

    If you are posting a picture today, leave a comment to let me know.  Even if you're not xanga (xanga-schmanga - I wish it were easier) you can set up an identity in two minutes and let me know.  I love looking at your fine art offerings!

  • Fasten My Heart

    From a little Lutheran Book of Prayer for Wednesday morning:

    Let me not devote my efforts today to purposes that are unworthy;

    But, Lord, fasten my heart and hope on the life that is in Thee and let my striving and my desires be directed to the treasures of Thy love.

    Amen.

  • Summer Reading Sampler

    Here's a few lovely little bits from my reading:

    From Every Little Thing by James Herriot

    Siegfried's words at the beginning of our partnership came back to me. "Our profession offers unparalleled opportunities for making a chump of yourself."

    From The Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis, on Temptation

    Don't underestimate the power of a temptation.  Don't overestimate your power to resist temptation...Yes, temptations are often useful, whether they come in small packages or large.  But how can this be?  They bring us low, purge, scourge, and school us in the fire; that's to say, they scare the living daylights out of us.

    We do have some success in the fight.  But as one temptation or tribulation is dispatched, another soon takes its place.  Many seek to flee temptation altogether.  Alas, the escape route is clogged, and the refugee is destined to succomb!

    Advancing to the rear, then, isn't the answer.  We can't hope to conquer that way.  But through spiritual cunning--that's to say, through Patience and True Humility--we become the stronger, and the tempters have to try harder.

    From Temperament by Stuart Isacoff

    Below is a picture of a keyboard designed with 27 keys to the octave from Martin Mersenne's Harmonie universelle. Isn't it wild? Dividing the octave into 12 equal steps is a relatively new thing.  If you would like to hear how some music sounded before equal temperament you can listen here. More info on the book is here

    I can't find the reference, but I recall that the organ built in Spurgeon's church in London was built with multiple keys, similar to the pciture below.

    My favorite quote from this book is from dear Martin Luther.

    Luther had praised the music of complexity, in which nature is "sharpened and polished by art."  In its intricacy, he wrote in 1538, "one begins to see with amazement the great and perfect wisdom of God in His wonderful work of music, where one voice takes a simple part, and around it sing three, four, or five other voices, leaping, springing round about, marvelously gracing the simple part, like a square dance in heaven... He who does not find this an inexpressible miracle of the Lord is truly a clod, and is not worthy to be considered a man."



  • Detoxing the Soul

    This verse (I Peter 1:22) from yesterday's sermon:

    Seeing that you have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren, see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently.

    Here it is again in a paraphrase:

    Now you can have real love for everybody because your souls have been cleansed from selfishness and hatred when you trusted Christ to save you; so see to it that you really do love each other warmly, with all your hearts.

                                                           ~   ~   ~   ~   ~   ~

    Saturday we had a garage sale at/with Curt's folks.  There were about 15 sales in one neighborhood.  During a lull Curt and his dad walked around to see what bargains might be found.  Eureka!  Three CD's for $4 each, all in the original shrinkwrap: Gordon Lightfoot and two YoYo Ma CDs.  Gordon Lightfoot was someone we listened to in the early years of our marriage.  The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald is a beautiful ballad.  Does anyone remember Gordon Lightfoot?

  • Fine Art Friday


    "Our Country Garden" by Robert Duncan

    Robert Duncan is one of my favorite living artists.  I enjoy the familial aspect of his paintings (his family members are his favorite subjects).  They resonate with warmth and beauty. This scene could be almost anywhere five miles from my home.  You can see other Robert Duncan works here

    "My paintings
    reflect the things I love. My subjects are usually family members and
    friends in neighborhood surroundings. I also paint out of a concern that
    we are losing sight of the things that have a profound impact on our souls
    and well-being. We seem to be in a mad rush to progress, but there are
    some things that haven't been improved upon for centuries. If each of
    us contributes just a little, we can preserve the things that matter.
    We all need nature in our lives. We need fresh air and open spaces. I
    think just to drive by a farm and see cows grazing in a field does a soul
    good. And children need to be nurtured in loving families."

    -- Robert Duncan

    Be sure to check out the Millet at Btolly's blog.

  • A Favorite Find

    Our strawberries are coming on strong and the raspberries are abundant for the first time since we planted them two years ago.  I have experimented with many different pectin products and this, dear reader, is my favorite.  Don't you just love the fresh, sassy taste of freezer jam?  What I love about Ball's Fruit Jell is its low proportion of sugar to fruit: 1 1/2 cups sugar to 4 cups fruit.  That's the best I've found so far.  One small spoonful of jam mixed into a dish of plain yogurt....heaven!  It's on sale this week for 99 cents. (doing cartwheels in my mind...)

  • What's An Austen Reader Supposed To Do?

    Anthony Trollope (1815-1882)

    So you love Jane Austen.  You've read all her novels and plan to re-read them with great pleasure the rest of your days.  When you come to the end of Austen, you always have an appetite for...more!  You start in with the Brontes and read through their works.  This is a good thing.  There are many, many good books in different genres, true.  But there are times you want a nice cup of tea and a little touch of Britain in the night. 

    It was because Anthony Trollope's name was said in the same sentence as Austen's, and from a friend I trust, that I decided to go exploring.  I've only read one book (audio book), so I'm no Trollope expert.  But--BUT-- I thoroughly enjoyed An Old Man's Love, which was unfortunately the extent of our rural library's Trollope collection.  This work seems a little obscure: Frank Magill's Cyclopedia of World Authors didn't list the title among Trollope's principal works.

    An Old Man's Love was a sweet romance, a lovely love story.  Here's the gist: A young woman, Mary Lawrie (20 something), is left orphaned.  A friend of her father's, the 50 year old bachelor, William Whittlestaff decides to take her in and provide for her.   He  falls in love with her and asks her to marry him.  She hesitates and acknowledges to him that her heart is with a young man, John Gordon, from whom she has not heard a word in three years, and with whom no words of love were ever exchanged.  Whittlestaff presses Mary, confident that her infatuation was a childish one and sure that he can give her a good life.  She reluctantly agrees and decides to do her duty to the man who has been so kind to her, a man for whom she has genuine affection. Within hours of giving her promise to marry Whittlestaff, John Gordon, home from the diamond mines, knocks on the door asking for Mary.

    The ensuing conflict between Mary's love for Gordon and her promise given to Whittlestaff occupies the rest of the book. A promise is a promise! Trollope portrays so accurately that inner impulse to be a martyr  that seems so noble at night, but sticks like a bone in the throat in the daylight. Hearing the tale unfold was like riding a see-saw; it was impossible to guess how it would come out.  Each man is so certain that it would be in Mary's best interest to be with himself. There are two Dickensian characters, the housekeeper and the vicar, which add comic relief to the drama.
     
    From An Old Man's Love "Here he was wont to sit and read his Horace.  And think of the affairs of the world as Horace depicted them.  Many a morsel of wisdom he had here made his own.  And to then endeavor to think whether the wisdom had in truth been taken home by the poet to his own bosom, or had only been a glitter of the intellect, never appropriated for any useful purpose."

    "A novel should give a picture of common life enlivened by humor and sweetened by pathos."  Anthony Trollope

    "His great, his inestimable merit was a complete appreciation of the usual." Henry James on Anthony Trollope.

    It isn't the satisfying protein of Austen, but we still need some carbs in our life, and Trollope is a good carb.

  • Google Earth

    One of my son's favorite college professors taught geography.   "He would come into class with a newspaper, read a short news story, and tell you all the geographical background of that story," Carson enthused. 

    I remember the "aha" moment when the significance of  Hannibal crossing the alps with elephants sunk in.  It sure helps to know his starting point and destination.

    Here's a great teaching (and learning!) tool:  Google Earth.  If you google "Google Earth" in Google you will see the link for a free download.   Then you will  be able to see satellite images of any place on the planet.  Metropolitan areas have sharper pictures that you can zoom in on.  Rural areas tend to be fuzzier. 

    When you read a book with geographical references, you could type the town in Google Earth and see a bird's-eye view of it.  You can see obstacles that confronted someone going from point A to point B. 

    I've had the most fun with friends looking at the places where they grew up.  We would type in their address and see what it looks like today.  Collin typed in Yankee Stadium just for kicks. Too much fun!

  • Book Talk

    Update on Summer Reading Challenge:

    Temperament  I'm on the last chapter.  This is the most challenging book I've read in a while.  When I'm finished I'll write a short review.

    1776  Excellent book.  I'm glad I read it .

    Every Living Thing  Halfway through, and I've enjoyed every page.

    84, Charing Cross Road and The Legacy of Q by Helene Hanff  These weren't on my original list but, oh my!, these books are like savoring rich spoonfuls of homemade ice cream to a bibliophile.  I do love English literature.  I do dream about taking a literary tour of England.  Someday...

    Imitation of Christ   Good, slow reading.

    This picture is for Janie: she asked us to take of picture of a stack of books because she enjoys enlarging them and looking at them.  I'm the same way.  I've taken a magnifying glass to a picture of an author in front of books and peeked at his/her collection.  When I met a new pastor in town I exlaimed "you have Owen on your shelf!" (which I gleaned from said magnifying glass and a newspaper article.)

    This shelf is near our entry.  It is a sort of  "holding tank" for books.  The bottom shelf is our daily reading.  Library books and tapes often go on top so we can get them back on time.  Other books are ones that are either borrowed, recently purchased, or current reads.  In short, they don't have a permanent home on another bookcase.  On an organized day (read: company is coming) the middle shelf has pictures on it and the top is cleared off.   
    The picture on the left is a photo of a local river meandering through a canyon.

    Can anyone tell me how to post a picture so it can be enlarged?

  • Brus "Kate" ah!

    My dear Katie (friend, but I'd adopt her in a minute) has influenced my cooking far out of proportion to her young age.   It's always a joy to eat in her home or to have her join us at our table.  She serves a Bruschetta that is stunning in its blend of flavors. 

    My DH and I love this. We don't just like it a little bit.  We're crazy about this stuff.  With tomatoes coming on I'm looking forward to many reasons to make it.  I've always pronounced it "brew-SHET-ah" until my SIL Valeri, the Italian student in her spare time, corrected me: an Italian would say "brew-SKAY-tah," lingering a little on the SKAY.  Well, hunky-dory by me!  I have two friends: Katie and Kate, and saying this lovely little concoction in correct Italian reminds me of them both!

    Katie's Bruschetta

    1 loaf Italian bread
    8 garlic cloves

    1 pound tomatoes, chopped
    1 T red onion, diced
    1 T fresh basil, chopped
    4 oz feta cheese, crumbled
    2 T olive oil
    2 tsp balsamic vinegar
    1/4 tsp each: salt and pepper

    We skip the bread, unless we're trying to be civilized with company.  It's better made up and cooled in the refrigerator for several hours, but who can wait?  Curt likes to alternate bites of a sandwich with bites of bruschetta.   It tastes fabulous on top of a green salad, or as a dip with veggies.  But I like it best by itself.