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The Weblog at The View from the Core - Sunday, July 26, 2009
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Sunday Snippets - A Catholic Carnival 4 Tabb Centenary Year XLII: Five lyrics by Rev. John B. Tabb. Lane Core Jr. CIW P Sun. 07/26/09 09:10:51 PM |
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Recent Comments III Neo-neocon discussed, July 22, Obama: ignorant or arrogant? fool or knave? liar or stupid? And does it really matter anymore? I left a comment: Obama is amazing, actually. He’s just like Lincoln was, except completely different. Lincoln was extremely careful to make sure that he said what he meant and meant what he said. (His famous letter to Horace Greeley is probably the finest example of that kind of precision; it should, perhaps, be mentioned that Lincoln and Greeley had been friends already for years.) Obama, on the other hand, seems to take great care to avoid saying what he means and to mean other than what he says. Obama seems to engage in a great deal of cogitation before expressing himself (off-prompter); too bad the effort seems to be to keep himself from saying what he’s actually thinking. What kind of person does that? And how long can he keep it up consistently? And what are the consequences to his psyche of doing so?... And American Digest looked at the Henry Louis Gates debacle, July 23; I left a comment: If we didn't know it before (which everybody should have), we do know now that Obama is not the post-racial president: he's the most-racial president. Lane Core Jr. CIW P Sun. 07/26/09 08:37:30 PM |
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Tabb Centenary Year XLII Five lyrics by Rev. John B. Tabb. The Seed
Bearing a life unseen, March 1895 (p. 95, Nature: Miscellaneous) Resignation
Behold, in summer’s parching thirst, 1897 (p. 98, Nature: Miscellaneous) Wood-Grain
This is the way that the sap-river ran July 1901 (p. 28, Nature: Trees) The Acorn
I am the heir—the Acorn small, May 1906 (p. 30, Nature: Day and Night) Soil-Song
I give what ne’er was mine— September 1898 (p. 104, Nature: Miscellaneous) [“The Seed”: Magdalen is St. Mary Magdalen(e); the allusion is to the Gospel story of the sinful woman washing the Lord’s feet with her hair, Luke 7:36-50: traditionally, the woman has often been identified as the Saint, though the identification is not much more than conjecture. “Resignation”: in Greek mythology, Tantalus was a son of Zeus: “Tantalus's punishment, now proverbial for temptation without satisfaction (the source of the English word tantalise - US tantalize), was to stand in a pool of water beneath a fruit tree with low branches. Whenever he reached for the fruit, the branches raised his intended meal from his grasp. Whenever he bent down to get a drink, the water receded before he could get any.” “The Acorn”: a remarkable poem for having all eight lines rhyming. ] The references (page number and section) are to The Poetry of Father Tabb, ed. Francis A. Litz, Ph.D. (New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1928). All of Tabb's poems published here in the Father Tabb Centenary Year were originally published before 1923. Biblical references link to the New Advent Bible comprising Bishop Challoner's edition of the Douay-Rheims Bible (English) and the Sixto-Clementine edition of the Vulgate (Latin), since they are the versions which Father Tabb would have used as a Catholic. The year 2009 is the centenary of the death of Rev. John Banister Tabb, November 19, 1909. Lane Core Jr. CIW P Sun. 07/26/09 12:15:03 PM |
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