
SOWETO, SOUTH AFRICA “Soweto was designed to be bombed –that’s how forward-thinking the architects of apartheid were. The township was a city unto itself, with a population of nearly one million. There were only two roads in and out. That was so the military could lock us in, quell any rebellion. And if the monkeys ever went crazy and tried to break out of their cage, the air force could fly over and bomb the shit out of everyone. Growing up, I never knew that my grandmother lived in the center of a bull’s eye.” Trevor Noah. Born a Crime ** EVERY SAILOR NEEDS A FRIEND “Somewhere in the Southern ocean, as the immortal Captain Joshua Slocum recounted in his journal Around the World in the Sloop Spray, he was touched to discover that his loneliness was ephemeral. An intrepid spider in the cabin was spinning sidewise while he spun forward, and the knowledge of their companionship inspirited him for the rigors that lay ahead.” S.J. Perelman. “ Looking For Pussy” in Eastward Ha! (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1977) ** ON THE ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD TRAVEL travel (v.) late 14c., "to journey," from travailen (1300) "to make a journey," originally "to toil, labor" (see travail). The semantic development may have been via the notion of "go on a difficult journey," but it also may reflect the difficulty of any journey in the Middle Ages. Replaced Old English faran. Related: Traveled; traveling. Traveled (adj.) "having made journeys, experienced in travel" is from early 15c. Traveling salesman is attested from 1885. ** Etymological Dictionary On Line ** WOBURN, MASSACHUSETTS “I had come from Woburn, Massachusetts, a fine New England town noted for its rambunctious biker gangs, its indicted and convicted mayors and the worse toxic-waste dumping grounds in the United States. But it’s also an old colonial city with a bronze minuteman on the town green guarding the white-shingled Methodist church and a great ivy-covered library with a statue of Count Rumford on its front lawn.” Eric Bogosian. Drinking in America (New York: Vintage Books, 1987). +* FOR THE FANS OF THE LEGEND & LORE OF KING ARTHUR “ A cold, wind driven rain soaks through my parka as I walk across a narrow foot-bridge that links the Cornwall mainland in southwest England to a rocky promontory overlooking the Bristol Channel. Far below this cantilevered span, waves crash against the cliffs and swirl inside a grotto known as Merlin’s Cave.” Joshua Hammer. “The Forever Legend” in Smithsonian Magazine (September 2022) ** People also ask “What is inside Merlin's cave? Inside Merlin's Cave contains Numerous poems, commentaries, prophecies and plays, including the full text of Thomas Hardy's Queen of Cornwall, that establish Cornwall not just as the birthplace of King Arthur but as a source of all Arthurian themes.” ** REMEMBER THIS PASSWORD? “ Dildano's password, "Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch", is the name of a real village in Wales, United Kingdom. It's also the United Kingdom's longest place name.” IDMb trivia to Barbarella (1968) ** JOHN JAY AUDOBON TRAVELS THROUGH FLORIDA “At Indian Key I observed an immense quantity of beautiful Tree Snails of a pyramidal or shortly conical form, some pure white, others curiously marked with spiral lines of bright red, yellow and black. They were crawling vigorously on every branch of every bush where there was not a nest of the White Ibis. Wherever that bird nested not a live snail was to be seen; hundreds lay dead underneath.” John James Audobon ** NOT EXACTLY ABOUT INDIA ‘This novel isn’t about India. I don’t know India. I was there once, for less than a month. When I was there, I was struck by the country’s foreingness; it remains obdurately foreign to me. But long before I went to India, I began to imagine a man who has been born there and has moved away; I imagined a character who keeps coming back again and again. He’s compelled to keep returning; yet, with each return trip, his sense of India’s foreigness only deepens. India remains unyieldingly foreign even to him.” John Irving.”Author’s Notes” to A Son of the Circus (New York: Random House, 1994) ** SAILING DOWN THE RIVER AMUR Sailing down the River Amur, I started to dream of Dorothy Lamour. I cried out: “Leave her alone, Bob Hope.” “Wake up,” my wife sd, “and quiet down, you dope!” LJP **

Thank you, Louis
LikeLike
Always a pleasure, Louis
LikeLike