[Image: “DCI Mooreland,” by John E. Simpson — one of my #jesstorypix series of photos (many highly post-processed) which inspired mini-narratives in me. (Shared here under a Creative Commons License; for more information, see this page at RAMH.) The story I saw in this one: DCI Selwyn Mooreland thought he’d seen it all — but he hadn’t. He realized that now… now that they’d arrested Harry Rightback’s widow, Marjorie, and had time to search the house. Bad enough, it was, that all the bodies in the back yard matched up with name tags tacked up on the corkboard on the basement wall. But Mooreland knew the worst was yet to come. For there were still a hundred more tags there — tags with no corresponding bodies. Yet… (I’m afraid the inconclusive concluding ellipsis is a feature of many of those stories.) You can find the large version of this photo at my SmugMug site.]
From whiskey river:
Stop worrying about your identity and concern yourself with the people you care about, ideas that matter to you, beliefs you can stand by, tickets you can run on. Intelligent humans make those choices with their brain and hearts and they make them alone. The world does not deliver meaning to you. You have to make it meaningful… and decide what you want and need and must do. It’s a tough, unimaginably lonely and complicated way to be in the world. But that’s the deal: you have to live; you can’t live by slogans, dead ideas, clichés, or national flags. Finding an identity is easy. It’s the easy way out.
(Zadie Smith [source])
…and:
Not Only the Eskimos
We have only one noun
but as many different kinds:the grainy snow of the Puritans
and snow of soft, fat flakes,guerrilla snow, which comes in the night
and changes the world by morning,rabbinical snow, a permanent skullcap
on the highest mountains,snow that blows in like the Lone Ranger,
riding hard from out of the West,surreal snow in the Dakotas,
when you can’t find your house, your street,
though you are not in a dream
or a science-fiction movie,snow that tastes good to the sun
when it licks black tree limbs,
leaving us only one white stripe,
a replica of a skunk,unbelievable snows:
the blizzard that strikes on the tenth of April,
the false snow before Indian summer,
the Big Snow on Mozart’s birthday,
when Chicago became the Elysian Fields
and strangers spoke to each other,paper snow, cut and taped,
to the inside of grade-school windows,in an old tale, the snow
that covers a nest of strawberries,
small hearts, ripe and sweet,the special snow that goes with Christmas,
whether it falls or not,the Russian snow we remember
along with the warmth and smell of furs,
though we have never traveled
to Russia or worn furs,Villon’s snows of yesteryear,
lost with ladies gone out like matches,the snow in Joyce’s “The Dead,”
the silent, secret snowin a story by Conrad Aiken,
which is the snow of first love,the snowfall between the child
and the spacewoman on TV,snow as idea of whiteness,
as in snowdrop, snow goose, snowball bush,the snow that puts stars in your hair,
and your hair, which has turned to snow,the snow Elinor Wylie walked in
in velvet shoes,the snow before her footprints
and the snow after,the snow in the back of our heads,
whiter than white, which has to do
with childhood again each year.
(Lisel Mueller [source])
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