Wednesday, September 5, 2007

I've got the spots. Perhaps you can see them, perhaps not, but they're all over my face. Little bumps everywhere. I was getting ready to chalk this up to the blended salad that I've been eating (drinking) for lunch (it's a really very vile meal, but one by which I manage to consume 4 cups of greenery). In any case, I think I've ruled out the blended salad (and the peach pie I made yesterday) and am now debating between excessive indoor sweating from the treadmill in my mother's basement (i should be clear: i sweat profusely on it; the machine itself doesn't sweat) or reading Whitman. While the former would seem the more obvious choice, I'm going with the latter. I've been feeling that overwhelming sense that thinking about Whitman is often like thinking about vomit -- it just pours and pours and pours out, and in all the pouring, it flattens itself. I also have had no access to the prose from my childhood hamlet of Traverse City, Michigan. What does it mean to be in a place where a girl can't even get her hand on Whitman's letters? So instead of pulling out my hair, I've ordered a couple of volumes of prose and correspondence (NYU has recently released all their Whitman texts -- Daybooks, Notebooks, Unpublished Prose, Letters, etc. in paperback). In the meantime, I've been transcribing all of my notes from the records of a cool homeschooling society that was fascinating and will be another chapter. In fear of jinxing myself, I don't want to talk too much about it. But suffice it to say, in 1880 their American history and American literature curriculum (mind you, almost no other school or college would teach anything called "American Literature" for almost another two decades) included the likes of Harriet Beecher Stowe, George Washington Cable, Catherine Maria Sedgwick...and the expected Longfellow, Bryant, et. al.

7 comments:

Maura said...

why are you covering your eyes like that?

Maura said...

ps. the vomit metaphor is confusing!!!

hope your spots go away.

Maura said...

i mean the vomit simile.

even though i don't get it, i get the sense that your simile is not nice towards whitman. watch out. he knows what you're thinking. he's just under your bootsoles. and everywhere else you or he can think of.

Lost said...

Maura, I think Whitman would appreciate the vomit simile. Clearly Anne is in the bodily-fluid-loving spirit of our bearded friend. Although on the off-chance that you're not, I'm not sure his prose will clarify much.

Maura said...

hey if you find a way to access the Brooklyn Eagle (other than excerpts in _I Sit and Look Out_, let me know. I'm trying to find out if I have any other option besides the Brooklyn Historical Society.

EAL said...

It is the vile blended salad! Clearly I need to come up there and make you some meat cookies.

Matthew Spencer said...

I doubt Whitman would appreciate the vomit image. I have clear undeniable reasons why he wouldn't, but won't stoop to make the argument.