I don’t know who painted the painting this is an image from
“Is not this a true autumn day? Just the still melancholy that I love – that makes life and nature harmonise. The birds are consulting about their migrations, the trees are putting on the hectic or the pallid hues of decay, and begin to strew the ground, that one’s very footsteps may not disturb the repose of earth and air, while they give us a scent that is a perfect anodyne to the restless spirit. Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns.”
―George Eliot in a letter (Oct. 1, 1841)The reality is it poured heavily and intensely last night but not enough to cause floods massive enough to wash away the neighborhood (as a hurricane has just done in Cuba and then in Florida), and today the air was filled with wet moisture and it rained lightly and then a bit heavier on and off all day, and tomorrow we are promised pouring rain once again, but nowhere near hurricane strength …. Oct 1, 2022
Dear friends,
Once again I must live through October 3rd (it would have been Jim’s birthday, now it’s his birthdate, 1948), October 6th (the day we met, 1967, and the day we married precisely a year later, 1968), and October 9th (the day or evening he died, between 9:05 and 9:10, me with my arms around him, 2013). He stopped talking to us on October 8th. Since that last grim October day, some years I have been at a conference, for early October is academic conference time across the US; not this year, but
I will no longer go to any JASNA conferences after the way they rejected us transparently (having registered almost immediately it took the organizers several weeks to drop us to the lowest rung of who might get in) during registration four years ago now, causing Izzy to cancel her membership for good (I wrote about this elsewhere, useless to repeat it); and now this year I’m not having any luck reaching the virtual forms of the sessions (live-streaming) so the money paid is the last dime the AGMs will have from me.
I was going to go to the annual EC/ASECS, where the sessions are to be held at Winterthur museum, the hotel is a drive away (Wilmington, Delaware), and two night time things also a drive — I can no longer drive at night. I remembered that Jim said the one time before the EC/ASECS held the conference there, the drive is hellish and twisting so we took an AMTRAC and then he rented a car. I was foolish enough to try to go with an untrustworthy (I half knew this) friend, a man who turned out also to be cunningly false, and without telling you the uncomfortable several week’s details, I finally told him to go by himself directly there, cancelled the hotel reservation, too embarrassed to be there while he would be (it being a small group you see), and not wanting any scenes, having told him never email, text or phone me again. I will hope to go next year, if they have it in a place where the sessions and hotel are the same building, and in a readily accessible place.
So here I am alone at night remembering. The Facebook software not knowing what was the content I wrote on FB on this day 2015, reminded me (they do this) of what I sent that day, and invited me “to share” this on my timeline. I did; the material contained a link to a blog I wrote that night: this was written before Trump campaigned and then won the election to the US through gerrymandering and the peculiar injustice of the electoral college (he did not win the popular vote) at which I turned the Sylvia I blog over to politics wholly: you will see how Jim and I resolved issues over the years together, with me admitting that most of the time one might say he won, but he got me to accede to what he wanted with terms set up I could endure. You will also see what he looked like the year before his body developed esophageal cancer.
And what he looked like the month we met, October 1967, in front of the Leeds terraced house we were living in together that first week: above is a mature man, below is a boy:
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Before I tell my readers here, how & something of why I am for this term and probably the foreseeable future online for all but three classes, and living most of my life online still, when I was hoping to go out regularly to teach in both places, lest you think I am more cheerless than I am. My mood (though near tears somehow) resembles Austen’s when she wrote
My day’s journey has been pleasanter in every respect than I expected. I have been very little crowded and by no means unhappy — Jane Austen, Letters (24 Oct 1798).
Over the past few days I’ve had some lovely letters from real friends, today I was on the phone twice (!) with two girlfriends who live in DC and we made plans to meet soon, a third friend I had happy time with lunching at a Greek restaurant at Dupont Circle has proposed a zoom together, tomorrow at 6 pm Izzy and I will have our monthly face-time with Thao (electricity holding up — fingers crossed). Tonight I enjoyed (not sure that is the correct word) — was fully absorbed watching Ingmar Bergmann’s The Seventh Seal, the first time I’ve seen it in decades, as part of an excellent course in “Movies, political, moral, aesthetic,” where I am one of those attending in person at OLLI at AU.
I’m as thorough going an atheist as anyone is likely to meet, and I do not think I’d find life easier were I to believe in any god or supernatural. It would have to be a hideously malevolent as the burning of that woman in the film — and that did happen and horrible tortures and deaths are happening in many countries. The film shows how much worse religious beliefs and practices make life for many. It’s so allegorical – I was interested to watch how consistent the allegory is with medieval art and texts as the austere noble knight (Chaucer), his earthy squire, the young wife and husband as circus performers (Renaissance theater). For the first time I understood what the famous image of Death and the Knight playing chess is about: it’s the story of the film, a kind of bet. If the knight wins, death takes no one on the spot; the duration of the game gives him time to go on a last journey; if he loses, he dies immediately, and those around him
The next morning the day dawns brightly and we see our young couple and baby hasten off before anything untoward could happen.
This season I’m finally reveling in Outlander, the sixth season, re-watching The Crown (for the sake of the queen’s story, I tell myself). I watch and re-watch Foyle’s War, each time more deeply moved, feel good at the ending as our “friends,” Foyle, Sam, sometimes with Milner or Foyle’s son, drive away … I have all three as DVDs with lots of features (which I sometimes enjoy as much as the episodes).
I am so chuffed my review-essay of the Cambridge Edition of the Complete Poems of Anne Finch has just been published in the Intelligencer. Soon I will write a blog about it, and put it online at academia.edu.
And I read away, these past weeks the profound brilliant James Baldwin (for an excellent and yes online Politics & Prose class) one of the greatest voices in American literature in the 20th century and of the African diaspora itself. I have said the last two years now I feel my outward character has changed to be more able to understand and even feel some ordinary sense of peace, security, and be able to read affirmative books and learn from them (I’m on my fourth Joanna Trollope — I come away having learnt a healthy lesson or outlook from her books), while drawing sustenance from the quietly bleak ambivalent — even in a Jane Austen sequel, Catherine Schine’s The Three Weissmans of Westport, a true updating of Austen’s Sense and Sensibility
This enraptured review must be by a friend of Schine’s: The humor is the grimace and witticisms and irony (as in Austen’s book); the daughters are step-daughters who don’t love nor forgive the unforgivable stepfather who utterly betrays his wife (the Mrs Dashwood character) and left them for a character who shares a Lucy Steele personality with another character who pretends to be pregnant to get the Edward character to marry her. Like other sequels, she has in mind actors and actresses from different movies; Gemma Jones for Mrs Weissman-Dashwood, Hattie Morahan for Annie-Elinor, Robert Swann for Brandon (he keeps that name), Gregg Wise (though unlike his usual persona and the Willoughby of Emma Thompson’s S&S, the utterly untrustworthy and cad-like Willoughby (he too keeps the name) of Schine’s novel. Her novel ends with Annie-Elinor and Brandon character forming a quiet supportive friendship. I loved that.
The 2008 version of that journey from Sussex to Devonshire: I never tire it seems of Austen
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So what happened with my I’m beginning to think misguided attempts to teach in person. Only 9 registered for the course at OLLI at AU; hitherto all my Trollope courses regularly began with over 30 and ended with about 22. I went online, lost one person that way but added 4, 3 of whom come from further away and had told me they would have taken the course had it been online. I was shooting myself in the foot. 13 registered for the OLLI at Mason Barsetshire Then & Now or the Two Trollopes (Joanna and Tony), but only 6 showed up. I was devastated and saw the summer disaster that occurred in OLLI at AU when I tried Christa Wolf (she is too difficult for most readers I now know — as hard as George Eliot without the reputation to bring people in for self-improvement and self-esteem) this summer — it’s not enough to sustain a class over a number of weeks. I’m told this is the average number who show up in person (6); 4 came from the spectacularly enjoyable good class I did in person on The Woman in White and Mary Reilly for the 6 week summer course at OLLI at Mason. I’m also told that the over-riding factor is convenience.
So I must accept that what compels me to enjoy in person contact so much (truly perceiving what’s happening within students vis-a-vis a book) cannot motivate people in the class. Who among them is widowed in my way? For many what they got in person that they valued they feel they get via zoom. I have again misunderstood the nature of a social experience and the attitude of the people towards it. As I age, I admit also that driving even during the day is not as easy, and I myself as a member of the class find online delightful when the teachers and level of class are wonderful.
It’s not inappropriate to write of this on this first night of the coming week of remembering Jim since I turned to the OLLIs as a way of building an acceptable life for myself without him literally with me. So now I have had to change again: the pandemic itself has transformed the public world. I used to wish more people understood that life can be full and rewarding online; so here’s another instance of that fable, careful what you wish for, for you may get it.
My two cats and I have grown closer still. I find it so touching when as I prepare to go out (I do go out), whatever it be, getting dressed (shoes), putting stuff in my handbag, getting together stuff to take out with me, and especially when I either turn off my computer or put on a face mask, they both get up from wherever they are in my room and start heading for the door. It’s the awareness of me, and the desire to cooperate with me that moves me. Cats are sensitive, affectionate, communicative animals and they and I understand one another in all sorts of ways. At this point too Ian has bonded with Izzy, and stays a lot with her in her room: this is the result of the pandemic and her working from home remotely 2 days a week.
Clarycat on Jim’s lap — both photos taken before Jim died, say 2012 (like the photo of Jim above), the two cats are are about 2-3 years old
I close tonight with the lines Jim wrote for the top of the urn in which his ashes remain, which urn sits on my mantelpiece along side a photo of him, his reading glasses & ancient Anglican Book of Common Prayer; the DVD the funeral company made of photos across his life; a toy sheep Laura bought from the shop at Stonehenge that summer the 4 of us spent 3 weeks together in England, and a small stuffed Penguin Izzy added to the collection from her and my visit one summer to Sussex to go to a Charlotte Smith conference together (I could not have gotten there w/o her).
Jim’s play on Rupert Brooke’s famous lines: If I should die,/think only this of me:/That there’s a corner of a foreign mantelpiece that is for a while England.
Ellen, still his faithful wife
Fateme Minayi
Each time I find out about a problem with my body, my very first thought is: “good, a chance to die before him”. So yes, beautiful lady. I understand some of your pain. Words from a stranger you don’t even know how she looks like might not mean much to you. But I send you a hug, a tearful face, and a smile, because of the love you’ve written about.
Fateme
Me in reply
Why thank you. I feel you are sincere in this — you have a husband too. I used to think I had a good chance of predeceasing him because I have a bleeding problem.
But he was never medically strong. In his childhood the family had little money and growing up he didn’t have a good diet. They were often very cold (no central heat) and these things affected his well being permanently. He used to get so very sick every time he got sick.
We are just getting to know one another. I got that Poet’s Daughter book and will be getting to other books than for lists, conferences, teaching some time next week now.
Fateme:
“Looking at the picture of your husband, I would never have thought that he’d had such a hard past. The books, the domestic atmosphere, and the comfortable way he is sitting, all convey a sense of intellectual serenity. It’s easy to forget how unexpected lives are. You see the American white male and not the vulnerable individual …
The picture and the writing show clearly your love for him. And love is the most valuable achievement anyone should aspire to. Everything else is too ephemeral to count on.”
Me: But he was a British, or closer still, an English white male. Here are [I sent her] two photos of him before we came to the US for the first time. The first is him in 1967 sitting in front of Leeds terraced house in which we had a flat; and another in Edinburgh, on the second trip we took together.
After years of life in the US, and having obtained a good paying job, and doing well in it, and we living in this comfortable house, and he doing the cooking (an Elizabeth David cookbook), yes he was probably at peace that day.
You’re right: the thing to marry for is companionate love, and (quoting Elizabeth Bennet from Pride and Prejudice) esteem and gratitude.
Robert Burke: “when my English wife’s father died I was asked to read Brooke’s poem. I will never forget ‘The Soldier’.”
My reply: Here is the poem itself: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/…/poems/13076/the-soldier I have a small volume of poetry by Brooke in the house. It was a book Jim bought.
The Soldier:
If I should die, think only this of me:
That there’s some corner of a foreign field
That is for ever England. There shall be
In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;
A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,
Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam;
A body of England’s, breathing English air,
Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home.
And think, this heart, all evil shed away,
A pulse in the eternal mind, no less
Gives somewhere back the thoughts by England given;
Her sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day;
And laughter, learnt of friends; and gentleness,
In hearts at peace, under an English heave
Here is a poem written for Jim by one of his colleagues upon his retirement:
A Tribute to Jim Moody
(with apologies to Rudyard Kipling and the entire British Empire)
Oh, you may talk HTML
when you’re sittin’ safe as hell
In the hallowed halls of DISA’s JPO.
Slaving under ACTD lash,
You’ll do your work on cash,
And lick the bleeding boots of them that’s got some.
Now in DC’s balmy clime
where I spent much of my time,
A servin’ in the bowels of DoD.
Of all them balding crew,
The finest man I knew
Was our own Jim Moody, Prince ACTD.
It was Jim, Jim, Jim,
Where the bloody hell’s the dough?
We’ve got ACTD’s a-waitin’
New technology anticipating.
Now where’s the R&D, we want to know!
The uniform he wore
was not much to adore
Just wide open collars and no tie.
His ropey chest hairs dangled,
his teeth were golden-spangled.
But ever twinkling brightly was that eye.
His most skillful tool
was the Dell line’s brightest jewel
with his Excell spreadsheet spend plan right astride.
When the budgeteers came walking,
Jim would do the talking
And get the OSD blighters on our side.
And it was Jim, Jim, Jim,
Thank the Lord for Jim.
Ready with slides to show ya,
It’s been good to know ya.
Don’t forget us in the Out-years, Gunga-Jim.
I shan’t forget the day,
ACOA’s budget blown away,
And I went to see him with an open palm.
800 K, that’s all
and we’ll be standing tall.
And he cashed the check that morn without a qualm.
So it was Jim, Jim, Jim
Thanks for serving till the end.
Though we’ve roasted and we’ve flayed you,
by the bleeding god who made you,
You’re a better man than I am, Gunga-Jim.
Curt Hammill
2JUN04
The teacher of the movie course wrote me what he thought The Seventh Seal means: “I see the Seventh Seal as a film where there is no God and how people struggle with that situation. The Knight who wants knowledge and faith but cannot find it; the church that only offers death and suffering, the Squire who can live without God, and Mia and Jof who live life without asking those questions. I think Bergman is asking, how do we live in a world without God?
Smiles of a Summer Night is also considered a Bergman comedy.”
I had written that Bergmann’s The Magic Flute is one of his comedies where the joy is so intense tears came to my eyes I replied: The movie might well be summed up that way. It’s certainly by a man who can be taken as having agons over the idea there is no God and then infer one must struggle with this as if it were a predicament. I’d say that is the core of Moby Dick; I’d go further and say much American literature is teleological, one reason it’s so symbolic. To me it was ironic that the first prize given to an American by the much-lauded Brooker Prize was Lincoln In the Bardo. Certainly it is unlikely to have been written by a Brit (brought up in the UK at any rate). Putting it flippantly, I remember thinking to myself at some point “so what, get over it” and face complicated chaotic if patterned reality. It’s not that bleak. I elected early on not to study American literature. I’m glad I didn’t speak up.
But now I’ll add it’s better that I know that Jim didn’t exist before he was born and now no longer exists. He has stopped suffering from that dreadful disease. I accept that we each have to make our own meaning in life, as best we can. I like Forster’s emphasis on good relationships (congenial loyal friendship) as central for some happiness, and living amid what beauty we can find, create. There needs no claptrap filled with poisons (religions).
Tyler: “My thoughts are with you, Ellen. I hope the pain has lessened some. I just had the three year anniversary of my brother’s death and while I still miss him every day. The third year was easier than the first two.”
My reply: I think life gradually becomes easier as we accustom ourselves and as we change somewhat in this adjustment.
The Rupert Brooke, version by Jim, so touching it brought tears, And then the Kipling version by his colleague, brought a grin & a heart lift. A better man indeed was your Gunga-Jim. I hope you heart will be lighter too when the rains are over & gone & October’s bright blue weather returns, Ellen. Judith
Do you know that poem by Helen Hunt Jackson. My mother loved it & said it by heart to us children,as it described her birthdate season so well (October 8th, 1910).
Which poem? If you can remember any line or title I’ll look it up. Thank you for this reply. Love Ellen
October’s Bright Blue Weather by Helen Hunt Jackson. Love back to you, J.
I used to love October for the weather, and I especially loved early October for Jim’s birthday, the beginning of our relationship and then our marriage day. I found the poem
“October’s Bright Blue Weather”
O SUNS and skies and clouds of June,
And flowers of June together,
Ye cannot rival for one hour
October’s bright blue weather;
When loud the bumble-bee makes haste,
Belated, thriftless vagrant,
And Golden-Rod is dying fast,
And lanes with grapes are fragrant;
When Gentians roll their fringes tight
To save them for the morning,
And chestnuts fall from satin burrs
Without a sound of warning;
When on the ground red apples lie
In piles like jewels shining,
And redder still on old stone walls
Are leaves of woodbine twining;
When all the lovely wayside things
Their white-winged seeds are sowing,
And in the fields, still green and fair,
Late aftermaths are growing;
When springs run low, and on the brooks,
In idle golden freighting,
Bright leaves sink noiseless in the hush
Of woods, for winter waiting;
When comrades seek sweet country haunts,
By twos and twos together,
And count like misers, hour by hour,
October’s bright blue weather.
O suns and skies and flowers of June,
Count all your boasts together,
Love loveth best of all the year
October’s bright blue weather.
It’s the briskness and the blueness together.
Ellen