If you couldn’t tell from the title, it’s Virginia Woolf‘s birthday today.
Karen
Posts by Karen Kaminski:
Home
From, of all books, Thunderhead (the sequel to My Friend Flicka), by Mary O’Hara:
“…if you go away from your own place and people, the place you spent your childhood in, all your life you’ll be sick with homesickness and you’ll never have a home. You can find a better place perhaps, a way of life you like better, but home is gone out of your heart, and you’ll be hunting it all your life long.”
I think this is mostly true but a little bleak. But, since this is the sequel to My Friend Flicka, here’s the speech that follows the one above:
” ‘And so–‘ she had leand to him and slipped her hand in his. ‘Here–this–your hand, is home for me.’ “
Aww…that’s why I love the fiction of my youth. Did I mention there were horses on a ranch in it, too?
It’s Cheaper Than Therapy
Well, what have we here? A sweater, completed in about three weeks, made from 12.5 of the 15 balls of birthday yarn!
Sorry about the blur, but the lighting/distance conditions in the apartment don’t lend themselves to self-portrais. At least this gives you the general effect.
Here’s a close-up of the nice buttons. And look at that tidy arm seam! (Seaming is something I just recently learned how to do well.)
I finished it Sunday, and this line from Jorie Graham’s “Le Manteau de Pascal” popped into my head when I was sewing on the buttons:
…filled with the sensation of being suddenly completed —
as then it is, abruptly, the last stitch laid in, the knot bit off —
Really, needs expensive therapists when you have lots of knitting projects and some post-modern poems to mumble to yourself?
More Song Lyrics
I realize these may get tiresome to people who don’t know the music, but “A Fine Romance” put me on a Billie Holiday kick over the weekend and the songs she sang have such delightful lyrics. Like this, “Comes Love”:
Comes a rain storm
Put your rubbers on your feet
Comes a snow storm
You can get a little heat
Comes love
Nothing can be done
Comes a fire
Then you know just what to do
Blow a tire
You can buy another shoe
Comes love
Nothing can be done
Dont try hidin
cause it isnt any use
Youll just start slidin
When your heart turns on the juice
Comes a heat wave
You can hurry to the shore
Come a summons
Hide yourself behind a door
Comes love
Nothing can be done
Comes a headache
You can lose it in a day
Comes a toothache
See your dentist right away
Comes love
Nothing can be done
Comes the measles
You can quarrantine the room
Comes a mousie
You can chase it with a broom
Comes love
Nothing can be done
Thats all brother
If you’ve ever been in love
Thats all brother
You know what I’m speakin of
Comes a nightmare
You can always stay awake
Comes depression
You could get another break
Comes love
Nothing can be done
Nothing can be done
Three reasons why this is especially delightful:
1. Comparing falling in love to calamitous things
2. The 30’s slang (“shoe”= tire)
3. The line, “Comes the mousie, you can chase it with a broom.” What other love song says “mousie”?
Sometimes I’m Glad I’m Not Famous
I’ve been short on sleep this week, for different reasons (the sweater, Microsoft, websites, a very persistent cat) and I look now, on Friday, pretty haggard. It’s times like this when I’m glad there are no pictures of me circulating today, to be compared with the me of forty years–or even a sleepy week–later.
For instance:
At least I haven’t lived quite as hard a life as Bob.
Yeah, We Need Some
A Fine Romance
That is the title of the delightful song that first appeared in Swing Time, a delightful Astair/Rogers musical. Here are the lyrics:
A fine romance, with no kisses
A fine romance, my friend this is
We should be like a couple of hot tomatoes
But you’re as cold as yesterdays mashed potatoes
A fine romance, you won’t nestle
A fine romance, you won’t wrestle
I might as well play bridge
With my old maid aunt
I haven’t got a chance
This is a fine romance
A fine romance, my good fellow
You take romance, Ill take Jello
You’re calmer than the seals
In the Arctic Ocean
At least they flap their fins
To express emotion
A fine romance with no quarrels,
With no insults and all morals
I’ve never mussed the crease
In your blue serge pants
I never get the chance
This is a fine romance
If you can, listen to Billie Holiday sing this. It, too, is delightful, especially when she sings the line, “I’ve never mussed the crease in your blue serge pants–I never get the chance.“
This is a fine romance! Fine, I tell you!
A Weekend on Sleeve Island
…and Second Sock Island, and Let’s Learn How To Knit A Cable Scarf Island, and I Know, Why Don’t I Order More Yarn For Another Sweater Also With Sleeves Island. It was a fairly productive weekend, though–if I were Captain Jack Sparrow and had to get off Sleeve Island using only sea turtles and human hair, I’d say I have one sea turtle all taken care of.
In other news, the archives are back. Oh yes, all 215 previous posts can now be accessed by clicking on the desired month in the right navigation there. Because I know you really, really, wanted to read that post about yarn, Celtic trees, and a Jorie Graham poem again. (Many thanks to the future Mr. and Mrs. Kitty for the help.)
PS-For those of you who like that sort of thing, the RSS feed is back, too.
Sleeve Island
I’ve been reading a lot of knitting blogs this week, and apparently that’s where you go when you knit sleeves. I think the idea behind the name is that sleeves take so damn long to knit you feel like you’re stuck on them–stuck on Sleeve Island. I may be marooned on Sleeve Island, since last night I unraveled about nine inches of the first sleeve, due to a too-tight wrist and a baggy elbow.
But I told myslef that if it’s worth doing and giving myself carpal tunnel syndrome, it’s worth doing right. So I’ll start over tomorrow night, and until further notice be on Sleeve Island. Maybe there will be caabana boys!
Why I Love M.F.K. Fisher:
Consider this passage:
“As for dining in love, I can think of a lunch at the Lafayette in New York, in the front cafe with the glass pushed back and the May air flowing almost visibly over the marble tabletops, and a waiter named Pons, and a bottle of Louis Martini’s Folle Blanche and moules-more-or-less-marinieres but delicious, and then a walk in new black-heeled shoes with white stitching on them beside a man I had just met and a week later was to marry, in spite of my obdurate resove never to marry again and my cynical recognition of his super-salesmanship.”
And consider that in the middle of that description of food and that pithy (and bitchy!) character summary, she mentions what shoes she was wearing. Now you see why.