Sunday, June 30, 2024

June 30– From “On Liberty” by John Steward Mill (1859)

 A different Mill (and a solid music video)

June 30– From “On Liberty” by John Steward Mill (1859)

Summary: Tyranny of the majority bad.

Commentary: I'm so tired today (red eye flight flying against the time change), which is a shame, since I think this is a really good piece, but it's also a bit of a thinker. I'm just going to drop the pull quote and make myself a note to come back to this one.

People are accustomed to believe, and have been encouraged in the belief by some who aspire to the character of philosophers, that their feelings, on subjects of this nature, are better than reasons, and render reasons unnecessary. The practical principle which guides them to their opinions on the regulation of human conduct, is the feeling in each person’s mind that everybody should be required to act as he, and those with whom he sympathizes, would like them to act.

Reflections on Week 25 (June 17-23)

   Link to readings

Still technically on time for the week.

Quick review on this week's readings:

June 17 "Brief Narrative" by Elliot: 2/5 Interesting (probably badly whitewashed) story about establishing a church/conversion. Kind of rambly.

June 18 Cinderella by The Brother's Grimm: 4/5 It's so metal! \m/

June 19 "Of Our English Dogs" by Harrison: 3/5 Interesting to see how people looked at dogs then compared to today.

June 20 The Voyage of The Beagle by Darwin: 3/5 One of the less interesting Darwins, but still pretty good.

June 21 "Sesame" by Ruskin: 1/5 Terrible philosophy, followed by some decent poetry analysis.

June 22 "Letter LXXXIII" by Pliny: 3/5 I didn't actually like this one, but it was short, and it was interesting to see ghost stories haven't really changed in a couple thousand years.

June 23 John Stuart Mills Autobiography: 1/5 "A list of books I read because I was a smart kid."

Average: 2.43/5 A meh score for a pretty meh week overall.

Overall Thoughts on The Project:

I want to zoom in on Pliny for this week's commentary. Let's start by looking at a (trimmed) quote from Dr. Eliot that's included in the 15 Minute A Day guide and some of the advertising copy for T5FSOB:

My aim was not to select the best fifty, or best hundred, books in the world, but to give, in twenty-three thousand pages or thereabouts, a picture of the progress of the human race within historical times, so far as that progress can be depicted in books. The purpose of The Harvard Classics is, therefore, one different from that of collections in which the editor's aim has been to select a number of best books; it is nothing less than the purpose to present so ample and characteristic a record of the stream of the world's thought that the observant reader's mind shall be enriched, refined and fertilized. Within the limits of fifty volumes, containing about twenty-three thousand pages, my task was to provide the means of obtaining such knowledge of ancient and modern literature as seemed essential to the twentieth-century idea of a cultivated man. The best acquisition of a cultivated man is a liberal frame of mind or way of thinking; but there must be added to that possession acquaintance with the prodigious store of recorded discoveries, experiences, and reflections which humanity in its intermittent and irregular progress from barbarism to civilization has acquired and laid up.

T5FSOB isn't supposed to just be the best books, or to tell you what/how to think. It's supposed to show how we as (western) society have developed over the course of a couple thousand years to today (or 1910's today).

And it's really interesting how little we've developed in the realm of ghost stories in that time. Pliney's story starts with a self fulfilling prophecy (an up and coming general is told he'll get promoted. He does. He's told he'll die near his home and he goes "well, if the prophecy says so...") where none of the actions are really that unusual (and are kind of vague). Then follows up with a "I heard from my friend's brother's roommate's girlfriend's cousin..." story.

Other sections show more change. It's interesting to read Darwin supporting Lamarck's evolution though inheritance of acquired traits, when today we see his theory of evolution as directly opposed to Lamarck.

Saturday, June 29, 2024

June 29– Macbeth (the second half of) Act III by Shakespeare (1623)

The header quote for today's reading. It's not actually in the reading. Wild Doc Elliot


Summary: Macbeth goes crazy and ruins dinner. Then Hecate shows up.

Commentary: Ok, I know I whine about the specific selections from pieces a lot, but this one is really weird.

1. "Is this a dagger..." is the headline quote in the reading guide, but comes in the beginning of the previous act, over 15 pages earlier. Macbeth is only like 80 pages, so that's pretty significant. If not that one I'm surprised we didn't get one of the (either earlier or later) famous soliloquies. Especially since, unlike Hamlet, this is the only Macbeth selection we get.

2. Scene 4 (the dinner) is pretty good. "You have displaced the mirth," is one of the underrated lines in all of Shakespeare. Still not really a key/famous scene.

3. Scene 5 is a Hecate scene. There's some pretty credible speculation that Hecate isn't even in the original play (and slightly less that she was originally larger role, since the version of Macbeth that survived is probably an abridged/working copy). A fair number of productions I've seen cut her (and this entire scene) entirely, or occasionally cut her but preserve some of the her lines and give them to the witches.

4. Scene 6 is basically just Lennox serving as a narrator to set up some future events. No reason at all to include it in a small selection like this.

If nothing else, (assuming he wanted the dinner, the only worthwhile scene here) Elliot could've done the first half of  Act III. You still wouldn't get "Is this a dagger?" but you do get the murderers, a strong Macbeth and Banquo scene, and a good Macbeth and Lady Macbeth one.

Friday, June 28, 2024

June 28– From "The Voyage of The Beagle" by Charles Darwin (1839)

 A Famous Beagle

June 28– From The Voyage of The Beagle by Charles Darwin (1839)

Summary: Darwin moves into the sociological part of his splat book.

Commentary: I really enjoy how comprehensive Darwin is. Geography, biology, botany, sociology it's all here. 

The best parts are his various hunting expeditions where "to [his] shame as a sportsman" he runs out of powder missing a deer, and accidentally bolases himself/his horse.

Also interesting to see him agreeing with Lamarck, who he is generally considered the opposite of today.

Thursday, June 27, 2024

June 27– Sir Francis Bacon’s “Of Friendship” essay (1597)

 It's Bacon!

June 27– Sir Francis Bacon’s “Of Friendship” essay (1597)

Summary: Friends are important.

Commentary: Good essay on friendship. Probably doesn't deal with much that isn't familiar to most people (friends are important, good friends aren't afraid to disagree, there's a difference between a friend and an acquaintance, etc.) but good to refresh now and then (and helpful for the people who might not have read a similar one before). I kind of wish it'd been closer to the Cicero piece we read earlier in the year so they were more comparable. Maybe I'll go back and reread both together at some point. 

Today's pull quote, to which I have nothing to add:

But little do men perceive what solitude is, and how far it extendeth; for a crowd is not company, and faces are but a gallery of pictures, and talk but a tinkling cymbal, where there is no love.

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

June 26– From "Beowulf" translated by Francis B. Gummere

 Beowulf in Old English

June 26– From Beowulf translated by Francis B. Gummere 

Summary: Beowulf fights Grendel's mom

Commentary: I don't think I've read this translation of Beowulf before. Seems like a pretty good one. I like the "bone-ring" kenning for vertebrae, not a translation I've seen elsewhere.

Kind of surprised we got this fight instead of the Grendel fight. I think that's the more common choice for "if you only read one part of Beowulf" but not a bad choice. 

Currently trying to talk my wife into reading Beowulf with me since she likes The Lord of The Rings so much. Maybe that'll be a blog feature next year.

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

June 25– Poems by Robert Herrick

 Alan Rickman

June 25– Poems by Robert Herrick

Summary: Mostly fun poems

Commentary: Tonight's selection has the famous, "gather ye rosebuds while ye may." I've always been less of a "life is short, enjoy it" person, and more of a "life is too long to be miserable all the time" kind of person. Maybe that'll change once I'm older, but right now it seems awful to think about being miserable for 40+ years.

I appreciate this chunk from "Delight In Disorder"

     A careless shoe-string, in whose tie

     I see a wild civility;—

     Do more bewitch me, than when art

     Is too precise in every part.

A little wildness in life (and art) is usually a good thing.

"To Anthea..." is likewise good. It's very much a cliché love poem, but I appreciate it for being straightforward and not over written. No weird compound metaphors or whatever, just "I love you, so I'll do anything you ask."


Like Mark Twain and Vincent Price had a kid.


June 30– From “On Liberty” by John Steward Mill (1859)

  A different Mill (and a solid music video) June 30– From “On Liberty” by John Steward Mill (1859) Summary: Tyranny of the majority bad. Co...