Sunday 21 June 2020

The Sunday Ishmael - the longest day, 21st June in the Year of Ruin 2020

The Caption Contest
Thank you for your entries. The Dodo's Verdict: Everyone has won and all must have prizes. Especially mr verge.

The News 
There isn't any good news. There isn't any new news. There's lots of same old, same old, news, dressed up in new clothes.  
Surprise! Rich man allegedly attempts to corrupt the planning process.
Covid -19 remains a Bad Thing. People continue to die. But shops and restaurants must open. People must spend. How do you eat spaghetti in a face mask, by the way?
The Party and Event scene crowd in Stuttgart got drunk and abusive. More than a dozen police officers were hurt  during rioting and looting by an indeterminate number of up to 500 people.
The man responsible for a terrorist stabbing in Reading was known to MI5. The fourth suspected terrorist knife attack in recent months followed November stabbings at Fishmongers’ Hall, HMP Whitemoor prison in January and Streatham in February.

And as America's Civil War, commenced on April 12th 1861 and now in its 159th year, continues with burnings, murders and rioting, here's a note from mr ishmael:

I was reading in my apparently uncancellable Time magazine subscription about Hillary Trousers' encounter with a small group of  Black Lives Matter activists in New Hampshire. Yo, bitch, was your ole man, Spunky Bill, introduced this Tough On Crime shit, which means, trouserlady, that black folks, walking down the street, mindin' they own business,  can just get their nigger heads all blown away by any redneck cop who feels like doin' that shit; wochoogottasayboutthat, bitch?
Time magazine, ever gracious to Power, did not report the fleabitten old buzzard's response; we can, however, frame it for ourselves, from our own experience. Aw shucks, I'm just poor Southern trash, jes like y'all, an' it don't mean shit that me an' Spunky Bill done raised a billion dollars in bribes fer ourselves, we's still poor at heart. Y'know, friends, I'm kinda like the Dolly Parton a politics, I came from nothin' to bein' First Lady, an' I done it on my own efforts,  an' by standin' by my man. (sings) sometimes it's hard to be a woman.......
catcalls: Yeah, bitch, stand by yo' man even when he's noncing an intern, Way to go, DykeLady. Pure feminism, that is

The Art Appreciation Pages

The Balinese say: We have no Art. We do everything as well as we can.
  I read those words years ago, decades ago, in McLuhan's Understanding Media, and they are always around, somewhere, on a shelf, a mantelpiece, not prominent but never out of sight.
The intrusiveness of the TeeVee arts presenter has been a regular theme, hereabouts;  recently, we have  focused on Dr Tubby Ramirez, punk-Goth arts historian, and the grotesque Simon Russell Beale, a man who would talk-over Beethoven at prayer,  but we have looked at lots of them, socialist peer, Lord Belbin Bagg, pension fiddler, Alan Yentob, dunderhead Mark Potato, the PBC's cawing Kirsty Wark and many more; it is a  self-ordained priesthood of gabshitery, a predatory band of media-hedin
holypersons, wise ones, explaining to us the sacred mysteries of architecture, painting, writing, even of trashy pop music, 
Yentob, in all seriousness, taking us on a tour of Mark Knopfler's expensive guitars. 

Well, essentially, viewers, Fender only make about a quarter of a million of these per year.  And not all of them are in pink. So that makes this one very rare. A work, in fact, of art; given sixty years of production, there can't be more than  a few million of these in existence. In fact, viewers, I am so up myself to be holding this that I might just piss.  Mmmm, smell the garlic; sometimes I think my bodily functions are a work of art. 
But just mine, not everyone's, obviously.

Yes, Alan, that's so deeply, profoundly, shockingly correct; when I am taking a dump, after a night of delightful pasta and Chianti, purchased for me, naturally, by the license-payer, I think to myself, Simon Russell, these are maestro turds, it is philistinism that they are flushed away.
They belong in the Louvre, my droppings. Where ordinary people can appreciate them
This pseudo-arts-crit posturing has gilded not just  arsehole presenters such as those above  but also his or her - chosen field of arseholery,  creating a Synod of Shit, in which clerics and laity joyously fellate and cunnilingualise one another, rather, one suspects, as happens in Synods and conclaves proper.  Private Eye has at least one regular cartoon devoted to Britain's growing smarmyarmy of artfucks; critics and collectors who compel us to believe that this stinking heap of shit, fag-ends  and condoms


is art.

We were talking a while back about the contradictions of creativity and decay inherent in curating and conserving works of art.  I wouldn't want to be the curator charged with looking after Tracey Emin's bed, dirty fucking slut.
I'd just set fire to the fucking thing.


And her bed, anyway, looks different each time you see it.

In this new church there is no  heresy, no penance to be served, however grave the sin; however disgusting the scandal, there is no excommunication. The charmed circle of celebrity knows no shame, sins are airbrushed away, by the hand of Entertainment's Dark God. And those who have lived a life of criminal debauchery are Hosannahed by people like this prat,

into superstar glory.


As in  most things, with art, we are dictated-to by those who have, by fair means or foul, acquired a lot of money,  people like these,


art collector Saatchi and his coke-snorting ex-wife, Lawson, seen here enjoying an artistic moment.
 Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin, doncha just love 'em, love what they've managed to get away with, sharks and shitty beds. No business like showbusiness.

And then there's this numbskull and his tedious, domestic architecture schtick. I know that house-building's not art but Kev and his producers attempt to make it such - cliff-hanging vacuously through each episode,  will the maniacs  finish in time, will the money run out - but Kev always manages to make each madcap project sound as though it has added to the national landscape, is a Versailles, a Castle Howard, just waiting to be discovered.
Zen in the Art of BreezeBlocks

Tarquin and Jocasta really have succeeded in creating a unique home which sits with great integrity in the landscape. (No, Kev, it fucking doesn't, it should be demolished) It may have cost them and their over-indulgent parents an arm and a fucking leg but they and their children, Shelby, Dimitri and Francesca, will enjoy it for many years to come. Or until the hideous, preening, facetious morons turn on each other and divorce, probably next week. 

I wish I could find a phrase for this thing that's happened, whereby art and culture and craft and trade have been NutriBombed, blended into homogenised televisual product, squirted at us by pushy, shameless nobodies.

All I  know about Assyrians is that they  came down like a wolf on the fold. Other than that, until life-long socialist, Sir  Tony Robinson 
I'm only accepting it on behalf of my profession. Archaeology. Not showbusiness.

and his grave-robbing scruffs do a Time Team feature on it, Assyria will remain in a mental file marked Look-up On Wikipedia When You Have Absolutely Nothing Better To Do, i.e. never.

I am surrounded by stoney old shit,  here.  Much, much older than the Tower of London or Kenilworth Castle, some of it is supposed to pre-date the pyramids in Egypt, being five thousand years or so old.  I have seen it all:

The Standing Stones at the Ring of Brodgar

Skara Brae

Maeshowe


I once crawled through the Maeshowe tunnel into the burial chamber. Once was enough, maybe once was one time too many.

 

Dark and painful, half-stooping, half-crawling, arriving in an empty space, five thousand years old, vandalised in the 700s by my Viking ancestors who left graffito such as Sven wuz 'ere, honest. 

There is an enforced  reverence which hangs in the air of all these places, you get a blast  of it when you buy the tickets. I do wonder at  stuff, when I visit these places, but only for a while.  I repaired one of the floors, here, at home, last week, varnished it all up again, and one of the boards I removed was laid well over two hundred years ago and grown some time before that; it had some man-made marks on it which I have yet to decipher but this old bit of pine is as much a link to dead hands as any of the piles of old stones, what am I to do with it? Start a museum? Hang it on the wall? Can't just throw it out, can I, put it in the fire. The place is filled with stuff, one, two, three hundred years old; it is, I sometimes feel, just  a fucking tyranny, the past and its fucking stuff

Doesn't matter where the historic sites are, Lindisfarne is plagued by old biddy Godlessheathenbastards  from English Heritage, tut-tutting their shrivelled,  verminous lives away, watching you suspiciously, as you try to think yourself into the minds of Bede and Cedric; they call Jarrow Monastery BedeWorld, honest, straight-up. 

I had a row at Lindisfarne, with one of the custodianati.  mrs ishmael's grandson, six, was climbing on the walls and this old boot freaked-out. Alright, i'll get him down, I said, screech-screech-screech, she went, he shouldn't be on there in the first place.  He's a little boy, little boys have been climbing these ruins for a thousand years, and he's about the weight of a coupla seagulls. She had, being a minor curator, completely lost perspective - on the building, on history, on God.  I wound-up snarling at her, at her veneration for rocks, at her snooty, violent sense of ownership.

  Every stately home in England is icily guarded by regiments of  these vindictive, blue-rinsed volunteers in  mean, sensible shoes and support hose, daring you to cross through the blue ropes keeping you from contact with the Chippendale,  as though dining chairs were holy fucking relics, as though the cruet sets were silversmithed by God, Himself. It's all Canticle for Liebowitz stuff, this insane reverence for the mundane, and it all keeps us, even today, in line, obedient to fuckpig Dukes - Dimbleby minor, on the radio the other night, YourGrace-ing some arsehole descended from the Duke of Wellington, I nearly crashed the fucking car -  Noncing Monsignors and ancient WiseMen, all the PowerFilth, all the elites, mumbo-jumboing, droit de seigneuring, excommunicating, human-sacrificing, all those rotten bastards who have besmirched human existence; the monastery, the stately home and the stone circle, all remind us that there have always been bastards to lord it over us, keep us off the grass and charge us for entry to our own fucking property, often upon pain of death, torture or both.

And now the keepers of Subservience's Flame have gone global;  we are all supposed to lie awake at night worrying about some old rubbish in Iraq.

God only knows what kind of arseholes built these Assyrian towns, over which everyone has their knickers in a twist but civil liberties and equal opportunities won't have figured at all in their civic ordinances. Boiling in oil, decapitation, flogging  and being pulled-apart by horses was probably the usual drill for freethinkers like us and we may also be certain that health and safety issues went unrecognised - there would have been no hard-hat areas.

 
I should think that most people in the world have never heard of these artefacts and that only a handful will have visited and in any event, all of it - or enough of it - will have been digitally archived, accessible to scholars and other layabouts with nothing better to do.
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If I could Sing Only One Song

I don't do that much talking, these days - doctors, tradesmen, people like that and those conversations are actually a constant negotiation. I might have a chat with someone I bump into, Uptown, hoping it will end very quickly,  but sitting down, drinking and rabbiting is hard going. And the telephone is worse, talking to someone whose face you can't see is like taking a piss wearing gloves.  I am out of practice, therefore, in the art, if such it is, of small talk, I can only do big talk. It's all your fault, for reading this stuff and joining-in; blogging, it is the other woman in my life.

Such conversations as I do have take the form of a quick blog post, not that I do many of them, and are shaped, unknowingly, really, to be completed before being commented upon. It is not quite, Shut Up and Listen, but there is a cadence which beats-out, saying This Is Where I'm Going, This Is Where I've Been, Right, Now We're There, WhaddaYouThink?    

I think it is more respectful and purposeful to communicate thus and maybe those better educated than I have always done so but for me it is relatively novel.

mr ishmael's essays are taken from 2015:

White Folks Do this Shit, too                                drafted 19/7/2015
Trouser Woman Unbound - Black Lives Matter   drafted 29/8/2015
If I could sing only one Song                                drafted 20/7/15 
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Advertising Break


Gardening Corner
Some garden portraits I promised you in the Garden is Bent, passim:
 eschallonia as a specimen, which does like to be beside the seaside:

And golden elder:

On the night of the 20th/21st June, the sun sets at 22: 30 and rises next day before 04:00 . The after-glow and the crepuscular light between them ensure that on a cloudless night there is no dark. I took this photo at 11:40 on Saturday night.


Music and quaint folkore page
Richard Durrant - now, I've skipped a few of his virtual gigs, but here he is at Sherwood Forest. Fun encounter with Friar Tuck, and some seriously weird English folk and Morris music. mr ishmael, the musicologist, who revered the Copper Family, and the Incredibe String Band, would have liked this. Me? I like Meatloaf.


17 comments:

Mike said...

Beautiful pictures, again appreciated, Mrs I. If it were me, the brew house would be my next project. Surely there are heritage funds you can tap into? Maybe even EU funds before its too late.

And yes, the on-going Civil War in the US. Is it only me enjoying it?

mongoose said...

Straight lines, Mr Mike, all those counties and states. It can't be true and it isn't.

I was also astonished by the ethnicity thing. Vast areas of the USA are ethnically German. Sensoible, serious, hard-working, responsible. These sensible, slightly austere (white) people are now the ones at political war against the coalition of the rest. It's going to be ugly between now and November.

I love your aged stone places, mrs i. If you weren't all the way up there in the sky, I'd come and look.

Mike said...

Mr mongoose: you may have heard of the Barossa valley - home to some of Australia's finest wines. Many of the wineries have German origins. About 30 years ago me and the memsahib traveled through that area, and very memorable it was.

One evening we went to a small restaurant. On walking in, all the patrons went silent. I had forgotten to wear my Iron Cross.

mongoose said...

They're to be had in every tat shop across the land, Mr Mike. Yours for a fiver.

I am still disconcerted by mrs i's rejoinder: well, mongoose, cui bon? You asked. I have come to view that there are events in the world from which nobody can reliably prepare to profit - because they are unforeseeable. But there are bastards in the world - too many by far - who are prepared to profit whatever the fuck happens. This such is our enemy.

The vermin who send young folk out onto the streets to get their BLM heads caved are just as much our enemies as the Robocop who does the caving, or the Libyan loon of last evening's Reading disgrace. ("Not connected" to an illegal BLM shouting fest at the very same place the same afternoon. Of course not. How silly of me.) The teaching unions now are politicking the retrun to school of UK kids. Moaning too about losing their hols this summer. Although they have just had three months off and their vocation, if such it is, might cry a different song. Alone among the chaos it seems only the EU cannot frame a decent strategy - surely the sign of a dead horse too repeatedly flogged.

The hippies were out this morning at Stonhenge. Denied access to the stones, they pranced about a bit while Robocop sternly spouted its ruinous Covid estrangement. I think they'll still be there when the rest of our arguments are dust.

mrs ishmael said...

mr mongoose, if you like piles of Neolithic stones, tracing out the cathedrals, chambered tombs, villages and fortressed farmsteads of our ancesters, then this is the place to be. The Ring of Brodgar predates Stonehenge - indeed, it is thought that Brodgar provided the template for all the British stone circles and that Orkney was the centre of sea-highways, rather than at the edge, as it is now. And if you are intrigued by American sea pirates,the Napoleonic incursions and the Martello towers built to repel them, there's one on Hoy, same age as the Manse. And if you are interested in the twentieth-century World Wars, their machine-gune emplacements, batteries, sunken block ships and the Churchill Causeways, there's a wealth of artifacts here, as the local council never needed to remove them - no land hunger. The natural environment is a constant delight, the sea a miracle and menace, the islands an ever-renewing inspiration to the artists and crafts people here - you get the idea. Of course, it is a long way from you - but mr ishmael has already written up the route, with photos, for you:
https://mrishmael.blogspot.com/2015/04/the-sunday-ishmael-travel-pages.html
The first half is the fabulous review of the Dundee Turkish A class Barbers and the Malmaison; the second half describes the journey north of Dundee -
- and it is a delightful journey - not just the Scottish section, but also the north of England.
However, the borders are still closed, so you couldn't get passage across from the mainland to the isles. You'll need to plan for a late Summer trip, when Scotland - best part of England - is once more open for business.

mrs ishmael said...

The American War, messrs mongoose and mike. The buggers have achieved such intellectual and cultural dominationn that now our idealistic and disaffected young believe they have to copy where the U.S. leads, as though we were another state, as though US issues, internal strife and deep divisions, were ours. But they are not. Our problems stem from the legacy of Empire and from our Class War. Their problems stem from the inception of their country - from the influx of extremist religious migrants from Britain and Europe, from land hunger and gold greed that caused the genocide of the existing population, from the avaricious Scots and their plantations and bought-in slave labour - when the northern working class transportees were found not to tolerate the climate they turned to Africa for slaves to work their fields; from the war between the industrial North and the rural South. And more recently, from the migrants moving North from Latin America, from America's military-industrial economy and determination to police the globe which it appears to consider falls, in totality, within their sphere of influence; from their, goddammit, sense of exceptionalism.
Let's see how they get on, eh?

mrs ishmael said...

Glad you liked the pictures, mr mike. I like them, too. Maybe the next owner will take on the old Brew-House project, and, of course, the maintenance of the Hedge.

Bungalow Bill said...

The barbers and the travel piece is one of his very finest. Some relevant horror there too.

mongoose said...

I am interested in it all, mrs i. Here in Bandit Country we have much of that stone stuff but not as old as Brodgar. Although I knew about it, I have never had cause or excuse to travel so far north except the once and then time did not permit. The Shetlands, eh? I could live there in a heartbeat.

And that is pretty much spot on about the Cousins. A hard rain's gonna fall.

inmate said...

No, no mr mongoose, the Shetlands has got to be the most god-forsaken place on earth. For my sins I had cause to work there, during what the locals called summer, just a light breeze, they said, twas hurricane level wind with horizontal rain, nonstop for over a week, no wonder they’re all miserable fuckers, we’re not Scottish an we’re not British, so fuck of English bastards. The Lerwick Hotel is a contender, allegedly, for the ugliest building in Britain...only we’re not British ya bastards, and it is f’ugly. There’s not trees to shelter from the wind, when you land at the airport, haha, you have to walk, almost out of the sea, through the driving wind and rain to get a taxi, cause the driver won’t risk going to the end of the runway, in case he gets blown into the sea, by the driving wind and horizontal rain. The pubs charge ‘foreigners’ more, a lot more, is it coz I is English? for the piss they call beer, heavy?
Nah I wouldn’t recommend it even to Tories, did I mention the fuckin wind n rain.
Lovely photos Mrs I.

mongoose said...

That's odd, mr inmate, because I have only been there the once - a day trip to an oil platform - and the sun shone gloriously. And as I am neither Scottish nor English but the O'OtherThing, so I am, I was welcomed with open arms. It was probably that one day in August that they call Summer. Of course, I saw most of it from a helicopter.

Doug Shoulders said...

"when the northern working class transportees were found not to tolerate the climate they turned to Africa for slaves to work their fields"
If only this was taught in schools Mrs Ishmael….if only.
I’ve bookmarked the travel pages for a read later. Thanks.
I considered a visit to Shetland but decided against it when I discovered there were no trees.
Can’t abide a place that doesn't have trees.

Anonymous said...

"Nothing is more probable," said the Professor, taking off his spectacles and beginning to polish them, while he muttered to himself, "I wonder what they do teach them at these schools." ~C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1950)
mr shoulders, I learned it from a fellow-student on a trade-union course back in the last century.
I'm with you on Shetland - never been there, never wanted to go. It is very, very far North, treeless and windswept. I think they have some sycamores in Lerwick - but they are the exception.
We have trees. We were determined to have trees, against the odds, because it is north and maritime. Given walls and shelter provided by tough Argentinian and New Zealand grasses, we were able to encourage the little darlings, and now we can walk beneath an arching canopy of multi-stemmed whitebeams. No oaks, sadly, the horse chestnut leaves are constantly crisping at the edges due to the salt winds and my copper beech just sulk. Sea-views are all very well, but they ain't trees.

mrs ishmael said...

Thank you, mr inmate - ever been to London Airport? It is worse than Lerwick Airport. A field by the sea - no buildings, no tarmac, a miracle the little Islander plane sets down at all. Those Islander planes are something else. Designed for island-hopping, they are like Minis with wings. The seats fold down so the back seat passengers can get in - like a 2 door, 4 seat saloon car. The pilot gives you all his usual pilot spiel by turning his head and speaking over his shoulder to you. He flies low over sea and landscape features, while pointing to them through the window. Great fun, if you like flying:
Eday Airport is located on Eday in Orkney, Scotland. As it is close to the Bay of London it is known locally as London Airport. The Bay of London may have been so called because of puffins breeding there: Old Norse lundi = "puffin", Old Norse á Lundunum = "at the puffins".

mongoose said...

Y'all do know that this hatred of treelessness is probably a hate crime by now? Tut, I say, tut. I ashamed of you.

I once did five Scottish airports in five days: Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Prestwick and one I cannot remember. (Ayr? Is Prestwick by Ayr? Maybe it was four in four days.) There was barely time to have a pee at each let alone do any meaningful work.

inmate said...

Sorry, no mrs I, have not had the pleasure of visiting Orkney. I have travelled to and from, unfortunately, all of that southern London's airports and non of them were/are a good experience.
Probably the finest airport I have travelled through would be Munich, if only for the lavatories, mr Ishmael would have marvelled at the technology the Hermans put into their inspecting and cleaning of oneself and the loo; inspection shelf, cold water, warm water, warm air and mirrors for goodness sake. I'll leave it to your imagination of how it all works.
Sibiu airport in Romania is much like your Eday landing strip, all corrugated iron shacks and thick necked, muscular, shaven headed staff.

mrs ishmael said...

You are well-travelled chaps, messrs mongoose and inmate. Looks like there will be a lot less of it in our immediate future. I like the sound of those steam-punk airship things. Do you know they used to have mooring posts at the top of very tall buildings! How surreal is that? Surely they have sorted out the technology so that they don't burst into flame (granted, a drawback).
And those Herman toilets should be compulsory.Toilet and bidet combo. Helped with Stanislav's little problem, as narrated here:
https://mrishmael.blogspot.com/2009/07/stanislav-it-all-shit-is.html