surely some revelation

So you probably noticed we have a new tag line on Metaphor. Gone is “Intangible things are the writer’s business,” and in its place is “Surely some revelation is at hand.”

This is the first line of the 2nd stanza of this very famous poem:

The Second Coming
by William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

Blasphemy? Not exactly. A personal, mystical statement about the forces which oppose each other in history. Science and mysticism, democracy and totalitarianism, war and peace, Coke and Pepsi, sanity and tea parties, etc.

What rough beast, indeed.

home again

I’ve been away for a few days, celebrating my nephew’s 9th birthday.

Oh Good Grief.

“Solitude is not something you must hope for in the future. Rather, it is a deepening of the present, and unless you look for it in the present you will never find it.”

– Thomas Merton

Solitude is cold weather, essential to our gratitude for the summer days of company and love. 


Called Away

   "Every person gone has taken a stone
    to hold and catch the sun. The carving
    says, "Not here, but called away."
                           -William Stafford

It really is hard to believe, but ten years ago today we slipped off our little Stella's leash for the last time and let her run on ahead, to find a good spot and wait for us.

I wrote several poems for Stella, and it bothers me that they were all written in the weeks and months after she died. It seems wrong that death inspires writing in ways that life doesn't. I should write more out of love for the living, is my point.

It's and good and happy thing to remember Stella, who was such a bright light in our lives, who loved to run and play. She was very intelligent, and knew all her toys by name. But today is the anniversary of her passing. Her Rainbow Bridge Day. So here are a couple of shavings out of my novel in progress.

We all stayed with her together until it was late, then Dad and Mama went to bed. Papa went upstairs but I could hear his rocking chair creaking overhead until much later. I did not go to bed and did not sleep at all that night. I left the light on, pulled pillows down onto the floor and laid there beside my dog. I talked to her and watched her breathe. I cried and told her about Heaven and who would be there to meet her, naming all the dogs that came before her and lived a while and went on ahead to wait, and many humans too. He told her it was OK to go, that she had done her job and completed every task and been the best best friend a boy and his brother could want. She should not worry about her family, I said. Our hearts would break, but we would be alright. And we would get along by cherishing her memory which would have to be more than enough until God sent along another dog for us.

            I left my place on the steps and went and sat with my back against the tree, beside my friend. I decided my thinking had been terribly wrong, that I should just dispute the whole idea of dead. There was nothing about Sadie’s life and what she was – like loyal, patient, and playful – that is subject to the claims and premises of death. Even if the Church did not believe that pets have souls, that they go to Heaven when they die, I didn’t care. I had looked into the eyes of dogs and cats, horses, hamsters, enough to see that God was looking through at me. There was love in them, and God is love, so I had been taught. I thought maybe no one really dies at all, that dogs are just as alive after we think they’re dead as they ever were when we thought they were alive; that some men are just as dead when they think they are alive as they will ever be in time. But when they came with the truck and the shovels and an oval stone the width of a man’s chest, we buried her body under the tree near Apache and the others. We took turns digging, as we do, lowered the wrapped bundle on bits of rope that bore it down and down.

from Charlie's Crossing
a novel in process
(c) 2010 by J. Kyle Kimberlin
all rights reserved

it’s always something

I wanted a perfect ending. Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next. Delicious ambiguity.

– Gilda Radner

In other words, it's a good idea to budget for inevitable emergencies.

china syndrome

The very air tingles with promise. Far and wide, all good people – those not consumed by Tiger Woods or some other surpassing disaster – are spreading the news:

The iPad is here. Hurrah! Yippee! Ole!

It's pissin' me off.

But why? you ask. It's wonderful! It's the best thing since fitted underwear in the whole wide world!

OK, here's why. I don't think computer companies, or car companies, or toaster companies for that matter, should feel entitled to spew forth new wonderments until they by golly work the bugs, kinks, gliches, pings, knocks, hang-ups, shut-downs, speed-ups, etc., etc., out of the stuff they've already been making.

This morning, just as an abject example, I started up my 2009 HP Phenomenal X4 Pavilion computer with a compass in the stock and this thing that tells time. Normally, an excellent device. I'm telling you folks, the thing was running whacky. Nutty. Spazz-o.

Word was working, and Firefox. But when I clicked on desktop icons, the computer essentially said, "you can't touch that." The start menu and the program toolbar were non-functional. I rebooted using ctrl-alt-del, because the start menu wouldn't work. No help. I shut down with ctrl-alt-del and everything was OK. But I got to start my day with adrenaline and confusion instead of caffeine and Google News, which makes me a grumpy puppy. 

Guess what! HP is coming out with a new tablet PC to compete with the iPad. You saw it here first, as far as I know.

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Seriously, from one generation of technology to the next, they run full speed into spreading puddles of FAIL, and they're in such a rush to get to the next puddle, they don't even notice how muddy they are. And who's urging them on, faster and faster? We are.

This blogger thinks it's time to think more about what's useful to us on a daily basis, slow down, make it well, enjoy it, and dream a bit before we plunge.

But Kyle, why title the post China Syndrome? Well, one reason is obvious. Another is that if I'd called it Resentment Over the Obdurately Accelerating Pace of Tech Innovation, you wouldn't have read it.  

Happy Easter

corningware redux

Thanks for the comments on Corningware. I haven't decided, but your input helps. Here's the paragraph I'm pondering, as it stands at the moment. The cadence needs work, and a verb in there somewhere couldn't hurt.

Setup: a man raised on a farm remembers the day of his grandfather's passing.

In the afternoon, there were church ladies in dark clothes and small colorless clouds of perfume, bearing food in Corningware dishes topped with aluminum foil, with their names discreetly etched on the bottoms, on strips of masking tape. There were sad hugs and cookies for a while, until Dad said there was something for the men to do.

            “Preparations,” he said.

feeling marginal

Do you ever print web pages, or make PDFs, and wish you could get rid of that ugly header or footer with the monster URL? By default, that information is included to show the source of the document, but it's rarely helpful and generally not pretty. I recently learned how to get rid of it in Firefox.

Go to File > Page Setup … then click the Margins & Header/Footer tab

You can set all 4 of the margins, and change the drop-down menus for headers & footers to show what you want to appear.

As you can see, I have small margins set, and no content appearing for headers and footers. So if I print something from, say, Google Docs, it will be nice and clean.

Yes, I was tempted to use the term "clear margins" as the post title, but … yuck. You're welcome.