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Posts by M.F. Corwin

(I should mention that I am still working on proofreading, so I apologize in advance for any awkwardnesses that are not the poet’s own.)

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Marzials: Poems Specimens of poetry by Theo Marzials, hanger-on at the British Museum, composer, and general oddity.

Do you need more mediocre verse from the late nineteenth century in your life? Yes, of course you do.

Special guest criticism by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and Jack Kerouac.
www.eudaemonist.com/biblion/marz...

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‘There are types of character which are like a prism, whose various and brilliant colours are but broken reflections of a single ray of concentrated light’ —R.H. Tawney (‘Religion and the Rise of Capitalism’, p. 156)

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‘Become the imitable thing’ —William James, ‘The Gospel of Relaxation’

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Spell check wants to change ‘bibliometrische’ to ‘bibliomantische’.

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‘Most of us continue living unnecessarily near our surface’ —William James, ‘On Vital Reserves’

1 month ago 5 0 0 0
A photograph of books and journals, including the DSM-5, a history of English hospitals, Anatomy of Melancholy, Foucault on the clinic, a book on werewolves, and Montaigne, all very uplifting.

A photograph of books and journals, including the DSM-5, a history of English hospitals, Anatomy of Melancholy, Foucault on the clinic, a book on werewolves, and Montaigne, all very uplifting.

Morning books are the perfect present to oneself: they break up mammoth books into digestible gobbets while also seeding the day with a sense of accomplishment.

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(I do not agree with this approach, let it be noted. Just stood out in the daily reading.)

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‘Nor hope to be my self less miserable
By what I seek, but others to make such
As I, though thereby worse to me redound:
For onely in destroying I find ease
To my relentless thoughts’
—Milton, ‘Paradise Lost’, IX.126–130

2 months ago 6 1 2 0
Brambles covered in hoarfrost, with a blurry view of a frost-covered meadow in the background, along with a hint of blue sky and some evergreens.

Brambles covered in hoarfrost, with a blurry view of a frost-covered meadow in the background, along with a hint of blue sky and some evergreens.

3 months ago 5 1 0 0
A view of a meadow bound by trees, covered with a thin layer of snow. A small cabin is faintly visible through the trees, its roof white with snow.

A view of a meadow bound by trees, covered with a thin layer of snow. A small cabin is faintly visible through the trees, its roof white with snow.

3 months ago 5 0 0 0

the ancestry and posterity of Grief go further than the ancestry and posterity of Joy

3 months ago 127 28 2 9

‘So there’s an end to that—it’s commonplace: light goes with life, and in the winter of your years the dark comes early…’ —Tom Stoppard, ‘Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead’

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Label makers are one of life’s underrated pleasures – they add an increment of joy to the quotidian.

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The autumn field yielding to the bounds of winter, the leaves now scattered solely on the ground, the evergreens a dark horizon.

The autumn field yielding to the bounds of winter, the leaves now scattered solely on the ground, the evergreens a dark horizon.

5 months ago 8 0 1 0
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‘Somehow his memory irritates me! He possessed the truth and answered to the heavenly calling, and yet always without joy and almost always without grace. His puerility, as you say, was heartrending.’ —Edmund Gosse, unimpressed with Andrew Lang in a letter to Henry James

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‘Opposite to exercise is idleness (the badge of gentry) or want of exercise, the bane of body and mind, the nurse of naughtiness, stepmother of discipline, the chief author of all mischief….’ —Robert Burton (‘Anatomy of Melancholy’)

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Autumn advances across in the meadow in shades of gold and russet.

Autumn advances across in the meadow in shades of gold and russet.

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A slash a blue sky visible behind silhouetted trees, with splashes of yellow and gold and red leaves below.

A slash a blue sky visible behind silhouetted trees, with splashes of yellow and gold and red leaves below.

‘Of seasons of the year, the autumn is most melancholy’ —Robert Burton, ‘Anatomy of Melancholy’, 1.1.3.2

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Carefully.

6 months ago 1 0 0 0

(Mostly I just liked the picture though)

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Engraved frontispiece to Ulrich von Hutton’s ‘Nemo’, which is mentioned in Robert Burton’s ‘Anatomy of Melancholy’.

Engraved frontispiece to Ulrich von Hutton’s ‘Nemo’, which is mentioned in Robert Burton’s ‘Anatomy of Melancholy’.

Ulrich von Hutten’s poem ‘Nemo’ (nemo, nam, nemo omnibus horis sapit, etc.) is briefly quoted in ‘Democritus Junior to the Reader’, and it reminded me of:

‘Well, one time when things was looking bright
I started to whittling on a stick one night
Who said, “Hey! That's dynamite!”?
Nobody.’

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An autumnal meadow, although most of the leaves are still green.

An autumnal meadow, although most of the leaves are still green.

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I really like discontent.

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(I am hoping that this quotation is not currently topical, but am making a note of it because I really like Burton’s use of ‘prank up’ and ‘trot about’ here. None so sweet.)

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‘Some prank up their bodies, and have their minds full of execrable vices. Some trot about to bear false witness, and say anything for money; and though judges know of it, yet for a bribe they wink at it, and suffer false contracts to prevail against equity.’ —Burton, ‘Democritus Jr. to the Reader’

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‘The natural dreariness of the place is not a little increased by the melancholy croakings of innumerable penguins with which the Shore is lined. Nature seems to have designed this Spot solely for the use of Sea Lions, Seals, penguins and Sea Fowls.’ —James Burney, Journals, 25.xii.1776

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A photograph of two stacks of small hardcover books, showing the the cream or milky tea colored text blocks, some decked, some warped, all more or less well-thumbed. Tolstoy on the left and Florio’s Montaigne and other early modern marvels (in early twentieth-century multi-volume editions) on the right.

A photograph of two stacks of small hardcover books, showing the the cream or milky tea colored text blocks, some decked, some warped, all more or less well-thumbed. Tolstoy on the left and Florio’s Montaigne and other early modern marvels (in early twentieth-century multi-volume editions) on the right.

A moment’s pause while tidying.

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‘As readers, most of us, to some degree, are like those urchins who pencil mustaches on the faces of girls in advertisements’ —Auden, ‘Reading’, in ‘The Dyer’s Hand’

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‘There’s really no point in writing normal novels’ —Yoko Tawada, ‘Exophony’ (trans. Lisa Hofmann-Kuroda), p. 81

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