June 24, 2020
Potus V Hawk
I still like W.C. Fields' idea. Broadcast it on every platform available so a virtual audience comprising thousands of arenas can attend, but leave the vast arena where it's held, football stadium size, completely empty except for crew of record, who would all be masked and at an appropriate distance from the combatants (what are zoom lenses for). The combatants if they wished could wear a mask, but POTUS has considered it beneath his dignity in the past, and this is the largest audience he can ever expect to attend an event he participates in; it's likely the Hawk with the new book would feel obliged to dispense with a mask also, though the battle will be close work. About a dozen dumpsters are provided at each combatant's end of the field to supply ammunition, viz: socks full of horse manure. (Neither wants to be unprovided for at a crucial junction.) Go at it, gentlemen! Grab those socks and come out swinging.
June 13, 2020
WHAT WAS THAT MASKED GARDEN?
I
don’t know why I was thinking of Last Year at
Marienbad when we were getting ready to visit the Laking Garden in
Burlington. There was no more than the slightest similarity of geometrical design
between the vast lawn where most of its exteriors were shot (whose statues were
slightly more real than the grass, less sculpted than the trees) and the Garden
grounds with profusion of irises and peonies in labelled rows, and even a small
patch of clematis, a few stray hibiscus round rust red tree-constructs. I’d
have to see the film again to be sure, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there
were not a single flower to be seen on that immaculately manicured lawn the
whole length of the film. Then it occurred to me: the masks! I was going with a
medical mask, better than half the people we met there in passing had them too,
and Marienbad (never seen in the film, because it was last year, which is
notoriously difficult to photograph) was a town famous for its health spa.
I
saw a deep purple iris I didn’t remember from last year called Anvil of
Darkness, which cracked me up: by day an unassuming flower, by night a sturdy
tool for pounding a horse shoe into shape.
I
wouldn’t have called that middle-tone violet iris Zebra Night; it seems to me
you need some kind of striping for a name like that.
A
robin perched in a red iron tree form barren of leaves, except for the vine
climbing up it on which bloomed a light purple hibiscus (a shade deeper than
Zebra Night)—couldn’t get Marysia over with a camera quickly enough to capture
the tableau.
Reading
in a corner of the garden, on chairs conveniently provided—a fine occupation
with a garden for backdrop over the top of your page: Rodge Glass’s biography
of Alasdair Gray. I’m told (or more likely reminded, though I can’t remember
from when) that Alasdair Gray did a comic lecture at a 1959 Scottish Fringe venue
on the useful topic: How to Assemble Your Own Rhinoceros. I should try to find
that lecture—did anyone ever bother to get it down on tape? I have most of the
required parts, but I could use some tips on how to assemble them.
FOLLOW
SOCIAL DISTANCING PROCEDURES
WASHROOM
OCCUPANCY IS LIMITED TO ONE (1) PERSON AT A TIME
*Note:
Co-Habitants Excluded*
Please Knock Before Entering
(I
should say so if there’s any wee chance someone’s taking advantage of the
co-habiting loophole.)
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