Nov 14, 2009

Bad Gurl 4 Lyfe: Cassie "Manuella Santos" Steele.

Um, apparently Cassie Steele is an even crazier bitch in real life. I don't know who Mr. Colson is (I like to think he's Degrassi's middle-aged on-set tutor), but I fear for him. The same way I fear for every man I've ever loved. Please to enjoy her Canadian Top 40 Hit....?

Nov 13, 2009

Nail Color for the Weekend


OPI Holiday Glow, but no holiday today, just grateful that I'm able to spend a large chunk of today's work hours getting my nails did and killing time in a Park Slope coffee shop. The good news is that they play a lot of Kelly Clarkson here but the downside is that she's not drowning out the conversational English lessons on either side of me. They could also be blind dates but how would you ever know the difference?

napoleon's hair is in there!


lookit.

Nov 11, 2009

11-11


View of a Room






















Bedroom from the Sagredo Palace, Venice (ca.1718), held by our Metropolitan Museum since 1907.

Nov 9, 2009

Nov 8, 2009

Early Photograph for Sunday

Burning Mills at Oswego
George N. Barnard
(Painted) Daguerreotype
1853

Verses

From-a-babe, I've felt a spiritual affiliation with WWI dead and mourning (likely past life residue). So this morning (nostalgic?), I returned to my collected Siegfried Sassoon. Sassoon has never impacted me like Wilfred Owen, never appeared to be as fine and musical a poet (or as tragic a figure). But he was certainly more prolific and . . . journal*istic? The war poems are best taken whole; severed from the pack, they are sort of naive, the satirical diary entries of a well-educated boy encountering misfortune for the first time, reactionary and freshly political. When read one after another, they impress with honesty, render one incapable of cynicism for their earnestness and for the trauma through which they were penned. That said, here are two, set aside, both on the subject of rough amusements, a persistent grotesque (I hope they haven't been criminally airlifted from context . . . they're definitely Brit-priggish):

"When I'm among a Blaze of Lights"
8 January, 1917

When I'm among a blaze of lights
With tawdry music and cigars
And women dawdling through delights,
And officers in cocktail bars,
Sometimes I think of garden nights
And elm trees nodding at the stars.

I dream of a small firelit room
With yellow candles burning straight,
And glowing pictures in the gloom,
And kindly books that hold me late.
Of things like these I choose to think
When I can never be alone:
Then someone says, 'Another drink?'
And turns my living heart to stone.

"Blighters"
4 February, 1917

The House is crammed: tier beyond tier they grin
And cackle at The Show, while prancing ranks
Of harlots shrill the chorus, drunk with din;
'We're sure the Kaiser loves our dear old Tanks!'

I'd like to see a Tank come down the stalls,
Lurching to ragtime tunes, or 'Home sweet Home,'
And there'd be no jokes in Music-halls
To mock the riddled corpses round Baupaume.


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