tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post5743813706283279611..comments2023-06-15T19:46:44.549+05:30Comments on <i>Onlyne</i>: G.K.Chesterton on Charles DickensS. M. Ranahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11186829793949408897noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-36028841658023999142010-01-31T10:25:03.956+05:302010-01-31T10:25:03.956+05:30@ Seongyong Cho
You have read more Dickens than I...@ Seongyong Cho<br /><br />You have read more Dickens than I have--and I was an English major! I have only read a very abridged version of <i>Great Expectations</i> (for shame, public school systems!) and <i>A Tale of Two Cities</i>, which I loved. I also visited his house in London, one of four that he lived in. <i>Oliver Twist</i>, <i>Bleak House</i>, <i>David Copperfield</i>, <i>Little Dorrit</i>, <i>The Old Curiosity Shop</i>, <i>A Christmas Carol</i>...the list of books of his that I should read goes on and on.Greg Salvatorehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00730593838362270359noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-74529596905166447402010-01-30T01:13:03.648+05:302010-01-30T01:13:03.648+05:30@Ronak
From Churchill's "My Youthful Yea...@Ronak<br /><br />From Churchill's "My Youthful Years":<br /><br /><i>Of course what I call Mathematics is only what the Civil Service Commissioners expected you to know to pass a very rudimentary examination. I suppose that to those who enjoy this peculiar gift, Senior Wranglers and the like, the waters in which I swam must seem only a duck-puddle compared to the Atlantic Ocean. Nevertheless, when I plunged in, I was soon out of my depth. When I look back upon those care-laden months, their prominent features rise from the abyss of memory. Of course I had progressed far beyond Vulgar Fractions and the Decimal System. We were arrived in an 'Alice-in-Wonderland' world, at the portals of which stood 'A Quadratic Equation.' This with a strange grimace pointed the way to the Theory of Indices, which again handed on the intruder to the full rigours of the Binomial Theorem. Further dim chambers lighted by sullen, sulphurous fires were reputed to contain a dragon called the 'Differential Calculus.' But this monster was beyond the bounds appointed by the Civil Service Commissioners who regulated this stage of Pilgrim's heavy journey. We turned aside, not indeed to the uplands of the Delectable Mountains, but into a strange corridor of things like anagrams and acrostics called Sines, Cosines and Tangents. Apparently they were very important, especially when multiplied by each other, or by themselves! They had also this merit—you could learn many of their evolutions off by heart. There was a question in my third and last Examination about these Cosines and Tangents in a highly square-rooted condition which must have been decisive upon the whole of my after life. It was a problem. But luckily I had seen its ugly face only a few days before and recognised it at first sight.</i>...<br /> <br /><i>I had a feeling once about Mathematics, that I saw it all—Depth beyond depth was revealed to me—the Byss and the Abyss. I saw, as one might see the transit of Venus—or even the Lord Mayor's Show, a quantity passing through infinity and changing its sign from plus to minus. I saw exactly how it happened and why the tergiversation was inevitable: and how the one step involved all the others. It was like politics. But it was after dinner and I let it go!<br /> <br />The practical point is that if this aged, weary-souled Civil Service Commissioner had not asked this particular question about these Cosines or Tangents in their squared or even cubed condition, which I happened to have learned scarcely a week before, not one of the subsequent chapters of this book would ever have been written. I might have gone into the Church and preached orthodox sermons in a spirit of audacious contradiction to the age. I might have gone into the City and made a fortune. I might have resorted to the Colonies, or 'Dominions' as they are now called, in the hopes of pleasing, or at least placating them; and thus had, à la Lindsay Gordon or Cecil Rhodes, a lurid career. I might even have gravitated to the Bar, and persons might have been hanged through my defence who now nurse their guilty secrets with complacency. Anyhow the whole of my life would have been altered, and that I suppose would have altered a great many other lives, which in their turn, and so on.</i><br /> <br /><i>But here we seem to be getting back to mathematics, which I quitted for ever in the year 1894...</i>S. M. Ranahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11186829793949408897noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-80924083195585600262010-01-29T23:50:55.749+05:302010-01-29T23:50:55.749+05:30Thanks, SM.
About the Churchill movie, I'd lo...Thanks, SM.<br /><br />About the Churchill movie, I'd love to watch it (I loved Gandhi), but availability is a problem since it's somewhat obscure. I will keep it in mind to look for a chance to get this one.Ronak M Sonihttps://ronakmsoni.wordpress.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-10243493966358572692010-01-29T23:24:17.829+05:302010-01-29T23:24:17.829+05:30@Plum
Yes, it's true that Shakespeare and Dic...@Plum<br /><br />Yes, it's true that Shakespeare and Dickens have a lot in common.S. M. Ranahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11186829793949408897noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-29470965565827002142010-01-29T22:53:29.685+05:302010-01-29T22:53:29.685+05:30I read that people say the same things about shake...I read that people say the same things about shakespeare, that he wrote something for everyone to love.<br /><br />Plum<br /><a href="http://www.dontbeaplum.co.uk/" rel="nofollow">Don't Be a Plum</a>Plumhttp://dontbeaplum.co.uknoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-75703726204354602572010-01-27T21:27:25.874+05:302010-01-27T21:27:25.874+05:30@ Ronak
I'm watching Attenborough's "...@ Ronak<br /><br />I'm watching Attenborough's "Young Winston" which Ebert gives around two stars for it's lack of character development of the protagonist, Churchill. I am immensely enjoying it for it's historical sweep ( after my latest and fourth view of his epic Gandhi in the last 25 years ). As a youth of 18, I would suggest "Winston" to you, since it projects a loftiness of youthful vision. Churchill says that the years from 20-25 are everything.At least Churchill and Gandhi have in common achievements at an early age. The early bird, etc.<br /><br />I won't be able to read Dickens because life has become a little crowded and Dickens would not be high in the list of priorities. There is Faust, which I still might make, but War and Peace, with it's gargantuan size<br />is an unlikely contender. Movies take less time, but ofcourse are no match for books.<br /><br />I quite admire your appetite for reading.S M Rananoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-38113339282277233942010-01-27T21:26:38.702+05:302010-01-27T21:26:38.702+05:30This comment has been removed by the author.S. M. Ranahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11186829793949408897noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-83293806474458446272010-01-27T20:39:04.007+05:302010-01-27T20:39:04.007+05:30Why will it only remain a wish?Why will it only remain a wish?Ronak M Sonihttps://ronakmsoni.wordpress.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-43717282094769854262010-01-27T17:07:55.305+05:302010-01-27T17:07:55.305+05:30The musical Oliver!, made in the sixties, is one o...The musical Oliver!, made in the sixties, is one of my beloved cinema memories. The link to the Chesterton site, given below my post, has a beautiful essay on Pickwick Papers, which really makes me hungry to read it, but which will remain only a wish.S M Rananoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-83402770350513689012010-01-27T16:01:56.112+05:302010-01-27T16:01:56.112+05:30I always feel shame about reading only four of his...I always feel shame about reading only four of his works(I'm busy(what a lame excuse) and there are so many other good books to read- I am reading Cormac McCarthy's "Crossing"). Nevertheless, these books and its characters are remembered well in my head. I remember watching puppet show version of "Oliver Twist" on TV when I was young. Although it was not-so-faithful version, many colorful characters were remained intact and they returned to me when I read the novel later.Seongyong Chohttp://kaist455.egloos.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-52804010825550856882010-01-27T10:22:59.782+05:302010-01-27T10:22:59.782+05:30Pasted from Ebert's blog.Pasted from Ebert's blog.S M Rananoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8453503290491393866.post-91043791781392610362010-01-26T23:23:05.869+05:302010-01-26T23:23:05.869+05:30Beautiful. I'd read it just recently, wonderin...Beautiful. I'd read it just recently, wondering where...Ronak M Sonihttps://ronakmsoni.wordpress.com/noreply@blogger.com