R.L. Swihart's Blog, page 89

September 19, 2020

Versailles: Fountain

 Versailles 2019. Fountain.


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Published on September 19, 2020 06:55

September 18, 2020

Morning in Seal Beach (9.17.20)

Morning in Seal Beach. The pier. Walking.


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Published on September 18, 2020 19:15

Charles Ray in Madrid (2019)

Madrid 2019. Glass Palace. More Charles Ray.


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Published on September 18, 2020 07:57

From Chekhov's Letters (5.14.1890)

   But what was worst of all, and what I shall never forget, was crossing the rivers. One reaches a river at night.... One begins shouting and so does the driver.... Rain, wind, pieces of ice glide down the river, there is a sound of splashing.... And to add to our gaiety there is the cry of a heron. Herons live on the Siberian rivers, so it seems they don't consider the climate but the geographical position.... Well, an hour later, in the darkness, a huge ferry-boat of the shape of a barge comes into sight with huge oars that look like the pincers of a crab. The ferry-men are a rowdy set, for the most part exiles banished here by the verdict of society for their vicious life. They use insufferably bad language, shout, and ask for money for vodka.... The ferrying across takes a long, long time ... an agonizingly long time. The ferryboat crawls. Again the feeling of loneliness, and the heron seems calling on purpose, as though he means to say: "Don't be frightened, old man, I am here, the Lintvaryovs have sent me here from the Psyol."

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Published on September 18, 2020 07:41

From Chekhov's Letters: Two "Clips"

From Chekhov's letters. A nearly fatal collision on his way to Sakhalin Island and early signs of the "consumption" (TB) that would eventually kill him:

My mother must have been praying for me that night, I suppose. If I had been asleep, or if the third troika had come immediately after the second, I should have been crushed to death or maimed. It appeared the foremost driver lashed on the horses, while the drivers in the second and the third carts were asleep and did not see us. The collision was followed by the blankest amazement on both sides, then a storm of ferocious abuse.


*


The overstrain, the constant worry with luggage and so on, and perhaps the farewell drinking parties in Moscow, had brought on spitting of blood in the mornings, which induced something like depression, arousing gloomy thoughts, but towards the end of the journey it has left off; now I haven't even a cough.


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Published on September 18, 2020 07:26

September 17, 2020

From Chekhov's Letters (2.15.1890)

    Did you really not like the "Kreutzer Sonata"? I don't say it is a work of genius for all time, of that I am no judge; but to my thinking, among the mass of all that is written now, here and abroad, one scarcely could find anything else as powerful both in the gravity of its conception and the beauty of its execution. To say nothing of its artistic merits, which in places are striking, one must be grateful to the novel, if only because it is keenly stimulating to thought. As one reads it, one can scarcely refrain from crying out: "That's true," or "That's absurd." It is true it has some very annoying defects. Apart from all those you enumerate, it has one for which one cannot readily forgive the author--that is, the audacity with which Tolstoy holds forth about what he doesn't know and is too obstinate to care to understand. Thus his statements about syphilis, foundling hospitals, the aversion of women for the sexual relation, and so on, are not merely open to dispute, but show him up as an ignoramus who has not, in the course of his long life, taken the trouble to read two or three books written by specialists. But yet these defects fly away like feathers in the wind; one simply does not notice them in face of the real worth of the story, or, if one notices them, it is only with a little vexation that the story has not escaped the fate of all the works of man, all imperfect and never free from blemish.

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Published on September 17, 2020 08:21

More from Versailles

 More from Versailles.


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Published on September 17, 2020 08:14

September 16, 2020

From Chekhov's Letters (3.5.1889)

  Last night I drove out of town and listened to the gypsies. They sing well, the wild creatures. Their singing reminds me of a train falling off a high bank in a violent snow-storm: there is a lot of turmoil, screeching and banging. 

  ... I bought Dostoevsky in your shop and am now reading him. It is fine, but very long and indiscreet. It is over-pretentious.

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Published on September 16, 2020 12:31

Morning in Seal Beach

 Morning in Seal Beach. Walking. Bay Theater. Empty (COVID-closed) Playground.


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Published on September 16, 2020 12:07

Versailles: Window

Versailles: Window.


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Published on September 16, 2020 07:45