For some reason, Golsa deleted all her regular videos some time back, so all her account has is shorts, which is fine I guess, but some of my favorites are gone now, and shorts embed weird. This one's nice, though.
PS - E Onoleo is a scale.
For some reason, Golsa deleted all her regular videos some time back, so all her account has is shorts, which is fine I guess, but some of my favorites are gone now, and shorts embed weird. This one's nice, though.
PS - E Onoleo is a scale.
And I matured in peace born of command,in the nursery of the infant century,and the voice of man was never dear to me,but the breeze’s voice—that I could understand.The burdock and the nettle I preferred,but best of all the silver willow tree.Its weeping limbs fanned my unrest with dreams;it lived here all my life, obligingly.I have outlived it now, and with surprise.There stands the stump; with foreign voices otherwillows converse, beneath our, beneath those skies,and I am hushed, as if I’d lost a brother.
Anna Akhmatova.
With only his dim lanternTo tell him where he isAnd every time a mountainOf fresh corpses to load upTake them to the other sideWhere there are plenty moreI’d say by now he must be confusedAs to which side is whichI’d say it doesn’t matterNo one complains he’s gotTheir pockets to go throughIn one a crust of bread in another a sausageOnce in a long while a mirrorOr a book which he throwsOverboard into the dark riverSwift and cold and deep
Charles Simic.
Nothing's in the nest. No needles. No newborn ravens.Maybe something like night in the deep hollow,an eggshell planet, cracked in the middle, an empty bowl of soup.Nothing's in the nest. No thread. No webs of words.Maybe something like my navel, the eclipse of a magnifying glass.A slice, mute with regard to its empty depths.In the nest, nothing. The web unwoven. Dismembered.In the space, something, yes. A piece of cloth. Sounding like flagstaking wing, a worm in its beak and suddenly, eyes, my eyeswhich, cutting across the empty air, direct themselves at something noiseless over there.
Valerie Mejer Caso.
The snail moves like aHovercraft, held up by aRubber cushion of itself,Sharing its secretWith the hedgehog. The hedgehogShares its secret with no one.We say, Hedgehog, come outOf yourself and we will love you.We mean no harm. We wantOnly to listen to whatYou have to say. We wantYour answers to our questions.The hedgehog gives nothingAway, keeping itself to itself.We wonder what a hedgehogHas to hide, why it so distrusts.We forget the godUnder this crown of thorns.We forget that never againWill a god trust in the world.
Paul Muldoon.
Sadie reminded me today that it is the official start of Birthday Month. That's a tradition Ericka and I began when the kids started being aware of birthdays and holidays, mostly to forestall the incessant demands for gifts in the lead-up.
So nobody is allowed to submit wish lists (now coming in the form of slide presentations, lol) until 30 days prior. It's always been sorta like Advent, and to this day I still give the kids small gifts and extra coin along the way, up until the Big Day.
Sadie's birthday, though, has long filled me with anticipatory anxiety because a day not long afterward (July 26) is an anchor of grief. For starters, in 2020 that was the last time the kids (or anybody in the family) ever saw their mother.
That was taken at their regular supervised visit on East Madison Street in Seattle. Ericka had been staying with her parents down in Estacada, and would drive up on alternate Sundays to see her kids for a few hours, but after this one, she never went back.U.S. and Canadian history are more intertwined than people realize. A contingent of the Continental Army was briefly based in Montreal in 1775-76 in an effort to recruit Canadians to the revolutionary cause. Learned a lot about our shared history at the Château Ramezay Museum. pic.twitter.com/ITO3ntR6Wu
— Ambassador Pete Hoekstra (@USAmbCanada) June 18, 2026
From the people who told us that J6 was a day of love, here is what they call "an effort to recruit Canadians":
As he approached the Palace Gate on Quebec’s northern shoulder, Arnold swung into Dog Lane to follow the wall toward the Lower Town. The parapet overhead immediately erupted in muzzle flashes and ferocious musketry, raking the Americans with plunging fire from the Royal Navy Battalion. “We advanced as fast as we could … but was obliged to leave our field piece,” a gunner later told his journal. The sled and 6-pounder were abandoned in a snowdrift. Hunched men instinctively narrowed their shoulders and hurried forward, unable to see anything above the high gray wall except that fatal winking.
...
Captain Jonas Hubbard, who had survived Bunker Hill, would not survive Dog Lane. He too fell, mortally wounded. “March on,” he called, “march on.”
March on they did, for six hundred yards before the lane bent south into the dim labyrinth of the Lower Town. Ahead loomed the first barrier, a ten-foot wooden wall with musket loopholes. Arnold had no sooner ordered his men to prop ladders against the barricade than he crumpled to the ground: a bullet fragment had sliced through his left leg below the knee, lodging in the calf muscle above his heel. Bleeding badly and in excruciating pain, he shouted encouragement through gritted teeth while hobbling to the rear with help from two men, who carried him the final mile to Dr. Senter’s surgery table at the convent hospital.
...
The Holland House plan called for Arnold to rendezvous with Montgomery at this spot before advancing uphill. Not only had casualties reduced the column, but as many as two hundred men had lost their way in the snowstorm and were wandering around the docks, sheds, and riverine warehouses. Wet firelocks needed to be dried; prisoners required careful watching.
A strange tranquillity settled over the Lower Town as the order was passed to each company: wait here for General Montgomery and his men. “I was overruled by hard reasoning,” Morgan later said. “To these arguments, I sacrificed my own opinion and lost the town.”
Consistent with our anti-Catholic bigotry, at least. Anyway, if you want more on our Recruiting Mission to Quebec, here's the Wikipedia article.
More importantly, though, I just noticed that I had the wrong link on a footnote in one of my old posts, which of course I can no longer edit since Typepad is deader than Captain Jonas Hubbard. The exchange I had in mind in Last of the Mohicans, from which this post's title is derived:
Hawkeye: My father warned me about you...
Cora Munro: [interupting] Your Father?
Hawkeye: Chingachgook, he warned me about people like you.
Cora Munro: Oh, he did?
Hawkeye: He said "Do not try to understand them".
Cora Munro: What?
Hawkeye: Yes, and, "do not try to make them understand you. That is because they are a breed apart and make no sense".
Cora Munro: A breed apart, we make no sense?
Hawkeye: In your particular case, Miss, I'd make an allowance.
Cora Munro: Thank you so much.
Seems fitting in the context.
Selah.
If Black History Month is notviable then wind does notcarry the seeds and drop themon fertile groundrain does notdampen the landand encourage the seedsto rootsun does notwarm the earthand kiss the seedlingsand tell them plain:You’re As Good As Anybody ElseYou’ve Got A Place Here, Too
Nikki Giovanni.