
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) ** an excerpt from "The Accidental Hotel," about The Atlanta Hotel, a budget hotel in Bangkok. "It was the kind of place travelers were always looking for, a combination restaurant, café, and bistro, where you could get a good, inexpensive meal, linger for hours over coffee, or while away a hot afternoon over beer. It was a natural gathering place, and what was best about the restaurant was what was best about the hotel: the mix of people. In an age of niche marketing, The Atlanta was an anomaly,; it cut across the usual segregating categories of age, class, and lifestyle. There were has-been hippies and would be hipsters, clean-cut college students and backpacking grandmothers, budget-minded families and middle-aged men on a Bangkok debauch, German scholars of Thai Buddhism, Swedish relief workers on R&R from Cambodia, blue-collar Brits, freelance writers, one or two indigents, and on the sidelines, quietly studying the show, a contingent of local day trippers that included, every Sunday at noon, a small group of That Baptists from a neighborhood church." From: Donald A Ranard The Accidental Hotel The Best Travel Writing 2005 ** THE TRAVAIL OF TRAVEL 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. Etymological Dictionary On Line ** CLOSER TO HOME “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) ** 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) ** TRAVELING IN SCOTLAND IN THE 1600's In the 17th century, Sir William Brereton published his Travels in Holland, etc, (1634-1635), and alas! he was not so enamored of the household smells of the good citizens of Edinburgh: "...their houses and halls, and kitchens, have such a noisome taste, a savour and that so strong, as it doth offend you so soon as you come within their walls; yea, sometimes when I have light from my horse, I have felt the distaste of it before I have ' come into the house; yea, I never came to my own lodging in Edinborough, or went out, but I was constrained to hold my nose...." ** TRAVEL Travel begins Where I am, With the world Lieing like A barnacled sea Scraped with knowledge Severe & kind, This wide-spread space Holding us together. Another way is To tunnel in: Go in, go out, go far. To stop is to die, Strut where spirit Falters, mind boggles, Another eye will Follow you, Another's hands Will hold you. Travel, sail forth, Kiss & be done. The briar is not so harsh As standing still, Or thorns, stream Of evenings at our windows Knocking, rush of moon Flaking foreign pines On dense hills beyond. Travel begins When the eye roams Star-jutted with The constant sweep Of cloud, Magellan Spray, space after Space enduring Human forms, or light Alone, Venus-edged. My bags are packed, I shall turn & Say farewell. Louis Phillips **
Happy Summertime, LP! Your TRAVEL poem is one for the ages; exquisite. I am reminded to be bold, to be brave. Twain’s insight comes to mind, too: “So throw off the bowlines, sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream.” Hail LP’s Bits & Pieces!
LikeLike
As always I love the trivia I gain as I read your blogs (I think you should take the Jeopardy test – you would be an awesome contestant). I loved your Travel poem (from above) – it really resonates
as we plan our (probably last) bucket list adventures.
LikeLike
Always a great read! ESP your words ,Lou
LikeLike
You had me at: “ Travel begins where I am….” The best approach for an adventurous life.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Unpack your bags and stay a little longer…please. Who else is going to hold us all together?
LikeLiked by 1 person