sharing my love of books with you

Category: Bookish Thoughts (Page 16 of 43)

Finished: Rumi

Though I haven’t read much in the last few weeks, I did reopen my Rumi book this morning. I had shelved it in my newly rearranged library and left it there – unread – for some time. Poetry books are nice in that you can stop reading a book of poetry, but when you pick it back up, it’s like you never closed the cover. I didn’t realize I only had a few poems left and a selection called “Two Discourses”.

Rumi was very hard for me to read. Sometimes, I fully understood the meaning of his poems, and sometimes I just didn’t. I think part of what makes Rumi hard to read is the difference in language and culture. Something is lost when a poem has to be translated. The author’s original words and phrases don’t seem to make sense in English, and culture is also a large part of that disconnect. Rumi was Persian, Islamic, and lived centuries ago. I am American, Christian, and quite modern. I don’t fully understand Rumi’s culture, just as he might find mine confusing. But it was still good for me to read outside of my comfort zone. It is part of growing and learning. Perhaps one day, a year or two from now, I will return to my book of Rumi and find that I love more of his works because I have matured in my knowledge. I hope so.

I encourage you to try reading some of Rumi’s poems. You can start with the ones I posted here. He isn’t always hard to understand, and it will be good for you to stretch yourself by reading something hard. If not Rumi, maybe something else. Do you have a book on your shelf you keep meaning to read, but you think is too big or too old or too hard? Now is the time to start it. Don’t worry about how long it takes you to finish. Enjoy the journey. You may come away from it, like I have from Rumi, with a feeling of accomplishment because you have done the hard thing. Happy Reading!

Peregrinate

Peregrinate – to travel from place to place, or from one country to another; to live in foreign countries

“The records for the fall of 1886 are sparse, for Roosevelt was carrying the biggest secret of his peregrinating life. He had fallen in love with Edith Carow and planned to marry her; he wanted no publicity.

Lion in the White House, Aida D. Donald

Halcyon

Halcyon – calm, quiet, peaceful, undisturbed, happy; a number of days occurring about the winter solstice, when the weather is calm; hence, days of peace and tranquility

“After this and other political atrocities, the legislative body was labeled the most corrupt since the halcyon days of Boss Tweed and his henchmen, who bilked the city out of tens of millions of dollars.”

Lion in the white house, Aida D. Donald

Bloviate

Bloviate – to talk at length, especially in an inflated or empty way

“[Roosevelt’s] resolution of impeachment was tabled, as an old warhorse of the system attacked him. As reported in one account, he bloviated about “that dude,” Roosevelt.”

Lion in the White House, Aida D. Donald

Sartorial

Sartorial – of or pertaining to a tailor or to tailoring

“The evening at the party’s caucus, he showed up in a formal cutaway coat with tails and carried a high silk top hat. He sported a gold watch and fob and a gold-topped cane. The sartorially splendid Rosevelt had a round, ruddy face, ample brown hair parted in the middle, and thick, reddish sideburns.”

Lion in the white house, Aida D. Donald

Expatriate

Expatriate – to drive (a person) from his native land; to withdraw (oneself) from one’s native land; to renounce the rights of citizenship where one was born, and become a citizen of another country

“Some of the most heartfelt poems in this book are written from the viewpoint of expatriates or exiles longing for their native land.”

Poems of the Irish People, introduction, printed 2016

Pyrrhic Victory

Pyrrhic Victory – a too costly victory; in reference to the victory of Pyrrhus over the Romans as Asculum in 279 BC, in which the losses were extremely heavy

“Roosevelt fought an intense battle, but he scored only a pyrrhic victory. At the next general election, German Americans made a revolutionary political switch to the Democrats.”

Lion in the White House, Aida D. Donald

On Roosevelt’s Police Examinations

“To reform the system Roosevelt introduced new examinations for policemen. As a result, sixteen hundred qualified men were given jobs as officers. Within two years, about two-fifths of all patrolmen were placed under the revamped civil service, or about four times the previous number of protected jobholders. The qualifying examinations were not onerous. An applicant had to know how to spell, to write a good letter, to do basic arithmetic, and to have some acquaintance with history and geography. To those complaining about the unfairness of the test, Roosevelt made public several examples of failing replies that would-be patrolmen had offered. In answer to the question “What are the five New England states?” a man wrote, “Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and Cork.” Another applicant who failed wrote the word paper in answer to “Upon what instrument is the government of the United States founded?” One applicant hoped to flatter Roosevelt by replying “President Roosevelt” when asked who would perform the duties of the mayor if he were absent or disabled.”

Lion in the White House, Aida D. Donald

Acclimatize

Acclimatize – to accustom to a new climate or different environment; acclimate

“[Roosevelt] turned to his uncle, James Alfred Roosevelt, the Hudson River aristocrat and influential Democrat (not the father of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who was to marry Theodore’s niece Eleanor), for advice about the sordid legislative arrangement, but James only tried to acclimatize his nephew to the prevailing practices of the day: go along to get along.”

Lion in the White House, Aida D. Donald

Excoriate

Excoriate – to denounce strongly

“It was this kind of [corrupt] political system, controlled mostly by Tammany Hall, as the Democratic Party’s office was known, that men like Roosevelt and other reformers had excoriated over the years.”

Lion in the White House, Aida D. Donald
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