"The best thing for being sad," replied Merlyn [to young Arthur]... "is to learn something.
That is the only thing that never fails.
"You may grow old and trembling in your anatomies, you may lie awake at night listening to the disorder of your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world around you devastated by evil lunatics, or know your honor trampled in the sewers of baser minds.
There is only one thing for it then--to learn.
"Learn why the world wags and what wags it.
That is the only thing which the mind can never exhaust, never alienate, never be tortured by, never fear or distrust, and never dream of regretting.
Learning is the thing for you."--T. H. White, The Once and Future King (1958)
I'd brought home a donated early edition of this book a while ago.
I haven't read it since I was young, when I loved the stuff about the boy Arthur and Merlyn, his teacher.
I totally missed its grown-up aspects ("the world around you devastated by evil lunatics" ? ), and that it is "a
sad and lonely and beautiful book that transforms the old and venerable
Arthurian legend into a philosophical examination of the uses of power
and violence, both personally and politically. It is a little painful to
read in places, because White’s loneliness and confusion feel so
palpable..."
--"Why The Once and Future King Is Still the Best King Arthur Story Out There", Constance Grady, Vox, 2017.
____________________
Sunday noon.
I'm sitting outside while bink naps in my bed. She came over for our usual Sunday morning coffee, but she was so sleep-deprived she was almost nonsensical, and I insisted lie down for a while.
She hates naps, but she was so tired she agreed--and immediately fell asleep.
But before she laid down, she dressed Fog City in a summer play suit. (Sometimes the bears like to wear clothes, and sometimes they don't.)
So that's a good day's work.
I got back on Instagram after a year+ away because that's the best place to look at art-makers, and especially I am looking at relief printmakers. They're inspiring.
Am I deluding myself to think I'd enjoy carving a pattern from this old photo of mine? I picture it all chunky and wrong.
(I admire the precise precision of some printmakers but wouldn't want to emulate them. Want to? Would never be able to!)
I don't have to wait for the class to start--that's not for ten days. I'll give this a try.
A thing about printmaking, though, is you get multiple prints. So there's that to ponder---what to do with them?
How much to think beforehand, "Is this something anyone else would want?"
Eh--very little at this stage. I'm learning!
It's for keeping at bay thoughts of trembling anatomy, disordered veins––(or teeth, in my case: the temporary crown is aching)––and evil lunatics taking the world apart.
I want to have guy lines in place when I go back to work in a couple months-- to stabilize me against the buffeting winds of High School.
Art making is a guy line.
Thinking of the students (instead of the system) is another.
(School starts the day after Labor Day--Tuesday, Sept. 3--but I think we special-ed aides have a day of training the week before.)
I just tip-toed inside. bink appears to be passed out.
I'm going to try drawing a pattern of thread now.
I hope ya'll're having a lovely weekend!
i never read the once and future king perhaps it should go on my reading list.
ReplyDeletehope bink had a good nap -- sometimes our body knows better what we need than we do!
the idea of guy lines is one i need to think about. i think i need some!!!
kirsten
hi, Kirsten— I read half of the first part of TOAFK, “the sword in the stone”, yesterday— it is better than I remembered. I had missed subtle things when I read it as a young person-/ it’s like a smart movie for children with treats for adults tucked in.
DeleteMust get the rest from the library today.
PS A political classic I've never read: "All the King's Men" by Robert Penn Warren---have you read it?
DeleteI read TOAFK as a child.....maybe 5th or 6th grade? But clearly need to revisit it and have added it to my library hold list (love public libraries).
ReplyDeleteThe trouble with a really good nap is the after-shock of waking up and feeling like crap. Hopefully that is just me.
Ceci
I have to get the rest of TOAFK from the library myself---I didn't remember that the volume I brought home is only the stand-alone first: The Sword in the Stone.
Deletebink did look after-shocked when she woke up from the nap.
I don't have that problem but she is not a gifted napper.