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Anniversaries abound
this week. Charlemagne and Napoleon became rulers of France, the Encyclopedia Britannica and the Los Angeles Times began, the Monroe Doctrine was spelled out, and the westward “Manifest Destiny” of the country was declared. One country attacked another, and a draft began for another war. The prohibition on alcohol ended but a prohibition on speech led to a student movement for freer speech.
Charles Dickens began to get paid for his speeches as he became a world traveler to read publicly from his works.
Some extremely well known authors were born this week, several of them having a great deal to do with satire. First there was
Jonathan Swift, and later
Mark Twain. Then came
Woody Allen,
Calvin Trillin,
T. Coraghessan Boyle, and sometimes
David Mamet.
Novelist
Joseph Conrad did not write comedy, nor did
Joan Didion nor
Peter Handke but they, and story writer
Cornell Woolrich, along with poets
Ranier Maria Rilke and
Christina Rossetti all reached powerful levels of anxiety in readers. Other well known names include
Winston Churchill, poet
Joyce Kilmer and the oft quoted
Kahlil Gibran. There is also another early Nobel prizewinner, the lesser known classicist
Theodore Mommsen who won in 1902.
This Week’s Question: Quotes from authors this particular week could fill a volume by itself but here are just two. Which authors born this week said these?
Why shouldn’t truth be stranger than fiction? Fiction, after all, has to make sense.
Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody's face but their own.
Answer to Last Week’s Question: The term
illuminated generally refers to the Medieval practice of decorating manuscript pages with gilded lettering and small illustrations interspersed with the text. Bringing the practice back to the modern world, poet – artist – visionary
William Blake invented relief etching, a reverse of the usual process, and added illustrations, which had to be hand colored, to create illuminated books of his poetry. Noted among them are
Songs of Innocence and Experience and
The Book of Job. Original editions are prized among collectors and special libraries.