Showing posts with label Great Conversation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Conversation. Show all posts

Monday, 6 April 2020

Just sit on the line

Last week, I set myself the usual weekly reading target with the best of intentions in getting through the readings and then some, hoping that by this time it got around to this Monday I would not only have blitzed the set readings but also managed to get through some of my other backlog on the side. Despite having a tab with Les Mis open on my pc browser, Plato on my kindle and Dickens ready for me on my phone, I was able to bring myself to complete almost exactly zero reading over the week.

At least one step too far into this series.
The one thing that I have attempted to spend the most time reading, The Long Utopia, the fourth book in Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter Long Earth series, continues at a snail's pace, a source of great frustration to me because I really ought to throw it on the life is too short to care pile, but I just want to like it a tiny bit too much to bring myself to do it. The series is based on a Pratchett short story that I enjoyed, but as it has gone on it has become more and more like every Stephen Baxter book I've ever read, which is to say  ponderous, touching on interesting concepts in the least interesting ways imaginable and either leaving a number of plot points dangling for the inevitable sequel or tying making them irrelevant along the way. The fact that I've spent the time since Christmas when I checked it out of the library trying to get through it when I'd normally demolish a book this size in a week maximum is a good indication of just how well it's going.

As frustrating as I've found this novel, the fact is that it's not the novel's fault that I'm not getting any reading done. It's not the novel's fault that I've struggled to engage with my writing or to produce a crossword this week either. For someone who has been feeling generally like all this being cooped up indoors isn't having that great an affect on his life, I sure am wandering about the house listlessly staring at walls a lot, so maybe I'm just not as unaffected by everything that's going on as I'd like to think I am.

So I've decided to be gentle with myself and just let things happen. Reading is supposed to be fun, so is the blog and so are videogames after all. If that means there's not a weekly Great Conversation piece, somehow I feel like both I and the readership will survive.

In lieu of that, then, let me leave you with this delightful little poem from Jeffrey McDaniel that a  friend linked me just when I needed a good sob earlier in the week.

Let's talk some other time.

Monday, 30 March 2020

GC XXVI: The proof will carry conviction

The whole 'weekly blog post with homework' format of our ongoing Great Conversation project is a strange beast. Usually I end up delaying the blog post because I need more time to read the books, but this time around I had the opposite problem; despite finishing the 'weekly' readings in mid-November, I've found the actual writing of the post itself to be the bit that's slowing down the process, and now here we are at the end of March, with the readings in the distant past, and if I was grasping for something interesting to say about them back then I have Buckley's Chance now. So, apologies for the limited review section, but it's time to get this show back on the road. It's almost Blapril, after all.

Unfortunately, the Adelaide eBooks site that I've been using as the main source for most of the links throughout the series has now disappeared from the internet, so all of the past links are now irretrievably lost. I guess that's what happens when your seven-year project starts hanging around past its used-by date. This also means that we have to revert to the project Gutenberg translations, which in many cases are inferior, but in the absence of learning ancient Greek and Latin I suppose that they'll have to do. More importantly, though, it means that I can't easily link directly to chapter headings any more unless Gutenberg have included direct links, which is about 50/50 so far. To get around this I'd hope to be using the Text Fragment Anchor flag available in the current version of Chrome. If you use Chrome you would can go here to turn that feature on for now to allow you to scroll straight to nominated places in the document, which wouldn't help readers on other browsers, but would have been a start. Unfortunately, my experiments with getting it to actually work have hit a dead end, and so I've abandoned it for now in the interests of actually getting this post up, so for now we're flying blind and if you want to read the chapters I'm reading I'm afraid you're going to have to do your own scrolling.

The Week That Was:

The History of Herodotus

Book VIII

As Herodotus winds down somewhat anticlimactically after the highs of book seven, I'm mostly just left with the general impression that it's really a wonder that the Greeks ever listen to oracles about anything at all, given how many examples we've been given lately of them being just straight up paid to lie about things. You'd have thought they'd learn something at some point.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XVIII-XX

If the reader was looking for some kind of conclusion out of the last few chapters of Crusoe, they're in for a rude shock. Once the mutineers have been dealt with, Crusoe returns home having learnt more or less nothing. Of course this is all just set up for the next book, and this being pretty much the first English-language novel the rules of how to write them aren't exactly codified yet, but I want closure, dammit!

All in all, I enjoyed reading Robinson Crusoe. I feel like it's aged pretty well when you consider just how old this novel is, but I think it falls just a little bit short of inclusion in my own personal canon. And I have absolutely no interest on reading anything at all about Crusoe's further adventures.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume III - Book IV

The various characters of the ABC all seem like a lot of fun, but as usual when it comes to French names I have absolutely no hope of keeping them all straight when it comes to the action. Hopefully Hugo will hold my hand a little when we eventually come to that stuff, or I am going to be so lost.

Republic of Plato

Book I

It's a whole new book, but Socrates continues to do Socrates things. As usual we're supposed to think he's so clever, but like Thrasymachus I find myself wanting to bop him on the nose. Rather smartly. If the rest of the Republic goes on like this it's going to be a long book.

The Sand Reckoner by Archimedes

Perfectly transparent

I found this one surprisingly easy to grasp and Archimedes chain of logic relatively easy to follow in comparison to Euler's, and was pleased to find that I could more or less able to nod along with all of his steps, so I was perplexed to find out that Archimedes model of the solar system was way, way off. Despite having a pretty good guess at the size of the Earth, it comes down one of his base assumptions being an order of magnitude off causing the measurement of the distance to the sun to be comically, tragically underestimated, but there's nothing wrong with the logic. Give me Archimedes over Socrates any day, is basically what I'm saying.


Some Numbers: 

This week we passed 3000 pages read during the project, which feels like a pretty significant milestone for someone who really hasn't read an awful lot in the last few years. It doesn't count all the Harry Potter fanfiction, either.

Pages last week: 106
Pages so far: 3021

Readings for Week XXVII


The only new book on the list this week is a return to Shakespeare with the Tempest, otherwise we're jsut continuing to power on through with bite-sized chunks of Hugo, Plato, Dicken, Bacon and our last dose of Herodotus. There's a few mid-sized readings and a couple of teeny-tiny ones, hopefully there's a little bit of something for everyone, so do join me by picking up a book or two ready for this time next week. Unless you only like things written since 1900, I guess, if so, you're bang out of luck.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume III - Book V (12 pages)
#non_gbww #imlit #novel #french

Republic of Plato

Book II (17 pages)
#gbww #pandt #philosophy #greek

The Tempest by William Shakespeare

(25 pages)
#gbww #imlit #play #english #oneshot

The History of Herodotus

Book IX (32 pages)
#gbww #mands #history #greek

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens

Chapters XIV & XV (18 pages)
#non_gbww #imlit #novel #english

Sphinx by Francis Bacon

(2 pages)
#ggb #pandt #essay #english #oneshot #short

Thursday, 24 October 2019

The Poetry of Things Themselves

This 'week' has actually been a very efficient one for reading. I've probably read more in the month or so since the last post than I did in the rest of the year up to that point. Unfortunately, most of the books that I read were extra-curricular. I've been thinking about maybe doing a review of some of them for the blog at some point, but for now I thought it would be best to get this post out there in the world and set off into Week XXVI rather than putting it off any longer.

The Week That Was:

The History of Herodotus

Book VII
The poor Spartans wish they looked this cool, but their helmets couldn't hold up their glasses.

I greatly enjoyed the way that the slow build and the pages and pages of descriptions of all of the different soldiers in Xerxes' army emphasised just how mindbogglingly huge his force is, whereas the Greek forces are barely mentioned in passing. I expected to feel cheated that all this had built up to a climax that arrived and was over so quickly, but on thinking back on it, it just somehow feels right, that the Persians had spent so many years building up this force and yet the battle was over in a moment.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapter XVII

Convenient, isn't it, that when Crusoe leaps mindlessly to save someone in a position of peril he turns out to have saved the captain from mutineers rather than the more likely option of having just laid the captain out. I guess even 26 years alone on an island just can't stop him from being on the side of the establishment. Probably a pretty good metaphor for the whole book, really.

Lucretius by George Santayana


I was not disappointed by picking up this one. Santayana's wit drips off the page, and while he doesn't pull any punches, one can feel his affection shining through. After reading this I am stoked to actually read Lucretius himself, although we're not due to get to him for another three 'months' if we keep to the plan.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume III - Books II-III

I like Hugo's constant diversions at least as much as the next guy, but having some indication that this little diversion is actually important information that the reader needs to care about is useful, and these chapters do it well. The musical tells us that you don't actually need any backstory about Marius at all to make the story work, but these chapters make a significant difference in helping us understand him and care about him as more than just a pretty face.

Some Numbers: 


The most significant number that we passed this 'week' was that we've now been having this little conversation for five years. At this point, 25 'weeks' into the project, I think it's time to find another name for each group of readings. I haven't come up with a better idea, but if you do, please suggest it in the comments. Though the whole 'seven year reading project' idea has obviously been blown well and truly out of the water by this point, I'm still enjoying myself, so let's keep going.

Pages last week: 112
Pages so far: 2915

Readings for Week XXVI


This week we are in for a lot of Greek even if our dose of Herodotus is a little more managable, since his good buddies Plato and Archimedes are along for the ride. I am particularly looking forward to both of them, because Republic seems to be the Platonic work that causes the most rolled eyes around here, and because, well, Archimedes! I imagine that both will probably be pretty hard work, but all in all it's a relatively quiet week, so I hope that we'll be able to manage, even if my history of managing the mathsy stuff shouldn't fill us with a lot of confidence. Then we're going to finish off Crusoe as a bit of a bit of a palate cleanser, and squeeze in a little Les Mis as well, just for fun. Dr J also had a little more Santayana this week, but while I've enjoyed the diversion, I don't feel like I need to go there.

The History of Herodotus

Book VIII (34 pages)
#gbbw #mands #history #greek

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XVIII-XX (26 pages)
#ggb #imaginativeliterature #novel #english

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume III - Book IV (18 pages)
#non_gbww #imaginativeliterature #novel #french

Republic of Plato

Book I (26 pages)
#gbbw #pandt #philosophy #greek #new

The Sand Reckoner by Archimedes

(10 pages)
#gbbw #mathmatics #greek #oneshot

Friday, 16 August 2019

Souls Which Are Pregnant

As the eagle-eyed may have noticed by the suspicious lack of blog posts a couple of times this week, it's been a busy week here at Leaflocker HQ, and a busy week means a lack of the dedicated focused reading time needed to get really dug into the weekly readings. I was left with almost half of the planned pages still to read yesterday morning in order to get this post to you on time, and I didn't quite get there. To be honest, if it hadn't been for the rain interruptions with the cricket you'd have been unlikely to reading this at all.
After bemoaning having to read all the books off of a screen after the loss of my tablet last week, I did the sensible thing and just went the 50 metres across the quad to the college library to read my Plato and Herodotus this time around. Since even the masters students have flown the nest by this point in the year, I had the whole thing completely to myself, apart from the one fellow reader pictured above. He seemed very well-read, but wasn't very forthcoming with him opinions on Plato, so I left him in silence and went about my reading.

The Week That Was:

The History of Herodotus

Book VI

I still can't keep all my various Greek islands straight, but I guess that it's not really important in the long run. Things are heating up between the Greeks and Darius, and after the early sorties this week I think we can be looking forward to some serious fireworks next time around. I still don't know why the Spartans keep listening to the oracle, it's pretty clear to me that the Pythoness just doesn't have their best interests in mind.

The Symposium by Plato

Hey! This is where Aristophanes and his excellent story about how people used to have four feet and are now searching the world for their other halves comes from! I was not expecting that to pop up in the midst of these series of speeches in praise of love.

When we got to the main event of Socrates speech I was feeling pretty uninspired, since to my mind he started off with a pretty poor argument and it felt like he was going to stay on that track the whole time, but thankfully he moved on, and the argument about love as a creative force is an interesting idea indeed. Overall, I think this was the best of the Plato that we've read so far, and I'm looking forward to seeing what he has for us next time we revisit him.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XVI

Defoe is actually pretty good at action scenes, which came as a bit of surprise to me after so much of the action up to this point happening inside Crusoe's head. The attack on the cannibals that Crusoe has been fantasising about on and off for seemingly half the book so far finally happens, and with three to twenty-one numbers, the element of surprise carries the day. Reading the book digitally means I'm not completely sure, but we must be heading towards the end now, and while it's been a good time, I think we've probably experienced everything that Crusoe has to offer.

Of Discourse by Francis Bacon

Another good one from Bacon. He seems to have his priorities in the right place, in this case his point is mostly that it's better to make conversation than to hold court and impress everyone with how eloquent you are. Normally I commend Bacon for his brevity, and while his packed a lot into one page, on this occasion I think he could probably just put the whole thing in a tweet.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo

Volume III - Book I

After spending a couple of weeks complaining about the detailed descriptions of a throw-away house during the last volume, we open this one by returning to the house after all. Maybe I need to give Hugo more credit. That said, it still seems unlikely that we really need to know the detailed history and layout of the house, no matter who lives there, but let's wait and see.

The title 'Paris studied in its atom' didn't exactly fill me with confidence for there being a lot of plot development in today's reading, and indeed there wasn't any, but it was an enjoyable read. Hugo's detailed, passionate descriptions of the city are really something. Everything that exists elsewhere exists at Paris indeed.

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens

Chapters XII-XIII

So we come to the employment of Mr. Weller. It's got to be a change for the Weller, too, as it's just not Dicken's unless one of the characters in each scene talks with a weird accent #punachieved. I can't say that I got a whole lot out of Pickwick this time around, it mostly just washed past me, but hey, there's a lot of chapters and they can't all be winners.

Some Numbers: 

This week we passed the 1000 pages of the Great Books of the Western World series read. We also passed 100 pages of philosophy and theology dialogues spread over six different titles, 5 of which are the various Platonic works that we've finished. But never fear, there's plenty more where that came from, as we still have eight Platonic dialogues to get through, not counting the twelve that we discarded during the great notoriety cull at the beginning of the project.

Pages last week: 114
Pages so far: 2803

Readings for Week XXV: 

Thanks to an absolutely gargantuan reading from the Histories, we're left with just enough room for three other titles to keep it company. Alongside excerpts from Defoe and Hugo we're going to take a risk and have a shot at George Santayana's Lucretius, because at some point we have to tackle Lucretius anyways, and also because Santayana famously said that thing about the past and being condemned to relive it. You'd have thought after the Emerson debacle I'd have learnt about picking books just on a pithy quote or two from the author, but I guess I have always been slow to learn, and I'm not going to change the habit of a lifetime after just one somewhat perplexing dive into modernism.

Dr. J, whose reading plan I am using as my starting line, also read D.H. Lawrence's The Rocking-Horse Winner, but he didn't have Sons and Lovers on his list like we do on ours, so I figure we can skip this one and hold out for the main event. It's a busy enough week as it is.

The History of Herodotus

Book VII (56 pages)

#gbbw #manandsociety #history #greek

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapter XVII (10 pages)

#ggb #imaginativeliterature #novel #english

Lucretius by George Santayana

(18 pages)

#ggb #manandsociety #essay #english #oneshot

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume III - Books II-III (28 pages)

#non_gbww #imaginativeliterature #novel #french

Thursday, 8 August 2019

Such, O Lacedaemonians, is tyranny!

It's been a tough week in the reading department here at Leaflocker HQ. It doesn't make a lot of sense given that I've had the most relaxed week that I've had in years that I've somehow had no time to read, but sometimes that's just how it goes. There was cricket to watch, and games to play, and far too many blog posts to write, and there wasn't my regular travel to and from work to get reading done in either, which all combined in a mad rush today to finish off the assigned weekly reading in time to get this post up before the clock strikes twelve and I turn back into a pumpkin.

The Week That Was:

The History of Herodotus

Book V

We turn at last to the Greeks, and Herodotus seems to enjoy being on firmer ground instead of trying to sort fact from fiction from the stories some bloke told him in a bar, but for the casual reader this one was quite the slog. There are just so many names to try an keep straight, I can't even manage all the different nations, let alone the leaders thereof. It strikes me as peculiar, once the Athenians worked out that they could just bribe the oracle, why anyone would ever listen to her again, but I guess the Greeks were Sparta men than I. #punachieved I also like the repeated reminders from Herodotus, the historian, that the Ionians really should have listened to Hecataeus, the historian. Very subtle. I also hope we get more Gorgo in the near future, as the mention of her here felt like a serious namedrop, and she must do something to have ended up as a leader in Civilization VI.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XV

Phew. After last week I was worried that I would never be able to enjoy Crusoe again, but all in all this was a fine chapter. I enjoyed how quickly Crusoe came to value and trust Friday's judgement, how interested he is in Friday's culture, and how clearly he is enjoying his company. 

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume II - Books VI-VIII

For two-thirds of this reading I was extremely worried by the idea that I might be reading 51 pages of Hugo this week and not get even a whiff of plot. Book VI was a detailed depiction of a monastery, which given last week's detailed history of a house wasn't a great start, and Book VII was an interesting and eminently quotable but out of place essay about how monasteries should all be torn down since they have no place in a modern society. Thankfully though, Book VIII not only mentioned the characters in passing, but had some actual significant plot, with our heroes finding a place a refuge for a while after a classic live burial cliffhanger. It ends with a promising time-skip, so I think we might be finally heading to the romantic bit!

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens 

Chapters VIII-XI

I really need to stop leaving Dickens to last. Pickwick has been fun when I've left myself the time to enjoy it at leisure, as it's supposed to be read with a nice stiff drink in the warm sunshine, and has been a bit of a labour when I've left it to a last-minute rush just to get the blog post up in time. We're going to read a lot of Dickens in the next few years, so we should really get in the habit of treating him well if we expect him to return the favour.

Thankfully, these were some rollicking chapters, with a cart chase and an unlucky bride jilted at the altar, so we didn't have the usual problem. I leave you with this little excerpt which made me smile:
The lady turned aside her head. ‘Men are such deceivers,’ she softly whispered.
‘They are, they are,’ ejaculated Mr. Tupman; ‘but not all men. 
I can't help but feel like Tracey Tupman would adore Twitter. 

Some Numbers: 

This week we reached a milestone 1200 pages read of titles that many people consider canon but which weren't included in the Great Books of the Western World series, with Dickens and Hugo carrying a little over half of that burden. Herodotus (215 pages) also overtook Huxley (194) as the author that I've read sixth-most of during the project, and I'd expect him to pass Nabokov (222), Euclid (237) and Homer (257) in the next couple of weeks to put himself into third place behind the two luminaries mentioned above. 

Pages last week: 112
Pages so far: 2689

Week XXIV: 

Only having four books to read was also I factor in my slow consumption rate this week, I think, as reading them in these big doses inevitably seems to take longer than just dropping by for a short visit; I guess I'm just the kind of reader who likes to know that the end of the chapter is just around the corner. Thankfully, we have smaller doses of Dickens and Defoe this week to make room for return visits from our friends Bacon and Plato, so if you've been waiting to jump into to something philosophical with me now could be the time: the Bacon reading is just about one page and the Plato isn't completely outrageous in length either, and so far we've found both authors to be pretty accessible, for philosophers.


Last time I read Plato, I greatly enjoyed reading him in the outdoors on my kindle, but recently my faithful ereader suffered a bit of a mishap in my backpack and is no longer in a fit state for the reading of Philosophy, or anything else, for that matter. It's served me well over many years, and I definitely need to find some time in the next little while to find a suitable replacement. A physical book is a wonderful thing and I can never get enough of them, but it's hard to beat the convenience of always having an e-reader in your bag.

The History of Herodotus

Book VI (33 pages)

#gbbw #manandsociety #history #greek


The Symposium by Plato

(27 pages)

#gbbw #philosophyandtheology #dialogue #greek #oneshot

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XVI (11 pages)

#ggb #imaginativeliterature #novel #english

Of Discourse by Sir Francis Bacon

(1 page)

#ggb #philosophyandtheology #essay #english #oneshot #short

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume III - Book I (29 pages)

#non_gbww #imaginativeliterature #novel #french

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens 

Chapters XII-XIII (13 pages)

#non_gbww #imaginativeliterature #novel #english 

Thursday, 1 August 2019

It Will Explain All Phenomena

It's hard to believe, but the first day of the eighth month of 2019 is already upon us, and that means that it's once again time for the annual blogging festival that is Blaugust. In accordance with long tradition, we're going to attempt to up the productivity of this usually dormant site over the month with a variety of regular features, but as August is once again a month of transition here at Leaflocker HQ, please don't expect daily updates or anything like that. We're not spring chickens with ceaseless energy any more, and if we can squeeze out three posts each week and somehow keep the household together, we'll be pleasantly surprised.


~

It's now been five years since we started a seven year project to read all the greatest works of the western canon, in a project pretentiously titled 'the Great Conversation'. We're running a little behind schedule, but the project limps on, and this week represents the twenty-third post in the series, which is probably some kind of Leaflocker record, as sticking to projects has never been a strong point.

It's been a pretty hectic week here at Leaflocker HQ, without the amount of downtime required to really digest some of the readings, but thanks to a couple of long bus rides, a quiet shift watching the college gate and liberal use of text-to-speech software while washing the dishes, we got through the readings in the allocated time.

The Week That Was:

The History of Herodotus

Book IV


I was going to try and draw a map based on Herodotus' directions in this book, but part way through I realised that someone else had undoubtedly done that already and probably done a much better job of it than I possibly could, and of course if you do a quick google search you come up with hundreds of options.

This feels fitting, as this book felt like mostly a pretty dry geography lesson, with the occasional interesting anecdote thrown in, but nothing remotely as captivating as some of the gems from previous weeks. Herodotus seems to know this himself, as he repeatedly points out that 'there a no notable men' among the Scythians, but as far as geography lessons go it isn't as too bad, and seems to be based on some actually reliable accounts and solid measurements rather than than the mystical creatures from last years wandering around India. I think I prefer the silliness, but the puzzle of trying to lay Herodotus' map onto my own mental map of the world is an enjoyable diversion.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XIV

Hoo boy! I found myself just thinking "that's racist" in response to section after section in this reading, particularly when it comes to the relationship between Friday and Crusoe. Crusoe is quick to reassure us that the whole master-servant dynamic is all Friday's idea, and that he loves the idea of waiting on Crusoe for the rest of his life, being called Friday and all, but Crusoe's already been dreaming of making savages into his slaves before Friday just appears thanks to divine providence, so it all seems a little...convenient, doesn't it?

Still, Crusoe is one of the first English novels. It's three-hundred years old this year, and comes from a distant time when the attitudes towards slavery were vastly different to those we hold today. When Crusoe was written, the slave trade was 1/20th of the British economy, and attitudes towards Africans in particular were distinctly less than complimentary, so maybe we need to cut Defoe a little slack. Still, one can't help but feel that if the British everyman Crusoe had treated Friday as more of a person, an equal, then the generations of Britons who grew up reading Defoe and then running African countries might, just maybe, have thought a little harder about what they were doing.

That's a big charge to lay at the foot of a novel. Especially one that you haven't finished reading yet. Maybe there's more surprises to come. But honestly I'd be surprised if I come out of the end of this one thinking anything other than "that's racist".

Nature by Ralph Waldo Emerson

There is a certain kind of person that one bumps into on a semi-regular basis in an Oxford common room. This person has read a lot of philosophy and wants you to know it, and conversations with them inevitably end up sounding a little like Emerson does in this text. As attractive as a 'theory of everything' sounds in practice, inevitably when people go looking for one they quickly lose me.

It's possible that I'm just not cut out for philosophy, but my test for what is bunkum nonsense designed simply to sound deep and able to be ignored wholesale is this: does the text sound like it could be an excerpt from Time Cube? Read the following excerpt and then tell me with a straight face that it passes this test.
The motion of the earth round its axis, and round the sun, makes the day, and the year. These are certain amounts of brute light and heat. But is there no intent of an analogy between man’s life and the seasons? And do the seasons gain no grandeur or pathos from that analogy? The instincts of the ant are very unimportant, considered as the ant’s; but the moment a ray of relation is seen to extend from it to man, and the little drudge is seen to be a monitor, a little body with a mighty heart, then all its habits, even that said to be recently observed, that it never sleeps, become sublime.

The Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde

I think this is the only thing by Oscar Wilde that I've ever read, and I seem to recall that I only read it the first time under the mistaken impression that it was 'the Little Prince', the much-lauded novella by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. I recall thinking that it was a pretty story, but certainly nothing to go Wilde about, and I have to say that on a second reading I just found it to be heavy-handed as a moral tale about selfless charity, and not particularly interesting as a story, with the possible exception of a cutting remark or two about politicians.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume II - Books IV to V

Ah Hugo. It is very important that I spend many chapters of description so that the reader understands in graphic detail the history, location and architecture of this building right here, because it is probably going to be an important plot point. No I am just kidding, we're just walking out the front door and never coming back. I had you worried though, didn't I? Aren't I a card? ... Never change.

The chapter from the perspective of Javert was a nice little change up. I have always been a fan of the man, and one of things I've been getting a kick out of in this reading has been seeing his human aspects as a man full of doubts and misgivings. Good stuff.

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens 

Chapters VII

Dickens makes an excellent attempt at the 'Full number of overs that are scheduled to be bowled that day' sketch here. It has its own chuckles, but as has become standard with Pickwick, many of the subtle or not even particularly subtle jokes go over the head of the casual modern reader, and I have to admit that this being the first day of the Ashes I'm just not in the mindset to be making fun of cricket. If I'd read this a couple of weeks later, once the dust has settled and my hopes of Australian cricket glory have faded a little, maybe I'd be able to give it a longer leash, but for this moment, cricket is sacred and I declare that Mr. Dickens ought to be more careful when choosing which aspects of British village life he chooses to take aim at.

Some Numbers: 

By my count, I read 115 pages last week but have somehow only increased the number of pages read by 107. Presumably something has gone wrong in my spreadsheet, but I can't work out what exactly so we're going to let the error stand and keep rolling on.

One number I am confident about is the page count in Les Mis after our efforts this week is now up to 365, so that means we're averaging a fifth of a page each and every day since we started it way back in the first week of August 2014. So that's something.

Pages last week: 115
Pages so far: 2569

Week XXIII: 

Dr. J's intended reading list for this week is still bogged down with Euclid and Usonian politics stuff that I dropped ages ago. This will mean that week XXIII is the first week since the beginning of the project that our list won't include a new or one-off reading, a phenomenon that I generally try to avoid, since one of the joys of our little Conversation has been the variety of the meal served up to us each day.

We'll make up for it with a frankly outrageously large excerpt from Les Mis with about as much Pickwick as I expect to be able to handle thrown in for good measure. All-in-all I expect it to be a generally easy-reading and enjoyable week to be reading the classics of the English canon.

The History of Herodotus

Book V (31 pages)

#gbbw #manandsociety #history #greek

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XV (8 pages)

#ggb #imaginativelierature #novel #english

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume II - Books VI-VIII (51 pages)

#non_gbww #novel #french

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens 

Chapters VIII-XI (30 pages)

#non_gbww #novel #english 

Thursday, 25 July 2019

The bag wants flour

On the whole, 2019 has been a pretty good year for my reading habits. I haven't gotten back to high school levels, but I've been reading steadily enough and reading relatively diversely too, thanks to our college book club. It hasn't been a great year for my weekly reading project, though, as I've made absolutely no progress on reading the 'classics' that are on my list since early September last year, despite finishing my assigned readings, just because I hadn't gotten around to writing about them...for about 11 months. 

Still, better late than never, so let's get a review of 'Week' XXI of our little conversation out of the way so that we can get on with it.

The Week That Was:

The History of Herodotus

Book III

We've all met a guy just like Herodotus, who just can't bear to let any fact that comes to mind go unmentioned, regardless how irrelevant it is to the main thrust of whichever story he sets out to tell. In amongst the meat of the story of the rise of Darius -which would be a fine yarn all by itself- is a bit of a side-note about the Greeks and a couple of fantastic, and I mean that in every sense of the word, stories about the creatures of India and Arabia which continue to be a delight. Herodotus is interesting enough when he's relating history but at his best when he's trying to describe things that he clearly doesn't understand, such as ants as big as foxes or where cinnamon comes from. Trying to glean little nuggets of truth out of these perplexing little stories is a good time all around, and I strongly recommend giving this one a try for yourself, dear reader.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XI-XIII

Three chapters of such possibility, such drama, and yet with so little of substance actually happening in them! I am willing to accept that the real story isn't the events of the story but what's going on in poor Robinson's head, but still, the possibilities for interesting bits of story so far left hanging are frustrating me to no end. I'm sure Defoe will get there, but perhaps not before our weekly reading of his novel stretches out to take the twenty-three years our hero has spent on the island. Personally, I'm feeling every one of them.

Two Friends by Guy de Maupassant 

The French stories that we've been reading have really packed a punch, and this one was no exception. The contrast between the flowery prose of the two carefree friends enjoying the summer, the sudden change in tone, and then the return to normality as if nothing had changed...oof. I am a sucker for a hopeless, pointless little stories with the backdrop of war and this number scratches that itch just right. I hope there's more pussiant stories from this guy to come. #punachieved

Immortality by Thomas Browne

As foreshadowed, this was dull. I don't know why I thought that it wouldn't be dull and am honestly a little upset at my past self for agreeing that this one should have made the reading list this week. I see why it was the sort of thing that excited Adler when he was pulling together the GGB, given that it's chock full of classical references and allusions to back up the idea that great literature is all inspired by other great literature; but that theory assumes that Browne is worth reading, and personally all I got out of the reading was a reminder to be more careful when picking my readings instead of just blindly following along after Dr. J.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume II - Books II & III

I'm finding it slightly troubling during this re-reading to find out just how much my multiple viewings of the musical have coloured my memory of Les Mis. I'd completely forgotten that in the original version Jean Valjean is returned to prison and has to stage a prison-break -in true dramatic Valjean fashion- in order to return to rescue Cosette from the Thenardiers.
On the topic of the musical, though, they really did do a number with the adaptation. Do yourself a favour and sit a moment and hum 'Master of the house' along with this excerpt from their introduction:
“The duty of the inn-keeper,” he said to her one day, violently, and in a low voice, “is to sell to the first comer, stews, repose, light, fire, dirty sheets, a servant, lice, and a smile; to stop passers-by, to empty small purses, and to honestly lighten heavy ones; to shelter travelling families respectfully: to shave the man, to pluck the woman, to pick the child clean; to quote the window open, the window shut, the chimney-corner, the arm-chair, the chair, the ottoman, the stool, the feather-bed, the mattress and the truss of straw; to know how much the shadow uses up the mirror, and to put a price on it; and, by five hundred thousand devils, to make the traveller pay for everything, even for the flies which his dog eats!”
This man and this woman were ruse and rage wedded — a hideous and terrible team.

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens 

Chapters V & VI

I think it was at about this point in the tale that I gave up on Pickwick last time around, frustrated with the authors tendency to get sidetracked from the point of the story, if indeed there even was one. This time around I'm rather enjoying the tour, although I do find myself wondering if we've actually going anywhere, somehow I can't imagine a story with these bumbling characters if the story itself wasn't bumbling all over the place too. Is that overly charitable towards Mr Dickens? I guess we'll just have to keep reading and find out.

Some Numbers: 

This week we reached the milestone of  having read exactly 1000 pages that were originally written in English. Greek trails behind, having reached 781 pages this week, while Latin and French together make up exactly 100 fewer pages than that. All of that would mean something if the page numbers that we were using for this project had any relation the amount of actual material consumed, but since the number of words per estimated page that I've been using in this project varies wildly, please continue to take the numbers with a pinch of salt.

Pages last week: 124
Pages so far: 2462

Week XXII: 

I hope you're enjoying Herodotus as much as I am, dear reader, as we have quite a lot of the Histories to come, including the significant wodge that is Book IV on Dr. J's reading list this week. We also have the pretty significant undertaking that is reading Ralph Waldo Emerson's essay Nature, which I am including in the readings against my better judgement because I vaguely recall being enamoured of a number of pithy Emerson quotations in my youth, though none of them come to mind right now.

Never fear, we haven't abandoned fiction, though. We'll also include a chapter each of Dickens and Defoe, just to keep them fresh in our minds, snack on a short story by Oscar Wilde, and round out the week with another few books from Les Mis.

Do pick one or two (or all) of the readings and come along with me on a little journey this week. Any journey is improved with fellow travellers on the road.

The History of Herodotus

Book IV (42 pages)

#gbbw #manandsociety #history #greek

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe

Chapters XIV (9 pages)

#ggb #imaginativelierature #novel #english

Nature by Ralph Waldo Emerson

(13 pages)

#ggb #naturalsciences #essay #english #oneshot

The Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde

(8 pages)

#ggb #imaginativeliterature #shortstory #english #oneshot

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo 

Volume II - Books IV & V (28 pages)

#non_gbww #novel #french

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens 

Chapters VII (7 pages)

#non_gbww #novel #english 

Thursday, 9 August 2018

Neither wholly our nor wholly not ours

Post 9 of ? for Blaugust 2018.
It's been a whole week already, and thanks to the wonders of bus rides I've more or less been able to keep up to date with my reading obligations, so it's time for yet another episodes of our 'seven year' reading project, The Great Conversation.
~

This 'Week':

The History of Herodotus
Book II


Everything that you ever wanted to know about the geography, history, religion and social structure of the Egyptians, as seen through the eyes of a Greek who thinks they're all crazy. What's not to love? There wasn't as many classic stories in this book, but it held together well and made for a fun read that had me repeatedly reaching for an encyclopedia to check Herodotus' facts.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
Chapters VIII - X


No drama just yet, just cottage industry. It amazes me that Crusoe can apparently use his ingenuity to complete anything he sets his mind to, but can't come up with a way to build a good boat. It's been fun, but it's time for something to actually happen in this story sometime soon, methinks.

The Masque of the Red Death by Edgar Allen Poe


Wow. I thought that this was going to be good fun, but it was not fun at all. I'm sure there's some deep and interesting allegory that Poe was going for with this one, but if it's there I think it's fair to say that I completely missed it. This was an excellent example of I should refrain from recommending titles before I read them, as all I got out of it was a bit confused as to how it even got published in the first place. 

Letter to Menoeceus by Epicurus


Epicurus doesn't seem to me to meet the definition of Epicurean that I'm familiar with, which is a little surprising to me. I thought Epicureans were all about enjoying the finer things in life but here he seems to be advocating finding enjoyment in the exact opposite. I guess we're just going to have to read more Greek philosophy to find out.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
Volume II - Book I


If you ignore the fact that this is an excerpt from a novel, then this is a perfectly passable musing on the Battle of Waterloo, the loss of national pride and the end of the First French Empire. Inside a novel, though, this is some weird junk.

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens
Chapters III - IV


I found keeping up with these chapters a little tricky after a year away from the characters, as I can't really remember anything about any of them apart from that scoundrel Mr. Tupman, but I think I'm back up to date again now. I'm not entirely sure that I'm 100% on top of everything that's going on, but I daresay it will all work out in the end. 


~

The Stats:

Twenty weeks down (I declared that prematurely last week because I got a little ahead of myself, I suppose), and we've hit more than 1000 pages of supplementary reading of classics that Mr. Adler didn't see fit to add to the Great Books of the Western World. This is largely thanks to Victor Hugo's Les Mis, which despite barely having gotten started at this point, sent him past Charles Dickens for the most-read author in the project last week. Don't worry, though, I fully expect Dickens to end up on top eventually given the cheer number of his works that we're going to end up reading.

Pages last week: 118
Pages so far: 2344
~

Week XXI:

We have three novels and the History on the go, and just a couple of little bits and pieces on the side this week courtesy of Dr. J. I've been thinking of condensing this part of the posts in future and just listing the readings, as there's only so many times that I can say 'I've got no idea what I'm about to read but I hope that it's good' without getting a little repetitive. Any thoughts on the topic, dear reader?


The History of Herodotus
#ggb #fiction #english #new
Book III (41 pages)


We've done the Persians and the Egyptians, I wonder where Herodotus is going to take us next. We've got no way of knowing from the chapter title, since like the rest it's just named after one of the muses, so we're going to have to just jump in and see, I suppose.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
#ggb #fiction #english #new
Chapters XI-XIII (24 pages)


Nothing new to say about Crusoe this week, so I'll just repeat what I said last time. "I feel like we're due a little bit of conflict here, as our friend has had life a little bit too easy, but somehow I feel that if that conflict is coming it's still a long way off, as he has a few more cottage industries to get off the ground yet."

Two Friends by Guy de Maupassant
#ggb #fiction #french #oneshot
(6 pages)


Guy de Maupassant has a name like a chess move, so I'm naturally predisposed to like him. I've also been quite fond of our forays into French fiction that we've taken so far, as it's a brave new world for me, so I look forward to finding out if he's the Guy for me. #punachieved (Go on, admit it, you've missed my literature puns)

Immortality by Thomas Browne
#ggb #philosophy #english #oneshot
(6 pages)


All I know of Thomas Browne is that he was relatively prolific and coined a lot of words that we still use today. I feel like that probably means that he's too clever for his own good and that this won't be any fun at all, but how bad can a six-page excerpt from a discourse on funeral rites really be?

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
#non_gbww #fiction #french
Volume II - Books II & III (28 pages)


Can we have a little story, here, Mr. Hugo, please? I understand that you're being paid by the word and all, but this is all getting a little silly.

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens
#non_gbww #fiction #english
Chapters V & VI (13 pages)


Dickens also has the distinct feeling of being paid by the chapter at the moment, but as long as his asides that don't move the story on continue to have decent jokes I'm alright with it. It's possible that there's an actual plot-line coming along to sweep our heroes along sometime, but then again, maybe it's already happening and I've just missed it. That would be very Pickwickian of me, I think.

~


I hope you enjoy reading along, or at least a little reading of your own this week.

Thursday, 2 August 2018

To ebb and flow darksomely

Post 2 of ? for Blaugust 2018.
It's time to pick up our conversation where we left off. Where were we, again?

If you're not familiar with my 'seven-year' reading project you can check out a little about the project on the page, on the first post, or by checking out the previous editions in the series. The idea is that I read about 100 pages of classics a week and report back, it's just that any given 'week' might take longer than that. This week has taken...just over eleven months. Don't ask what else I've been reading because I think I'd struggle to give you a straight answer.


Never mind that, though. The important thing is not how long it has taken but that we have gotten here, even if it took throwing the father of geometry from a moving bus to make it happen.


~

This 'Week':

Confessions of Augustine of Hippo
Book XIII

Ouch. Jumping back into Augustine after a few months off means getting reaquainted with this horribly archaic translation all over again. I can't help feeling that this one is always much more work than it ought to be due to the antiquated style. Theology can be confusing enough without having to wrestle with the whole sentence structure. note to self: do some research before picking a translation for a long book next time!

As we finish this book, I'm left in no doubt that it's surely not the theology that's the best bit of the Confessions. My advice, if you've not read them before and are considering it, is just to dive in at the beginning and to read the autobiographical section, which I found very human and relatable, until you get bored. For me it peaked around chapter 5 and everything was downhill from there, and the last few books really don't seem to belong at all.

Dream Children by Charles Lamb
(3 pages)

Wow. Lamb is just fantastic, isn't he? Do yourself a favour and read this, it's extremely short and it's just a charming exercise in wistfulness with a real punch at the end. What a joy.

Elements by Euclid
Book X(i)

Nah, I give up. I've been struggling with him for a while, but I've finally decided that Euclid is either not for me or just requires more interpretation than I'm able to put in. I got through the designated reading foe the week, but it's was close, and from here I'm throwing in the towel on this work and adding a new 'abandoned' category to my booklist.

The History of Herodotus
Book I

I can already tell that I am going to have a ball with my friend Herodotus. These chapters are full of the stories of characters whose names are familiar from folklore and from games of 7 Wonders, but who I've never properly encountered before: Croesus, Tomyris, Solon... There's a reason that these are stories that have lasted. Herodotus'  earnestness at assuring the reader that he's done the research and that these stories are all as true as he can make them is very endearing too. All in all, those 50-odd pages disappeared in of an eye.

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
Chapters V-VII

Crusoe has been on the island about as long as I've been reading about him being on the island, at this point. In parts I feel very jealous of his life of no obligations to anyone and feel compelled to go crash myself on some forgotten island somewhere, but then I recall that not only is Robinson Crusoe stranded on a surprisingly fertile and diverse island, he also has to work pretty hard. Since my favourite activity is sitting on a comfy couch nursing a cup of tea maybe that sort of life isn't for me after all.

~

The Stats:

After 20 'weeks' of reading and about 170,000 words consumed since August 2014, we're running at about 10% of the speed that I originally planned to get this project done in. Still, at this rate I'll be more or less finished by the time I reach a century in age, so all is well.

Pages last week: 136
Pages so far: 2226

~

Week XIX:

The reading list now has a great big Euclid-sized hole in it, and with Augustine done as well you might be forgiven for thinking that we were going to have a little time off from the Greeks for a while. It's not to be, however, as joining Herodotus we have a little bit of Epicurus, as well as a smattering of Poe, which is always fun. If you were thinking of reading along with me a little this week, you should pick the Poe. We also have a number of novels this week, as we read chapters from Defoe, Hugo and Dickens.

The History of Herodotus
#ggb #fiction #english #new
Book II (46 pages)

Very excited for this after last week's readings. While it's not necessarily an easy read and comes in yet another enormous chunk, if last time is any accurate measure this is going to a a lot of fun, and might even be vaguely educational, which is always nice.


Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
#ggb #fiction #english #new
Chapters VIII - X (22 pages)

I feel like we're due a little bit of conflict here, as our friend has had life a little bit too easy, but somehow I feel that if that conflict is coming it's still a long way off, as he has a few more cottage industries to get off the ground yet.

The Masque of the Red Death by Edgar Allen Poe
#ggb #fiction #english #oneshot
(4 pages)

I've read a reasonable about of Poe's short stories in the past, so I've probably read this one, but if that's the case then it's not one that lodges in the memory-banks. Hopefully I'll be able to go into this with fresh eyes and just be carried away by Poe's mastery of mood.

Letter to Menoeceus by Epicurus
#ggb #philosophy #greek #oneshot
(3 pages)

Something tells me that the Epicureans aren't my jam quite as much as the stoics are, but there's only one way to find out. I have no idea what we're getting ourselves into, here, but anyone who has an entire branch of philosophy named after him has to be worth a couple of minutes of reading.

Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
#non_gbww #fiction #french
Volume II - Book I (30 pages)

We come at last to the infamous Waterloo section of the book, the part that stops so many people from reading this classic and the first part that is mercilessly culled in any abridged version of the story, as it has nothing at all to do with the events of the tale. That said, I've heard that it's considered one of the first and most important French sources on the battle of Waterloo, so let's try to appreciate it for what it is and not get caught up in modern ideas like advancing the plot.

The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens
#non_gbww #fiction #english
Chapters III - IV (13 pages)

I remember thinking that Pickwick was a bit of fun last time we picked this one up, but all that I can recall now is that it seemed to involve a bunch of gentlemen playing jokes on each other and ignoring the consequences of their actions. Still, I'm always up for a little Dickens, especially when he's feeling playful, so let's have a go.

~

I hope you've gotten a chance to engage with one of our little texts in the last week, but even if you haven't, why not take this chance to let me know what you've been reading?