The Lovers’ Chronicle 26 June – awakenin’ – art by Branwell Brontë & Daoum Corm – birth of Pearl Buck & Laurie Lee

Dear Zazie,  Here is today’s Lovers’ Chronicle from Mac TagRhett

The Lovers’ Chronicle

Dear Muse,

as i so often do
runnin’ through visions,
thinkin’, hear me,
take me to hold
ours for each other
unlike anything before
not somethin’ conjured up
from wishful thinkin’
comfortin’ to know
we have fallen
and can fall no farther
so come,
we will marvel
at what we create

© copyright 2020 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved

lift me
and ask
was it good,
bein’

your face
smilin’
the lullaby i sing

as we hold
for as long as we can

here we find ourselves
cradle in arms

eyes wide
into each other

askin’ again and again,

how do we stay here

© copyright 2019 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved

it was then i began
to write again
from intense purpose
every day
imagination
scarcely falterin’,
rhythm barely
skippin’ a beat
and the verse i wrote…
a beginnin’ and an end
a first long drink
never to be forgotten,
or likely tasted again…

© copyright 2018 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved

Today is the birthday of Branwell Brontë (Patrick Branwell Brontë ; 26 June 1817 – 24 September 1848); painter and writer. He was the only son of the Brontë family, and brother of the writers Charlotte, Emily and Anne.

Brontë was rigorously tutored at home by his father, and shared some of his sisters’ creative talent, earning praise for his poetry and translations from the classics. But he drifted between jobs, supporting himself by portrait-painting, and gave way to drug and alcohol addiction, apparently worsened by a failed relationship with a married woman, leading to his early death.

In January 1843, Brontë took up a tutoring position in Thorp Green, where he was to tutor the Reverend Edmund Robinson’s young son. His sister Anne had been the governess there since May 1840. At first things went well, with Charlotte reporting in January 1843 that her siblings were “both wonderously valued in their situations.” During his 30 months service Branwell corresponded with several old friends about his increasing infatuation with Robinson’s wife Lydia, née Gisborne, a charming and sophisticated woman, almost fifteen years senior to him. He wrote, perhaps unreliably, to one of his friends that “my mistress is DAMNABLY TOO FOND OF ME” and sent him a “lock of her hair, wch has lain at night on his breast – wd to God it could do so legally !” In July 1845, he was dismissed from his position. According to Gaskell, he received a letter “sternly dismissing him, intimating that his proceedings were discovered, characterising them as bad beyond expression and charging him, on pain of exposure, to break off immediately, and for ever, all communication with every member of the family.” Multiple explanations have been given for this, including inappropriate relationships with a Robinson daughter or son, or that he had passed forged cheques. The most likely explanation is Brontë’s own account that he had an affair with Mrs Robinson which Brontë hoped would lead to marriage after her husband’s death. For several months after his dismissal, he regularly received small amounts of money from Thorpe Green, sent by Mrs. Robinson herself, probably to dissuade him from blackmailing his former employer and lover.

Brontë returned home to his family at the Haworth parsonage, where he looked for another job, wrote poetry and attempted to adapt Angrian material into a book called And the Weary are at Rest. During the 1840s, several of his poems were published in local newspapers under the name of Northangerland, making him the first of the Brontës to be a published poet. Soon however, after Mr Robinson’s death, Mrs Robinson made clear that she was not going to marry Branwell, who then declined into alcoholism, opiates and debt. Charlotte’s letters from this time demonstrate that she was angered by his behaviour. In January 1847, he wrote to his friend Leyland about the easy existence he hoped for: “to try and make myself a name in the world of posterity, without being pestered by the small but countless botherments.” His behaviour became increasingly embarrassing to the family. He managed to set fire to his bed, after which his father had to sleep with him for the safety of the family. Towards the end of his life he was sending notes to a friend asking of “Five pence (5d) worth of Gin”. It is not known whether he was even informed of the 1847 debut novels of his three sisters.

On 24 September 1848, Brontë died at Haworth parsonage, most likely due to tuberculosis aggravated by delirium tremens, alcoholism, and laudanum and opium addiction, despite the fact that his death certificate notes “chronic bronchitis-marasmus” as the cause. Elizabeth Gaskell’s biography of Charlotte reports an eye-witness account that Brontë, wanting to show the power of the human will, decided to die standing up, “and when the last agony began, he insisted on assuming the position just mentioned.” On 28 September 1848, he was interred in the family vault. Emily Brontë died of tuberculosis on 19 December of that year and Anne Brontë on 29 May 1849 in the coastal resort of Scarborough. Charlotte, the last living sister, married the Reverend Arthur Bell Nichols, curate of Haworth, in 1854 and died in March 1855, because of pregnancy complications.

Gallery

 Branwell Brontë, self-portrait, 1840

Brontë painted himself out of this painting of his three sisters.

Self caricature of Branwell (1847) in bed waiting to die.

Disputed portrait made by Brontë about 1833; sources are in disagreement over whether this image is of Emily or Anne.

Today is the birthday of Daoud Corm (Ghosta, Lebanon 1852–1930), David Corm in English; painter and the father of writer, industrialist and philanthropist Charles Corm. He was a teacher and mentor to the young Khalil Gibran as well as Khalil Saleeby and Habib Srour.
Gallery
1900 self portrait

1900 self portrait

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20220626_195709

 

 

 

 

 

 

Today is the birthday of Pearl Buck (Pearl Sydenstricker Buck; Hillsboro, West Virginia; June 26, 1892 – March 6, 1973 Danby, Vermont), also known by her Chinese name Sai Zhenzhu (Chinese: 赛珍珠); writer and novelist. Perhaps best known for The Good Earth which was the best-selling novel in the United States in 1931 and 1932 and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1932. In 1938, Buck won the Nobel Prize in Literature “for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China” and for her “masterpieces”, two memoir-biographies of her missionary parents. She was the first American woman to win that prize.

Pearl_Buck

In October 1892, her parents took their 4-month-old baby to China. As the daughter of missionaries and later as a missionary herself, Buck spent most of her life before 1934 in Zhenjiang, with her parents, and in Nanjing, with her first husband. She and her parents spent their summers in a villa in Kuling town, Mountain Lu, Jiujiang, and it was during this annual pilgrimage that the young girl decided to become a writer. She graduated from Randolph-Macon Woman’s College in Lynchburg, Virginia, then returned to China. From 1914 to 1932, after marrying John Lossing Buck, she served as a Presbyterian missionary, but she came to doubt the need for foreign missions. Her views became controversial during the Fundamentalist–Modernist controversy, leading to her resignation. After returning to the United States in 1935, she married the publisher Richard J. Walsh and continued writing prolifically. She became an activist and prominent advocate of the rights of women and racial equality, and wrote widely on Chinese and Asian cultures, becoming particularly well known for her efforts on behalf of Asian and mixed-race adoption.

Laurie_LeeAnd today is the birthday of Laurie Lee (Laurence Edward Alan Lee; Stroud, Gloucestershire, 26 June 1914 – 13 May 1997 Slad, Gloucestershire); poet, novelist and screenwriter.  Perhaps best known for his autobiographical trilogy which consisted of Cider with Rosie (1959), As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning (1969) and A Moment of War (1991).  The first volume recounts his childhood in the Slad Valley.  The second deals with his leaving home for London and his first visit to Spain in 1935, and the third with his return to Spain in December 1937 to join the Republican International Brigades.

Cider with Rosie (1959)

Cider with Rosie Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, England 1962
  • It was then I began to on my bed… to make up poems from intense abstraction; hour after unmarked hour, imagination scarcely faltering once, rhythm hardly skipping a beat and the poems I made… were the first and last of that time.
  • Never to be forgotten, that first long secret drink of golden fire, juice of those valleys and of that time, wine of wild orchards, of russet summer, of plump red apples, and Rosie’s burning cheeks. Never to be forgotten, or ever tasted again…

As I Walked out one Midsummer Morning

Segovia..”Here were churches, castles, and medieval walls standing sharp in the evening light, but all dwarfed by that extraordinary phenomenon of masonry, the Roman aqueduct, which overshadowed the whole…’The Aqueduct’, said the farmer, pointing with his whip, in case by chance I had failed to notice it.”

‘Love is simply the slipping of a hand in another’s, of knowing you are where you belong at last.’

Mac Tag

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