Patrick Hamilton, Hans Wollschläger, Jean Ingelow, Karl Gutzkow, Ebenezer Elliott, Paul Green

De Engelse schrijver Patrick Hamilton werd geboren op 17 maart 1904 in Hassocks, Sussex. Zie ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2009 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2010.

 

Uit: Hangover Square

 

„They used to rag him until it at last became an accepted thing. “Old Bone” was said to be in one of his “dotty” moods. Mr. Thorne used to be sarcastic. “Or is this one of your-ah-delightfully convenient periods of amnesia, my dear Bone?” But even Mr. Thorne came to accept it. “Extra ordinary boy,” he once heard Mr. Thorne say (not knowing that he was overheard), “I really believe it’s perfectly genuine.” And often, instead of making him look a fool in front of the class, he would stop, give him a curious, sympathetic look, and, telling him to sit down, would without any ironic comment ask the next boy to do what he had failed to do.

“Dead” moods-yes, all his life he had had “dead” moods, but in those days he had slowly slipped into and out of them-they had not been so frequent, so sudden, so dead, so completely dividing him from his other life. They did not arrive with this extraordinary “snap”-that had only been happening in the last year or so. At first he had been somewhat disturbed about it; had thought at moments of consulting a doctor even. But he had never done so, and now he knew he never would. He was well enough; the thing did not seriously inconvenience him; and there were too many other things to worry about-my God, there were too many other things to worry about!

And now he was walking along the cliff at Hunstanton, on Christmas afternoon, and the thing had happened again. He had had Christmas dinner with his aunt, and he had gone out, as he had told her, to “walk it off.” He wore a light raincoat. He was thirty-four, and had a tall, strong, beefy, ungainly figure. He had a fresh, red complexion and a small moustache. His eyes were big and blue and sad and slightly bloodshot with beer and smoke. He looked as though he had been to an inferior public school and would be pleased to sell you a second-hand car. Just as certain people look unmistakably “horsey,” bear the stamp of Newmarket, he bore the stamp of Great Portland Street. He made you think of road houses, and there are thousands of his sort frequenting the saloon bars of public-houses all over England. His full mouth was weak, however, rather than cruel. His name was George Harvey Bone.“

 

 

Patrick Hamilton (17 maart 1904 – 23 september 1962)

 

 

De Duitse schrijver, essayist, vertaler, uitgever, historicus, organist en muziekwetenschapper Hans Wollschläger werd geboren op 17 maart 1935 in Minden. Zie ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2008 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2009 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2010.

 

Uit: Leitfaden a priori. Karlheinz Deschners Kriminalgeschichte des Christentums

 

Es ist ein Kreuz mit der Geschichte. Seit Olim wird sie aufgezeichnet, seit Cicero soll sie uns das Leben belehren, seit es die Ton- und Bildermedien gibt, kommt sie uns tagtäglich aus allen Landen frisch auf den Tisch, zum Greifen nahe: – was wird von ihr begriffen? Nicht viel mehr jedenfalls als einst und ehedem, in den vergleichsweise unterbelichteten Zeiten, so scheint es, denn sie selber ist nicht anders geworden und hat sich als Lebenslehrerin gegen sich selbst ersichtlich nicht bewährt. Immer noch dreht sich ihr Semper-idem im selben engen Zirkel; immer noch reißt sie die menschlichen Tat- Kräfte mit »Ideen« hin, deren einzige sichere Konsequenz von altersher Ruinen waren; immer neu noch kommt sie ihnen mit Kausal-Notwendigkeiten, deren einzige tod-sichere Folge Leichenberge sind; und über allem zieht, als ihr veritables Wappentier, der Pleitegeier der Vernunft seine gleichbleibenden Kreise. Nun ist das die biologische Not des Menschen selber, und ihre Linderung schreitet allenfalls in biologischen Epochen fort, nicht in geschichtlichen.

Aber ein gewisser Lernprozeß wäre ja auch da nicht utopisch zu erhoffen, wo die Herrschaft des Stammhirns und seiner primordialen Antriebe ungebrochen mächtig geblieben ist, zumal ein Lernen aus unablässig identisch sich wiederholenden Vorgängen, aus denen sogar die Küchenschabe lernt –: ist unsere Wahrnehmung vielleicht nicht gut versorgt, ist sie, bei doch inzwischen leidlicher Ausrüstung, in deren Anwendung »gestört«?

So also sehe Weltgeschichte aus der Nähe aus, notierte sich Robert Musil nach dem ersten Weltkrieg: »Man sieht nichts.«

Nichts – das hieß: eben Ruinen und Leichenberge nur; nichts – das meinte: nichts von grandioser Notwendigkeit, nichts von einer, sei’s auch nur kümmerlichen, welthistorischen Idee.“

  

 

Hans Wollschläger (17 maart 1935 – 19 mei 2007)

 

 

 

De Engelse dichteres en schrijfster Jean Ingelow werd geboren op 17 maart 1820 in Boston, Lincolnshire. Zie ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2009 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2010.

 

Divided

 

I
An empty sky, a world of heather,
Purple of foxglove, yellow of broom;
We two among them wading together,
Shaking out honey, treading perfume.

Crowds of bees are giddy with clover,
Crowds of grasshoppers skip at our feet,
Crowds of larks at their matins hang over,
Thanking the Lord for a life so sweet.

Flusheth the rise with her purple favor,
Gloweth the cleft with her golden ring,
‘Twixt the two brown butterflies waver,
Lightly settle, and sleepily swing.

We two walk till the purple dieth,
And short dry grass under foot is brown,
But one little streak at a distance lieth
Green like a ribbon to prank the down.

 

 

Jean Ingelow (17 maart 1820 – 20 juli 1897)

 

 

 

De Duitse schrijver en journalist Karl Gutzkow werd geboren op 17 maart 1811 in Berlijn. Zie ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2009 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2010. 

Sehnsucht

O könnt’ ich jene Töne wiedergeben
Und jene purpurroten Farben malen
Von Abendglocken und von Abendstrahlen
Aus meiner Jugend erstem Liebeleben!

O könnt’ ich wieder durch die Gärten schweben –
Die Abendnebel dampfen aus den Thalen
Und einen Bund, beglückt von süßen Qualen,
Umspinnen Elfen, die im Mondschein weben.

Ich höre manchmal wie aus weiter Ferne
Ein Glöcklein wieder mit bekanntem Schalle
Und märchenhafter glüh’n die Abendsterne –

Dann sag’ ich wild, von innrer Kraft gedrungen:
Ich will euch wieder, ihr Erinnerungen!
Sie zucken wohl, doch bald verstummen alle


Karl Gutzkow (17 maart 1811 – 16 december 1878)

 

 

De Engelse dichter Ebenezer Elliott werd geboren op 17 maart 1781 in Masborough, Yorkshire. Zie ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2009 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2010.

 

To Fanny Ann

 

As the flower bloweth,
As the stream floweth,
Daughter of beauty,
Do thou thy duty.
What, though the morrow
May dawn in sorrow?
Ev’n as light hasteth,
Darkness, too, wasteth:
Morn then discloses,
Raindrops on roses!
Daughter of beauty,
What, then, is duty?
Time says, “Death knoweth!”
Death says, “Time showeth!”

 

 

Epigram

 

Free Trade means work for beef, not bone;
It means that men are brothers;
That every man should have his own,
And nobody another’s.

 

 

Ebenezer Elliott (17 maart 1781 – 1 december 1849)

 

 

 

De Amerikaanse toneelschrijver Paul Green werd geboren op 17 maart 1894 in Lillington, North Carolina. Zie ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2009 en ook mijn blog van 17 maart 2010.

 

Uit: Oral History Interview with Paul Green, 1975

 

„JACQUELYN HALL:

You mentioned the rebellions that went on in the ’30s, against the poverty and the whole sweep of industrialization by the working people, who gained this certain kind of self-consciousness and a certain kind of understanding of where they were and began to try to organize. There were many different kinds of things that happened in the ’30s. Could you kind of talk about this … the Burlington Dynamite Case, for example? Some of the incidents of labor organization that you got personally involved in?

PAUL GREEN:

Well, in the South, the labor union, the trade union movement was slow and they never got started. Some of the reasons were that the people who came out of the Civil War depression and gradually awoke, like the Reynoldses, the Grays, the different people around and got the South started again. All around the South, the Carolinas, Georgia, a local fellow would get the idea and he would build him a little factory and then he would expand it. So, these were sort of landlords with a landlord’s point of view and I know that down at Erwin, North Carolina right near where I was born, when I was a little boy, I would go by there with my father and we saw a lot of Negroes sawing and cutting down trees. We said, “What’s happening?” and they said, “We are going to build a cotton factory.” And the Dukes and Mr. Erwin, they changed the town’s name, it was called Duke but it is now named Erwin, and that was early in the century. So, more local industry began to spring up everywhere and the people behind that, Mr. Erwin, was a good Episcopalian and he gave the money and helped build this Episcopal church down here, the new one and they were all, every darn one of them, good church members. Some of them taught Sunday School, like John D. Rockefeller, Sr. did. Each one of them also had that possessive point of view about his factory. He herded in these people, cheap labor. At Erwin, I used to go by and see these children at the noon hour come out of the factory all yellow. I tried to deal with it a little bit in that novel you just mentioned. Well, gradually, when the war came on, a lot of these mill people went to Europe and were treated with this doctrine and so on and saw some new things in the world and then the impact of the labor unions in the North and the Middle West began to seep in. Now and then, there would be a young man in the labor group here in the South who would speak out and later they began to rebel. Like at Burlington and Gastonia and all around.“

 


Paul Green (17 maart 1894 – 4 mei 1981)