3.11.2021 – The lack of detail

The lack of detail
only stir unfocused images
nostalgia, longing

Adapted from the book, A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary (2009, Vintage Books) by Alain de Botton, and the passage:

The lack of detail about the destinations served only to stir unfocused images of nostalgia and longing: Tel Aviv, Tripoli, St Petersburg, Miami, Muscat via Abu Dhabi, Algiers, Grand Cayman via Nassau … all of these promises of alternative lives, to which we might appeal at moments of claustrophobia and stagnation.

Part of the series of Haiku inspired by from A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary (2009, Vintage Books) by Alain de Botton. I discovered this book entirely by accident. When searching for books online, I will use the term ‘collections’ and see what turns up. I figure that someone who has taken the time to gather together the etexts of any one author to create a collected works folder is enough for me to see what this author might be all about.

In this case I came across the writing of Alain de Botton. I enjoyed his use of language very much. Much of the words he strings together lend themselves to what I do.

As for his book, I recommend it very much though written in 2009, it misses the added layer of travel under covid but still the picture of the modern airport is worth the read.

3.10.2021 – since earliest days,

since earliest days,
Republic descended to
tergiversations

From the Mencken Project

I had to come up with the this one only to be able to use the word tergiversations.

The online Merriam-Webster defines it “as evasion of straightforward action or clear-cut statement.”

In French, it might mean, Fait de tergiverser ; attitude d’une personne qui tergiverse.

Which translates, Procrastinating; attitude of a procrastinating person.

Been one all my life but never knew I was tergiversationing.

But I do now!

Seems it has been used twice in American Literature.

This time here by Mr. Menckon.

And another time when George Will … was quoting Mr. Menckon.

The line is, “That the United States, in its foreign relations, has descended to gross deceits and tergiversations since the earliest days of the Republic was long ago pointed out by Lecky; it is regarded universally to-day as a pious fraud.”

From Notes on Democracy, 1927

3.9.2021- The Americans

The Americans,
bamboozled, exploited
by their own number

Part of the HL Mencken Project

The American people, true enough, are sheep. Worse, they are donkeys. Yet worse, to borrow from their own dialect, they are goats. They are thus constantly bamboozled and exploited by small minorities of their own number, by determined and ambitious individuals, and even by exterior groups. The business of victimizing them is a lucrative profession, an exact science, and a delicate and lofty art.

From Notes on Democracy – 1927

3.7.2021 – mediocrity!

mediocrity!
crass, gross, vulgar, obnoxious
and simply senile

Part of the HL Mencken Project.

This haiku is drawn from the Prejudices – The Sahara of the Bozart – a look a the Southern States 50 years after the end of the Civil War.

This is one of the essays that won Mr. Mencken the everlasting enmity of the south.

Mr, Mencken wrote, “Virginia is the best of the South today, and Georgia is perhaps the worst. The one is simply Senile; the other is crass, gross, vulgar and obnoxious. Between lies a vast plain of mediocrity, stupidity, lethargy, almost of dead silence.”

Mr. Mencken continued, “In the North, of course, there is also grossness, crassness, vulgarity. The North, in its way, is also stupid and obnoxious. But nowhere in the North is there such complete sterility, so depressing a lack of all civilized gesture and aspiration.”

In a preface to this essay printed years later, Mr. Mencken wrote, “This produced a ferocious reaction in the South, and I was belabored for months, and even years afterward in a very extravagant manner. The essay in its final form, as it is here reproduced, dates sadly, but I have let it stand as a sort of historical document. On the heels of the violent denunciations of the elder Southerners there soon came a favorable response from the more civilized youngsters, and there is reason to believe that my attack had something to do with that revival of Southern letters which followed in the middle 1920 ‘s”