Sunday
Jun. 30, 2002
Alphabet
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Poem: "Alphabet," by R.T. Smith from Messenger (Louisiana State University Press).
Alphabet
In the sewing room
  the mail-order Singer
  with its chrome-rimmed
  wheel and gleaming needle
  was turned under
  to make a desk while
  mother started dinner.
I faced west where
  the window shimmered.
  For an hour I rehearsed
  my letters, spelling
  everything visible-
  zipper and scissors,
  thimbles and spools.
  The oval mirror made
  the wallpaper zinnias
  flower still further,
  and a mantel clock
  held the minutes back.
The Eagle pencil
  in my cramped hand
  scratched fishhook
  j or an i like a needle.
  Late sunlight glazed
  the holly leaves silver
  beyond the peeling sill.
  While I squinted hard
  at the Blue Horse paper,
  the twilight world
  held perfectly still.
When I was finished,
  each curve and flourish 
  set in disciplined rows,
  fresh tea with ice
  appeared at my elbow,
  the yellow c of lemon
  in the tumbler's perfect o,
  and if mother had praise for what I had done,
  I would shine all evening
  bright as a straight pin,
  while the new moon
  with its careless serifs
  cleared the trees and rose.
  
  
On this day in 1952, The 
  Guiding Light was first broadcast on television, in an episode that 
  was 15 minutes long. The soap opera began on radio in 1937, and from 1952 until 
  1956, the cast performed the same scripts for radio and television each day. 
  The original stories centered around the Rev. Doctor John Ruthledge and the 
  people who came to him for help. He always kept a lamp on in his study as a 
  sign to those who needed his assistance, and the lamp was known to all as "The 
  Guiding Light." Currently, The Guiding Light is the longest running 
  show in broadcast history.
  
  On this day in 1936, Gone 
  with the Wind was published. 
  The novel was written by Margaret Mitchell.
  
  It's the birthday of the poet, novelist, and translator Czeslaw 
  Milosz, born in Szetejnie, Lithuania in 1911. He fought in the Polish 
  resistance during World War II, was a diplomat in communist Poland after the 
  war, and came to the United States to teach at Berkeley in 1960. He became a 
  U.S. citizen in 1970, and was awarded the Nobel Prize for literature in 1980.
  
  It's the birthday of the novelist Winston 
  Graham, born in Victoria Park, Manchester, England, in 1910. He is best 
  known for his Poldark novels, which became a BBC television series.
  
  On this day in 1857 (sometimes 1853), Charles 
  Dickens gave his first public reading. He needed the money, and he wanted 
  to get away from home and his unhappy marriage. He also loved to perform in 
  front of an audience. It was June in 1857, but his first reading was of "A 
  Christmas Carol" at Saint Martin's Hall in London. Altogether, he gave 
  about 471 readings during his life.
  
  It's the birthday of scholar and editor Alexander Dyce, born in Edinburgh, 
  Scotland, in 1798. One of the most respected editors of his time, his works 
  are characterized by scrupulous care and attention to detail. Dyce edited a 
  dictionary of the language of Shakespeare, and then a nine-volume edition of 
  Shakespeare's works which came out in 1857.
  
  It's the birthday of the poet and dramatist John 
  Gay, born in Barnstaple, England, in 1685, and buried in Westminster 
  Abbey with the self-composed epitaph: "Life is a jest, and all things show 
  it. I thought so once, and now I know it." Gay is best known for his play, 
  The Beggar's Opera, which was very popular when it opened in 1728.
  
Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®
