Before there were such debased things as blogs, there was the
locus communis, the
tópos koinós, evolving through personality into the humble
Essay...
Wikipedia doth pontificated and wrote:The word essay derives from the French infinitive essayer, "to try" or "to attempt". In English essay first meant "a trial" or "an attempt", and this is still an alternative meaning. The Frenchman Michel de Montaigne was the first author to describe his work as essays; he used the term to characterize these as "attempts" to put his thoughts into writing, and his essays grew out of his commonplacing.
I don't do blogs. Today the informational grotesquery (what I suppose used to be the Zeitgeist) is unfortunately polluted with melancholic and polychromatic shards of the Bibliothèque, the Médiathèque, what Albert Camus referred to as his Carnets - and I adopted [read: mangled] (in the naive and precocious romanticity of youth) as my own style of
essais lyriques. We fancied that when Matisse went to the Riviera, there was a softening of his style which some took as regression, a waning, a submission to form, at worst a betrayal of his beloved Fauvism. If confronted, he'd have shrugged and squinted into the light, breathed into the wind, and conceived of Shakespeare as being some kind of lovely radical...
- When forty winters shall besiege thy brow,
And dig deep trenches in thy beauty's field,
Thy youth's proud livery so gazed on now,
Will be a tattered weed of small worth held
I don't do blogs. I came here for the horse forums, but Fred has since turned them all to dogfood and glue! So sad. So sad.
So now words dribble down my chin mixed with the blood and bile of file-management tech-talk... a man cannot serve two masters, the determined meld them into one, even if a bit of bludgeoning be required.
I don't do blogs. That's what we have here: a violence of civility, mixed with a wee bit o'tech-babble.
I don't do blogs. To paraphrase Montaigne, the internet of people is best served with a caveat of Cyanide: We ourselves are the subjects of our blogs: it is not reasonable that you, dear readers, should employ your leisures on topics so frivolous and so vain.
We fancied thus, and thus we fancied - but we ne'er did we do no bloggin'.