Wednesday, November 20, 2024

November 20: "The Unfortunate Traveler," Vacation, Art

This is not going to be an angry post about the Felon in Chief.  Nor is it going to be about MAGA-hat-wearing mouth breathers.  I figure everyone needs a vacation from that circus.  (This statement doesn't mean, however, I will give up voicing my constant shock and disappointment over his idiotic cabinet appointments and outright lies.)

Billy Collins visits France . . . 

The Unfortunate Traveler

by: Billy Collins

Because I was off to France, I packed 
my camera along with my shaving kit, 
some colorful boxer shorts, and a sweater with a zipper, 

but every time I tried to take a picture 
of a bridge, a famous plaza,
or the bronze equestrian statue of a general, 

there was a woman standing in front of me 
taking a picture of the very same thing, 
or the odd pedestrian blocked my view, 

someone or something always getting between me 
and the flying buttress, the river boat, 
a bright café awning, an unexpected pillar. 

So into the little door of the lens 
came not the kiosk or the altarpiece. 
No fresco or baptistry slipped by the quick shutter. 

Instead, my memories of that glorious summer 
of my youth are awakened now, 
like an ember fanned into brightness, 

by a shoulder, the back of a raincoat, 
a wide hat or towering hairdo— 
lost time miraculously recovered 

by the buttons on a gendarme’s coat 
and my favorite, 
the palm of that vigilant guard at the Louvre.



I hosted a concert at the library this evening.  A good musician friend of mine gathered three of his friends and put on a show.  I wasn't sure how many people to expect, since it was the middle of the week and the weather turned cold and rainy after dark.  (By the way, it's now snowing in my neck of the woods.)  

Well, I guess a lot of people needed a vacation from the insanity of the Felon in Chief, too.  Over 90 people attended.  We all sat, listened, sang along, whistled, clapped.  Just what the doctor ordered.

It was good medicine--the kind that may just get us through the next four or so years.  

Because that's what art can do--lift you up, make you feel less alone or scared or angry or sad.  Art brings people together--whether its music or words or painting or acting or telling jokes or juggling cotton balls.  Art doesn't care about what color your skin is, who you love, how you worship, or where you're from.

All that matters is that you're a human being with a beating heart.

Saint Marty was filled with hope this evening.



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