1
May

Gaily bedight

   Posted by: Reely   in American

When I think of the poem El Dorado, I always get a mental picture of Edgar Allan Poe saying “what rhymes with knight?” and then he finds the word “bedight” and hollers “Eureka.” Then he says, hey, that’s a good title and saves up “Eureka” for later use.

Maybe he thought it was weird that the Spanish explorers were always “dressed to the nines” while conducting their explorations. Don’t think he didn’t know that expression since it appears in one of Robert Burns’ works - The Poem on Pastoral Poetry:

“Thou paints auld Nature to the nines,
In thy sweet Caledonian lines; …”

Our gallant knight isn’t just “gaily bedight” when he sets out. He is gaily bedight “in sunshine and in shadow.” I have always pictured him alone, though most of the searches for the fabled South American City of Gold were actually expeditions.

The legend of El Dorado actually grew from several stories. One involves “el indio dorado,” (the Golden Indian). This is a tale about Diego de Ordaz’s lieutenant Martinez, who was rescued from a shipwreck, and taken from town to town. Supposedly, he was entertained by a Golden Indian. However, Prussian naturalist and explorer, Alexander von Humboldt notes in his book, Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of America, that he believes this fable was based loosely upon the adventures of Juan Martin de Albujar, who “fell into the hands of the Caribs of the Lower Orinoco. This Albujar married an Indian woman and became a savage himself.”

Conquistador Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada (it is believed that Miguel de Cervantes modeled Don Quixotes after him) searched for El Dorado, but instead found the Muisca, one of the most advanced pre-Colombian civilizations. The invading Spaniards took gold and emeralds galore and stole the golden ornaments from the temple at Sogamoso. Then they burned down the temple. On August 6, 1538, the Muisca village of Bacatá was renamed Santa Fé de Bogotá.

Later in 1541, Gonzalo Pizarro who was the governor of Quito, as well as half brother of Francisco Pizarro, teamed up with Francisco de Orellana to set out in search of El Dorado. Pizarro quit the disastrous expedition. Orellana ended up being the first to travel and explore the entire length of the Amazon River.

Sir Walter Raleigh (who was pretty gaily bedight himself) resumed the search in 1595 and upon his return to England, published a book describing El Dorado as a city on Lake Parima far up the Orinoco in Guiana (modern-day Venezuela). This city was marked on English and other maps until its existence was disproved by Alexander von Humboldt.

Perhaps Poe was reading von Humboldt when he conceived the idea for El Dorado. Perhaps Poe even met von Humboldt during the period of time that he stayed with French author Alexandre Dumas in Paris, although that Poe ever even stayed in Paris is disputed. What can’t be disputed is that Poe dedicated his last great work, Eureka: A Prose Poem, to Alexander von Humboldt.

Our Poe pages so far
El Dorado
A Dream Within a Dream
The Bells
Annabel Lee

More links:
The Purloined Life of Edgar Allan Poe

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15
Apr

Gun in House

   Posted by: Reely   in American

We’ve got two readings on Billy Collins’ poem “Another Reason Why I Don’t Keep a Gun in the House”. Both of them are by actor Jamie Renell.

In this great poem, an attempt to drown out the neighbor’s barking dog with a Beethoven symphony has hilarious results. These are great readings that convey two totally different attitudes. There’s a pull-down menu where you can pick the Angry Neighbor or the Resigned Rabbi reading.

Jamie also did a fantastic reading of Charge of the Light Brigade. It’s my favorite Light Brigade.

Reely

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13
Apr

Governor Corzine seriously injured

   Posted by: Reely   in General

Wow - I couldn’t believe that the NJ Governor was in a car crash on the way to the Imus/Rutgers meeting. Kinda makes you wonder if they had just had a meeting between the team and Imus in NYC and left Sharpton and all that out of it, would the meeting have ended up at the Governor’s mansion?

However, it’s being reported now that Corzine wasn’t wearing a seatbelt and some people are already looking forward to the Governor getting a ticket.

NJ Governor Gravely Injured

I hope they find that red truck and give whoever was driving that vehicle a ticket too.

As for the Imus/Rutgers meeting, sorry I have nothing to say. I saw the team on Oprah yesterday. Oprah asked them leading questions, something like - did Imus steal your moment of glory. What moment of glory? They lost the game, didn’t they. They weren’t coming home to any victory celebration, ya know. The coach said it was never her or the team that called for Imus firing but because people are speaking up, it shows “moral fiber.” So — I’m like done with this topic.

I think real moral fiber would have been to say it was not a racial slur.

10
Apr

The Keep It Real Don Imus Poll

   Posted by: Reely   in General




The Keep It Real Don Imus Poll

I really think

Don Imus’ remarks were stupid and inappropriate, but not meant to be degrading.
it was a deliberate racial attack meant to be demeaning.
it was meant as comedy, but it wasn’t funny
it was meant as comedy and it was funny.
it was offensive because I never talk that way.
it was offensive because he’s white.
it was wrong because he didn’t know the people he was talking about.
it’s degrading to women.
he went too far, but I love Imus anyway
it wasn’t offensive but I hate Imus anyway.
he should just resign.
he should be fired.
he should be forgiven.
he should be persecuted til the day he dies.
Other

4
Apr

Ancient Mariner and Pandaemonium

   Posted by: Reely   in English

The Ancient Mariner is on the site, with an audio reading courtesy of Librivox.

There’s a movie I want to get from Amazon called Pandaemonium, which stars Linus Roache as STC and explores his friendship with the Wordsworths. Here is a movie that was listed as one of the top 10 films of 2000 but wasn’t widely distributed in the USA because of a bad review. Samantha Morton, who played Jane Eyre in the A&E miniseries (she was a great Jane), plays Sara Coleridge.

So, “I gots to see this,” even though I saw another review that claimed it was a little absurd that they go around spouting poetry. I do that myself at odd moments, courtesy of STC and other poets of great fame, of course. “Unhand me, greybeard loon.” You don’t even need a greybeard to get me to say that one.

Reely

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