Archive by Author | Sherry

Goodbye Summer; Hello Autumn: A Potpourri

Lots of my fellow bloggers have been saying good-bye to Summer and greeting Autumn with lists and plans and fond farewells. Here in Houston, we may wish for autumn to come, may long for the sweet relief of cooler weather and lower electricity bills, but pretending that the end of August or the beginning of school or the day after Labor Day is really the beginning of autumn is farcical. We can only start pretending on the first official day of fall: September 23rd, the autumnal equinox. Mind you, the weather hasn’t arrived yet, but we can start pretending. Let the longing for autumn begin! After all, Autumn is only a state of mind.

****NOTE: SCROLL DOWN TO THE NEXT POST TO ADD YOUR REVIEW TO TODAY’S SATURDAY REVIEW OF BOOKS*****

Here’s my favorite autumn poem:

Vagabond Song by Bliss Carmon
THERE is something in the autumn that is native to my blood–
Touch of manner, hint of mood;
And my heart is like a rhyme,
With the yellow and the purple and the crimson keeping time.
The scarlet of the maples can shake me like a cry
Of bugles going by.
And my lonely spirit thrills
To see the frosty asters like a smoke upon the hills.
There is something in October sets the gypsy blood astir
We must rise and follow her,
When from every hill of flame
She calls and calls each vagabond by name.

Bloggers Celebrate Autumn

Dawn lists her autumn delights, in many of which I share her joy.

Queen Shenaynay says goodbye to summer and lists her accomplishments for the season past. She says she didn’t do as much as she would have wished, but I’m totally impressed by what she did do. How would you like to come over and clean out my closets, O Queen of the Beehive?

Fa-So-La-La. also of the Beehive, has an equally impressive list and farewell to summer.

MotherReader lists the accomplishments of the summer and wishes everyone a Happy School Year.

Lars Walker says that September 8th was the first day of fall in Minnesota “in terms of the nuance in the air.”

Cindy of Dominion Family is looking forward to fall.

Kim’s Hiraeth: Autumn Harvest Soup

Steve at Flos Carmeli asks all poet-bloggers to join in his linked haiku with an autumn theme in the post, An Invitation to Versify.

Journey Woman associates fall with Robert Frost’s Mending Wall. I agree that Frost is a fall/winter poet. Snow, New England, fall work on the farm, trees–these are the images that I think of when I think of Frost. I like Robert Frost. Is he out of fashion now?

And the Seventh Carnival of Children’s Literature at Wands and Worlds has a fall harvest theme. Sheila Ruth has lots of good, fall, bookish links for lovers of children’s literature to enjoy.

As Ichabod jogged slowly on his way, his eye, ever open to every symptom of culinary abundance, ranged with delight over the treasures of jolly autumn. On all sides he beheld vast store of apples; some hanging in oppressive opulence on the trees; some gathered into baskets and barrels for the market; others heaped up in rich piles for the cider-press. Farther on he beheld great fields of Indian corn, with its golden ears peeping from their leafy coverts, and holding out the promise of cakes and hasty pudding; and the yellow pumpkins lying beneath them, turning up their fair round bellies to the sun, and giving ample prospects of the most luxurious of pies . . . The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving



Question: Why are used copies of Mousekin’s Golden House selling for over $50.00 on Amazon, but the rest of the Mousekin books are available at reasonable prices?

Fall Curriculum Helps
Preschool Activities for Fall

Pumpkin Poems and Songs

Why do leaves change color in the fall? An explanation and two related science experiments.

In Living Color: Fall Leaves, a homeschool fall unit study.

It was, as I have said, a fine autumnal day; the sky was clear and serene, and nature wore that rich and golden livery which we always associate with the idea of abundance. The forests had put on their sober brown and yellow, while some trees of the tenderer kind had been nipped by the frosts into brilliant dyes of orange, purple, and scarlet. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving

Fall Book Lists:

Seasonal Soundings’ Autumn Reading Challenge, a delightful collection of lists of what various participating bloggers plan to read this autumn.

New York Daily News

Washington Post

Autumn Unit Study from Seven Pillars Booknook
Autumn Booklist from the same source

Top 10 Books About Fall Literature

Librarian Pam Miech writes in the Providence (RI) Journal about fall food books, specifically books about pumpkins and apples. Someday, I’d like to do a whole year of homeschool in which we just do unit studies on different foods: apples, pumpkins, pecans, bread, rice, peanuts, beans, etc. In fact, a series of blog posts outlining unit studies on those foods and presenting resources for such a study would be fun, too. But Ms. Miech has already done apples and pumpkins for me.

field_day_button_2_5
Don’t forget to contribute to Dawn’s (By Sun and Candlelight) Early Autumn Field Day. Any posts or pictures about nature of any kind are welcome, and the deadline is Monday, September 25th.

SEPTEMBER MORN
Written by Neil Diamond and Gilbert Becaud

Stay for just a while
Stay, and let me look at you
It’s been so long, I hardly knew you
Standing in the door
Stay with me a while
I only wanna talk to you
We’ve traveled halfway ’round the world
To find ourselves again

September morn
We danced until the night became a brand new day
Two lovers playing scenes from some romantic play
September morning still can make me feel that way

Look at what you’ve done
Why, you’ve become a grown-up girl
I still can hear you crying
In a corner of your room
And look how far we’ve come
So far from where we used to be
But not so far that we’ve forgotten
How it was before

September morn
Do you remember how we danced that night away
Two lovers playing scenes from some romantic play
September morning still can make me feel that way

1979 Stonebridge Music (ASCAP)

In addition to Robert Frost, I also like Neil Diamond. I have eclectic tastes.

For Your Listening Pleasure

Kiddie Records.

“Kiddie Records Weekly is a three year project celebrating the golden age of children’s records. This brief but prolific period spanned from the mid forties through the early fifties, producing a wealth of all-time classics. Many of these recordings were extravagant Hollywood productions on major record labels and featured big time celebrities and composers.
Over the years, these forgotten treasures have slipped off the radar and now stand on the brink of extinction. Our mission is to give them a new lease on life by sharing them with today’s generation of online listeners. Each recording has been carefully transferred from the original 78s and encoded to MP3 format for you to download and enjoy. You’ll find a new addition every week, all year long.”

Singing Science Records.
From the creator of the webpage:

“When I was a kid my parents got this six-LP set of science-themed folk songs for my sister and me. They were produced in the late 1950s / early 1960s by Hy Zaret (William Stirrat) and Lou Singer. . . .The Singing Science lyrics were very Atomic Age, while the tunes were generally riffs on popular or genre music of the time. We played them incessantly.
In February 1998 I found the LPs in my parents’ basement. I cleaned them up, played them one last time on an old turntable, and burned them onto a set of three CD-R discs. In December 1999 I read the songs back off the CDs and encoded them into MP3, so now you can hear them on the web.

I already told you about LibriVox, a site which “provides free audiobooks from the public domain.” You can download these mp3 files of books (and poems) into your computer or iPod, or you can listen at the website. I’m enjoying it immensely.

American Rhetoric is a website with a “database of 5000+ full text, audio and video (streaming) versions of public speeches, sermons, legal proceedings, lectures, debates, interviews, other recorded media events, and a declaration or two.” I’ll be visiting this website frequently this year as I teach US History and American Literature at our homeschool co-op.

The Genevan Psalter. This webpage includes versified psalms in English and midi files to listen to the original (used in Calvin’sGeneva) melodies.

Isn’t the internet wonderful?

Poetry Friday: Of Snarks and Quarks

Eldest Daughter has fallen in love. . . again . . . this time with Lewis Carroll. According to my daughter’s Victorian Fantasy professor, the word “quark” is a portmanteau word, a combination of quasi-snark, from Lewis Carroll’s The Hunting of the Snark. According to my computer dictionary, the term quark was invented by a man named Murray Gell-Mann. “Originally quork, the term was changed by association with the line ‘Three quarks for Muster Mark’ in Joyce’s Finnegans Wake.” Somebody’s mistaken.

Anyway, mistake or no, I’m told that scientists, especially physicists, are also quite fond of Lewis Carroll. Carroll was quite the mathemetician, and his brand of nonsense appeals not only to Eldest Daughter, but also to the logical, imaginative, physics-types who, I assume, read his works looking for quarks and gluons and other nonsensical entities.

All this verbiage I’ve written is to introduce the fact that I have a new guilty pleasure. The other night, in my bed, I listened to Lewis Carroll’s The Hunting of the Snark as I went to sleep. To indulge, it helps to have a computer next to your bed. Then go to LibriVox, a site which “provides free audiobooks from the public domain.” You can download these mp3 files of books (and poems) into your computer or iPod, or you can listen at the website. Either way find a poem or story that you want to listen to for a bedtime story, and tuck yourself in and listen. I didn’t hear the entire poem, but I did enjoy the part I heard before I fell asleep. I think falling asleep to the sound of poetry might be even better than falling asleep to music.

By the way, boojum is a term used in physics, coined by a physicist, and taken from The Hunting of the Snark. And The Snark becomes a Boojum. In the poem. Not in physics. Eldest Daughter says that snarks transforming themselves into boojums is a very scary and deeply disturbing concept. Physicists probably find the phenomenon fascinating and mathematically intriguing.

“For, although common Snarks do no manner of harm,
Yet, I feel it my duty to say,
Some are Boojums–” The Bellman broke off in alarm,
For the Baker had fainted away.
———————————————–
“But oh, beamish nephew, beware of the day,
If your Snark be a Boojum! For then
You will softly and suddenly vanish away,
And never be met with again!”
———————————
In the midst of the word he was trying to say,
In the midst of his laughter and glee,
He had softly and suddenly vanished away —
For the Snark was a boojum, you see.

Read The Hunting of the Snark here.

Contrast

Pope Benedict XVI: (quoting a Byzantine emperor) “‘Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.”

Radical Muslims (al Qaeda): “We shall break the cross and spill the wine. … God will (help) Muslims to conquer Rome. … God enable us to slit their throats, and make their money and descendants the bounty of the mujahideen.” (CNN, September 18, 2006)

Rosie O’Donnell: “Radical Christianity is just as threatening as radical Islam in a country like America where we have a separation of church and state. We’re a democracy here.”

Radical Christians (Christian Coalition spokesman): “This is America, and everyone can have their own opinion, however, we do disagree with her opinion. Christianity is all about faith. Christianity is all about humanity and equality. That was the core of the life of Jesus Christ.” (Crosswalk, September, 2006)

So who exactly is threatening whom and to what degree?

Catholics and Calvinists

Eldest Daughter says that at her Southern Baptist university there’s a resurgence of both Reformed theology (Calvinism) and Catholicism. Not the the same people are becoming Catholic and Reformed at the same time, but many are converting to one or the other.

Here’s a reprint of a Christianity Today article called “Young, Restless, Reformed” detailing the popularity of Calvinism among young people especially.

My question is: where are all the traditionally wishy-washy, Calvinoarminian, Southern Baptists? Or why can’t we all just get along, and why does predestination matter anyway?
(Yes, I know that I please no one and offend almost everyone with that question, as well as creating deep doubts among you all about my own intellectual and theological maturity. So be it.)

Jared’s Meme

1. Have you ever been told you look like a celebrity? Who?
Never. There’s a reason I don’t put a picture of myself on my blog. 🙂 No, really, I don’t mind my looks, but I’m afraid after all this time of no picture, I’d disappoint anyone who was wondering what I look like. It’s always better to keep people guessing.

2. If different from above, who should play you in a movie of your life?
I chose Emma Thompson. No, I’m not nearly as pretty as she is, but who said my bio-pic had to be true-to-life?

3. What movie character do you most identify with?
Napoleon Dynamite. I, too, have skills.

4. What literary character do you most identify with?
David Copperfield or Charlie Brown.

5. What musician or vocal artist do you most identify with?
This question is a stumper. Kris Kristofferson? Sort of second tier, and although we can carry a tune, neither of us can really sing. Don’t tell him I said so. (Kris Kristofferson’s official website says he’s “a legend.” What do I know?)

6. What biblical figure do you most identify with?
Rebekah. I’m married to a wonderful man, after a whirlwind courtship, and I can be a bit underhanded and conniving if I don’t watch myself and pray to be delivered from temptation. I don’t think I play favorites among my children, though.

7. What animal best represents you?
A sloth? No, maybe a nice mama bear who moves rather slowly and likes to hibernate for at least part of the year. I only become aroused if you threaten my cubs.

8. What meal or dish best represents you?
Tex-Mex. I’d like to be spicy and and a bit wild and foreign, but I must admit that I’ve been tamed and toned down and Americanized.

9. What drink best represents you?
Vanilla coke. Plain, but fizzy, with a little bit of flavor added.

10. What shirt, dress, outfit, or other piece of apparel most reflects who you are?
When I was in junior high, my heart’s desire was to have a purple pantsuit. I still have fond memories of the purple (double knit) pantsuit that I received for my birthday, and I think if such a thing were available nowadays in my size I would wear it. I guess I’m just a 70’s, purple pantsuit sort of girl.
I also feel very wild and gypsy-like in my red broomstick skirt!

If you’d like to play, feel welcome. You can answer here in the comments or at your own blog. Let me know if you play. I stole the questions from Jared at Thinklings about a month ago. I’m just now getting around to finishing my answers. Hey, I’m a bear, slow but sure–with gypsy aspirations.

Best Villains

Here’s one more of Penguin’s and my five best whatever lists. This time we’re listing best villains in literature. Computer Guru Son says Sauron isn’t a villain; he’s just Evil incarnate. He insists that Saruman is the real villain of LOTR. Either way, Tolkien created some villainous characters. So did DIckens. And C.S. Lewis (The White Witch, Screwtape, Professor Weston).

THE BEST VILLAINS (according to the Penguin List)
The Brothers Karamazov
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Heart of Darkness
Joseph Conrad
Diamonds are Forever
Ian Fleming
The Master and Margarita
Mikhail Bulgakov
The Secret Agent
Joseph Conrad

Best Villains (according to Semicolon)

Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien. Duh. Sauron is the villain of all villains.

The Murder of Roger Akroyd by Agatha Christie. No comment. I don’t want to spoil the ending for those who haven’t read it, but . . .

The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis. Screwtape is a nasty little villain, full of himself and his mission to tempt a soul into sin.

The Singer by Calvin Miller. World-Hater is a fairly good represention of the Arch-Villain, too.

Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens. Ralph Nickleby is a spider, in the mold of other Dickensian villains such as Madame Defarge, Mr. Quilp, and Uriah Heep.

Week 6 of World Geography: South Pacific Islands


Music:
Ludwig Beethoven—Ninth Symphony
Ludwig Beethoven and the Chiming Tower Bells–Wheeler

Mission Study:
1. Bold Bearers of His Name: Kiayi Palus Tosari
2. BBOHN: Ruatoka & Tungane
3. BBOHN: Joseph Kam
4. BBOHN: Deu L. Mahandi
5. Window on the World: Indonesia

Poems:
Rime of the Ancient Mariner–Coleridge

Science:
Measurement

Nonfiction Read Alouds:
KIDS Discover: Equator

Fiction Read Alouds:
A Question of Yams–Repp
Born in the Year of Courage–Crofford

Picture Books:
Come to My Place: Meet My Island Family–Kamikmica

Elementary Readers:
Call It Courage—Sperry
Twenty-One Balloons—duBois
Kensuke’s Kingdom—Morpurgo
Island of the Blue Dolphins—O’Dell
Kaiulani: The People’s Princess–White

Movies:
South Pacific
Father Goose

Any other suggestions? Do any of you know of any really excellent books for children that are set in Indonesia, the Philippines, Fiji, Samoa, or any of the other 30,000 islands of Polynesia, Melanesia or Micronesia?

Poetry Friday

The City where I hope to dwell,
There’s none on earth can parallel;
The stately Walls both high and strong,
Are made of precious Jasper stone;
The Gates of Pearl, both rich and clear,
And Angels are for Porters there;
The Streets thereof transparent gold,
Such as no Eye did e’re behold.

A Chrystal River there doth run,
Which doth proceed from the Lamb’s Throne:
Of Life, there are the waters sure,
Which shall remain for ever pure,
Nor Sun, nor Moon, they have no need,
For glory doth from God proceed:
No Candle there, nor yet Torch light,
For there shall be no darksome night.

From sickness and infirmity,
For evermore they shall be free,
Nor withering age shall e’re come there,
But beauty shall be bright and clear;
This City pure is not for thee,
For things unclean there not shall be:
If I of Heaven may have my fill,
Take thou the world, and all that will.
From The Flesh and the Spirit by Anne Bradstreet

Don’t you think these words would make a good hymn? I’ve already put them to this music, sort of, in my mind, but I think someone who was musically talented could write music for these words and make the poem into a beautiful worship hymn.

Happy Friday, everyone! I hope we all meet in heaven where “things unclean there not shall be.”