First Man of the Land - Adlai Stevenson & the General from Addison Texas
Wednesday, November 06, 2024
I
remember very well what I was doing on Monday 3 November 1952. I was 10 years
old and I attended an American school in Buenos Aires called American Grammar
School. Because my mother taught at the nearby high school I was given a
scholarship as she could not have paid the high fees.
With my
friends at recess (it was a hot Buenos Aires summer) we were running around
screaming, “Eisenhower in the shower!” I have no idea who had told us about the
presidential elections on the next day but somehow our man was Adlai Stevenson
and not the general from Addison, Texas.
What did we
know about these two forthright men? We were innocent and oblivious.
I remember
very well what I was doing one 26 September, 1960. I was in our pool hall (Juniors & Seniors had that privilege) of my Roman Catholic boarding
school St. Edward’s High School in Austin, Texas. We were not playing pool. We
were watching the first TV debate between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon.
Because Nixon was not wearing any Max Factor makeup that UV light penetrating
TV lighting was making him look terrible.
There was
then a form of misinformation. People against Kennedy were saying that he would
have to obey his boss, the pope in Rome.
We were
happy when he won. In 1962 our school annual The Edwardian was dedicated to
Kennedy, who was then President of the United States. I must also add that on a
previous page there was a large colour photograph of Pope John XXIII. After writing this blog I read that dedication. It still stands particularly today 6 November 2024 In 1960, Austin was the most liberal city in Texas. In our school we had black students local Latinos and many more from Latin America. First Man of the Land
The morns are meeker than they were - Emily Dickinson
Tuesday, November 05, 2024
| Fall with Lauri Stallings - 5 November 2024
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Autumn – Emily Dickinson
The morns are meeker than they were,
The nuts are getting brown;
The berry's cheek is plumper,
The rose is out of town.
The maple wears a gayer scarf,
The field a scarlet gown.
Lest I should be old-fashioned,
I'll put a trinket on.
I am sure that I am not the only one today, 5 November,
2024 worried about elections in the United States of America.
A
Mexican journalist at the beginning of the 20th century said, “¡Pobre México, tan lejos de Dios y tan
cerca de Estados Unidos!”
That
translates to, “Poor Mexico, so far from
God and so close to the United States.”
Going to
get some eye drops at Shopper’s Drug Mart and buying fruits and vegetables for
dinner tonight with Hilary was a pleasant distraction on what is a sunny day.
And of
course scanning fall colours involving a portrait I took years ago of Ballet BC
dancer Lauri Stallings put me in the mood to get on my bed with Niño and Niña.
It will be impossible to not think of my Rosemary and what she would say about
the elections in the USA. She died on 9 December 2020 when Trump was still
president. In the morning over break fast in bed, during the man’s presidency
we would compare notes on what he had done the day before as seen in our phones
and our daily delivered (hard copy) NYTimes.
Tonight
Hilary and I will be visiting our Welsh neighbours, the Galsworthys to watch
the proceedings in the US on BBC. More Emily Dickinson blogs A Favourite Just Noticed All the Witchcraft that we need It only gives our wish for blue My heart is laden Of bronze and blaze The red and the white A Lady Red Hands I took my power in my hands That clarifies the sight Nature rarer uses yellow
Rosemary white and a bit of yellow Nature rarer uses yellow Luck is not chance T is iris sir The white heat
I tried to be a rose nature rarer uses yellow The Tulip Nor would I be a poet November left then clambered up
You cannot make remembrance grow
November
the maple wears a gayer scarf
A melancholy of a waning summer
Just as green and as white
It's full as opera
I cannot dance upon my Toes
a door just opened on the street
Amber slips away
Sleep
When August burning low
Pink Small and punctual
A slash of blue
I cannot dance upon my toes
Ah little rose
For hold them, blue to blue
A Resurrection
Monday, November 04, 2024
It seems that even though we live in Canada today we are
just waiting for tomorrow’s elections in the US. I feel unsettled. I decided to
putter in my oficina and look at some negatives in a box. These that I found I
have seen before as I have scanned and put in blogs some of the pictures of
Rosemary and me wearing the same shirts and the two of her not wearing anything
but revealing nothing.
This time I decided to scan the negatives and will place
them here both in vertical and horizontal format.
There was one single negative of a couple that as a negative
I could not recognize. I scanned it and so found out that the woman was a
friend and teaching colleague in Mexico City who was Welsh. Her name was Vivien
Worsdall and her English was absolutely impeccable. She insisted in saying
luncheon and not lunch and sofas were always davenports. She gave me many tips
and I became a better teacher of English to Mexican executives working in
American companies. She adored Rosemary.
I had not thought of her for years. Finding this negative it
almost feels like I have participated in a resurrection. From the time I married Rosemary in 1968 and particularly when me moved to a little house in Arboledas, Estado de México I began taking portraits of wealthy Mexican families, of friends and of my family. I used to good clunkers, a Pentacon-F and an Asahi Pentax S-3. I had a good 85 mm Komura portrait lens that fit both SLRs.I processed the negatives in one of our two bathrooms and printed them there. It was this realization that I could earn a living as a portrait photographer that gave Rosemary the idea for the four of us to move to Vancouver. As a portrait photographer I find this as a heavy
philosophical thought that will probably have me thinking about it tonight when
I get into bed in anticipation of what will happen tomorrow.
In a small Welsh coincidence, my Welsh neighbours, the
Galsworthys have invited me tomorrow to watch the proceedings on BBC. My
daughter Hilary has invited herself and made cookies. It will be fun. I hope.
Rosemary - Bathsheba & Showers
Sunday, November 03, 2024
| Rosa 'Bathsheba' - 4 November 2024 |
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Bathsheba (/bæθˈʃiːbə/
or /ˈbæθʃɪbə/; Hebrew: בַּת־שֶׁבַע Baṯ-šeḇaʿ,
lit. 'Daughter of Sheba'
or 'Daughter of the Oath')was an Israelite queen consort. According to the
Hebrew Bible, she was the wife of Uriah the Hittite and later of David, with
whom she had all of her five children. Her status as the mother of Solomon, who
succeeded David as monarch, made her the Gebirah (גְּבִירָה) of the Kingdom of Israel. She is best
known for her appearance in the Book of Samuel, which recounts how she was
summoned by David's royal messengers after he witnessed her bathing and lusted
after her; David has Uriah killed and then marries Bathsheba.
Wikipedia
No matter what I do on any day these days the action
reminds me of my Rosemary. Today I saw the only rose flowering in my fall
garden, Rosa ‘Bathsheba’. I scanned it even though I have scanned it many times
since I purchased the rose 3 years ago.
I had to find a new way of associating the rose with Rosemary. That was
not tough.
I met my Rosemary in Mexico City mid December 1967 and by
Christmas I had taken her to Veracruz to meet my mother who lived there. We were married in Coyoacán, on 8 February 1968..
At that time, and until recently Rosemary wore contact
lenses (including the one-a-day ones), this meant that she never took showers
and never swam in pools. When we lived in Burnaby, just as we were about to go
somewhere, she would tell me (it happened more than once) that she had dropped one of her contacts on our
terrible green shag carpet.
My mother had no tub so Rosemary took many showers
(without her contact lenses and she really did not see well without them)
during the day to escape Veracruz’s humid heat. Quite a few times when I heard
the shower going I would go in to spy on her (my version of King David). Such
was the sight of her in the shower that we would end up with shenanigans in bed
which resulted in further showers.
Once Rosemary had her one a day contacts and later when
she had laser surgery she would take many a tub bath. In our very nice
Kitsilano bathtub I could see her from my bed. Many a time I simply took my
clothes off and joined her in the tub. We used all kinds of Epson Salts. We
lived an active bathtub life.
Now when I am in the tub and I can see the empty bed (two
cats on it, though) I reminisce with melancholy those wonderful times.
My Rosemary, my Bathsheba – gone.
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