butters
High on a Hill
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Posts
- 85,941
I couldn't be bothered writing anything, but you have fairly well encapsulated what I was thinking.
it's a dirty job, but someone had to do it
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I couldn't be bothered writing anything, but you have fairly well encapsulated what I was thinking.
some musicians might argue that point you know.
So an idiot is the equal of a genius?"There was even a crayon portrait of her father hanging over the parlor mantlepiece. The wallpaper and carpets, not to mention the furniture, looked to be at least fifty years old, and it was only too apparent that they were hideous even when young. Thus Lillie lived out her days. She got along somehow, without intelligence, information, or taste. She had no desire to learn anything, and in fact learned nothing. Her ideas at seventy were her ideas at fifteen. It is hard to think of a more placid life, and apparently she enjoyed it, but it is likewise hard to think of one more hollow. It was as insignificant, almost, as the life of her dog."
From this entry, it seems he was judging her 'apparent lack-of-ness' against his own yardsticks. It doesn't do him any great favours, since it smacks of a feeling of superiority.
Many people have kept diaries, and many are embarrassed by their own entries as they mature. The act that he observes she led what was, for her, a contented life, and the fact that he admits to never having known her with anything other than the most shallow of aquaintances, makes for an observation that he really doesn't have much to base his judgements of her on. May we all be as content with our own lifestyles. What will suit one person will be anathema to another, and there's no such thing as good and bad taste - simply different tates.
There's nothing inherently wrong with him making his observations - if he's being true to his thoughts, then at least he was a man who could be honest with himself. If any of us had observed her on a daily basis as he had, then there would undoubtably be some of us thinking along the same lines as he committed to paper. Diaries are meant to be private. Our own snobberies, foibles, fetishes are not there for the eyes of others. But, as a newspaperman, I can't help but think he must have been aware of the possibility of his words being made public. Indeed, he may have written it with the intent of self-publication and so adopted that singularly cold and supercilious tone.
It's my opinion that the fact she had a crayon portrait of her father kept in a prominent position in the house indicates that she was capable of feeling connected to another person. If her furniture and decor were old, maybe she liked things that way - familiarity obviously not breeding discontent in her case. Or perhaps she didn't see the point in spending money on replacing furniture that still had years of use in it. Maybe it was all as she remembered from her times with her father - so perhaps kept that way as a comfort to her. His judgemental tone makes this piece more than mere observation, imo - he was judging himself superior to her, assuming his own life to hold more value than hers. Perhaps he was right. I think she might have argued the point - if she could have been arsed, that is. Don't you think his surprise at not having heard the news of Lillie's death, and his phrasing of it, very telling? lots of others seemed to have not only heard but were marking her passing.
But you're the equal of them both, right?Which point, that Mozart out ranks Bach, or that neither has use for their fame at this point in time?
The families can make good use of it, if all the copyrights and licenses are still in effect.
But you're the equal of them both, right?
Oh, wait, you're better because you're alive! I forgot.
So, when you're dead, are you their equal then?
So an idiot is the equal of a genius?
Thanks for explaining how Picasso's paintings could have sold for millions.
On Suicide
H.L. Mencken
From The Human Mind, Prejudices: Sixth Series, 1927
First printed in The Baltimore Evening Sun, Aug. 9, 1926
Which point, that Mozart out ranks Bach, or that neither has use for their fame at this point in time?
The families can make good use of it, if all the copyrights and licenses are still in effect.
It isn't, to me personally. I have the same aches and pains as everyone else. And I don't "worship" anyone.You are the one who assigns relative value to people. If you want to worship Mencken and Bach, I don't think anyone will object, certainly not me.
If I were better or worse than either of them, or even you, it would not make any difference in my life. Tomorrow, I will wake up with the same aches and pains. The people who like me today, will still like me tomorrow. The people who don't like me today, will find no reason to change their opinions.
If it makes you feel better, I think Mencken was a very talented writer.
Why is this so important to you?
Why not just say, "nothing means anything"?the equation is meaningless - a genius will believe their life more important than an idiot's; they will feel they have more to 'offer' the world. Perhaps they're right. But the value of a person's life is as dear to an idiot as to a genius - in fact, maybe moreso, since geniuses often succumb to depressive states of mind and end up committing suicide because of having to live their lives surrounded by idiots. Human society, imo, needs all sorts of people, at all levels of intellect, in order to function best. It is the 'job' of those endowed with advanced i.q's to help better the lot of his fellow man and not, as is frequently the case of the elevated-but-non-genius iq, to sit in judgement of others - in other words, whinge and sneer and sit on their own butts doing nothing to improve the status quo.
Personally, I'm not keen on Picasso. Many hold his work in high esteem. I don't like looking at it and wouldn't hang it in my house, whatever its value to others.
the former. A cellist friend thinks Bach is far superior. I like both equally.
At the risk of offending the "people are all the same" crowd, he was pretty damned exceptional.The clarity of his prose and thought give me goosebumps.
Perhaps if Mozart had lived longer, he might be the equal of Bach, but how is this kind of thing measured?
It would be easier if the debate was over which was taller.
I'm sure that in some alternate universe you would have given them both a run for their money.Perhaps if Mozart had lived longer, he might be the equal of Bach, but how is this kind of thing measured?
It would be easier if the debate was over which was taller.
It isn't, to me personally. I have the same aches and pains as everyone else. And I don't "worship" anyone.
But my aches and pains are not going to create a 9th Symphony.
To say that you're therefore the same as Beethoven is simply absurd.
I'm sure that in some alternate universe you would have given them both a run for their money.
Why not just say, "nothing means anything"?
Three words, and look at all the shit you had to type just to say that.
bloody men and your obsession with measurements!
you can't measure some things. some things are wholly subjective and Bach's superiority or otherwise to Mozart is one of those things
I'm sure that in some alternate universe you would have given them both a run for their money.
At the risk of offending the "people are all the same" crowd, he was pretty damned exceptional.
No more than I have in Charles Manson.Your confidence in me is inspiring.