Monday, 10 November 2025

Cat tale.




It is the butt end of a grey, cold, damp November day. The kind of day that really calls for you to have a book that you have read before, a soft reclining chair and no demanding tasks on hand. The undemanding tasks, the ones that are always hanging about, can be ignored, the book is amusing but you know the denouement, and the qualities of the chair are self-evident. 
 I have had a lovely nap, yes, thank you and I am now giving some thought to clearing the mess off my desk. I was aiming to find the bills that needed paying (see under ‘demanding’) but goodness knows what else is hiding under the sheaves and piles and notebooks. 
 I wrote that piece some days ago. Now it is the butt end of another November day, a very white one.
While I had my mind on money, I ordered three books from Amazon.. And I may donate the books to our local library once they have been to book club. You see, our book club has come up with what I consider to be a really good idea. We are working our way through John Ralston Saul’s Extraordinary Canadian series, choosing an eminent Canadian’s book from the list and reporting on it to the club. We figure we will use most of this year’s meetings on this as there are quite a few in the series and the library has a lot of them. 
 I chose to do Emily Carr next month and decided to buy the book as it is one of the few the library does not have. I also bought a book that is an overview of her painting, from adolescence on. Both books came today. The delivery was supposed to be yesterday, but we had a dump of snow, about 8 inches (and no, I am not going to do that in centimetres}, and the road was impassable. At noon today, which is the second day of the snowfall, the Township plow came growling along about noon and we were connected to the world once more. Well, by road. Both the internet and the phone were dead this morning and did not come to life until almost supper time. 
 I scanned through the book of paintings and quickly remembered why I do not enjoy Carr’s work. Although it is evocative and a wonderful record and commentary on West Coast tribal totems, her palette and her style do not resonate with me. It is amusing that the book of biography starts out with the author stating that he disliked Carr’s work. I will read on to see why he changed his mind. Maybe there is hope for me yet. I recall telling my mother, who admired and quoted T.S. Eliot (The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock is his most cited poem, I think), that I disliked his poetry. “You will enjoy it when you grow up,” she told me, cheerfully. Well, some of it speaks to me now. Since I am now 83, I am not hopeful about the rest. 
 I have to give the man his due, however. This is marvellous. 
The yellow fog that rubs its back upon the window-panes, 
The yellow smoke that rubs its muzzle on the window-panes, 
Licked its tongue into the corners of the evening, 
Lingered upon the pools that stand in drains, 
Let fall upon its back the soot that falls from chimneys, 
Slipped by the terrace, made a sudden leap, 
And seeing that it was a soft October night, 
Curled once about the house, and fell asleep.

11 comments:

  1. Sounds like Mother Nature sent quite the punch for this early snowfall. A sign of what's to come?!?!?

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    1. The amount of snow this early is unusual, but has happened before. Eastern Ontario winters are no joke, ever. Lots of snow, the occasional melt that screws up the snow removal, and dark, cold and unappealing. Lots of 'snowbirds' hereabouts, that being the tag for Canadians who leave for Florida or Arizona right after Christmas and stay for the longest legal limit allowed.

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  2. I never liked T.S. Eliot either, but have not attempted him in years. I once signed up for a class in college that was going to be entirely focused on The Wasteland. After wading through a few pages, i dropped the class.
    I do like the lines you quoted, though. Evocative. I have never heard of Carr, shall haven't Google her. The book club reading choices is an excellent idea; i really know only a few authors from Canada, but have probably read others without knowing their nationality

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    1. I had the option of a half credid course in American literature and turned it down in favour of a history course. Bad choice, as I have been trying to catch up ever since. Carr was a painter and writer; I will do a post about her as she is an interesting character.
      Beyond Margaret Atwood, most Canadian writers are in deep shadow. It should be North American literature, truly. We are so tied together by language and history.

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  3. It sounds like you've had a couple of lovely days. T.S. Eliot was born and grew up in my are (St. Louis, Missouri). In college I took a seminar on "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock". Much later I introduced my boys to selections from "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats" before we attended the musical Cats.

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    1. Love the cats part of it. But he depresses me, otherwise. Good for you on the introductions. I was never able to get my kids the least bit interested in poetry. We do have a common discussion on Sci Fi and Fantasy authors. Not very highbrow and the father and husband just leaves us to it.

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  4. I have a great fondness for Eliot, especially "The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock". Who can resist that plaintive cry of distress

    I have seen the moment of my greatness flicker,
    And I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat, and snicker,
    And in short, I was afraid. ...

    I grow old...I grow old...
    I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.

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    1. I know you have. And I am impressed, as I get very sad when reading a lot of his work. Although I do not use coffee spoons. I have a horrible tendency to take on the emotional loading of whatever I am reading, especially poetry. Single lines will rattle around in my head like peas in a drum. And song lyrics, ditto. There is a rendition of Hallelujah that makes me cry every time I hear it.

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  5. AC, deleted your comment by accident. Yes, that is the library I use. A very good one.

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  6. Sitting down and reading a good book would be my choice if we had a snowfall, which hasn't happened yet in Nashua, NH.

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  7. I donate our to the library, as well. I was 11th in line for one reserved book. Life is too short for that!

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