Today: "October 10" by Wendell Berry

[image: The Writer's Almanac]
<http://writersalmanac.org?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+10%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+10%2c+2016&elqTrackId=a3f6c2195bd7427291813991de3d7c82&elq=09121595b8924cb0a46435a7bfea8e3a&elqaid=24505&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21434>
[image:
American Public Media]
<http://americanpublicmedia.publicradio.org?utm_campaign=TWA+Newsletter+for+October+10%2c+2016&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Eloqua&utm_content=The+Writer%27s+Almanac+for+October+10%2c+2016&elqTrackId=2a63f7d4506f4a818875bc31932a3e2b&elq=09121595b8924cb0a46435a7bfea8e3a&elqaid=24505&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=21434>
*Monday, Oct. 10, 2016*





Now constantly there is the sound,
quieter than rain,
of the leaves falling.

Under their loosening bright
gold, the sycamore limbs
bleach whiter.

Now the only flowers
are beeweed and aster, spray
of their white and lavender
over the brown leaves.

The calling of a crow sounds
Loud — landmark — now
that the life of summer falls
silent, and the nights grow.

"October 10" by Wendell Berry from *New Collected Poems*. © Counterpoint,
2012. Reprinted with permission.

------------------------------

------------------------------

*It was on this day in 1938 that Germany, Great Britain, France, and Italy
ceded the region of Czechoslovakia known as Sudetenland*. This was a result
of the Munich Agreement - a pact signed on September 29.

Sudetenland was home to more than 3 million ethnic Germans, and Hitler had
threatened to take the area by force if the region was not given over. The
Czech government initially refused, believing they could gather
reinforcement, but the Allies were hesitant to escalate the situation with
Germany and reached an agreement without Czechoslovakia's consent. The
so-called Munich Agreement was signed by Adolf Hitler, Neville Chamberlain,
Benito Mussolini, and Édouard Daladier.

Though he promised that by signing the agreement he was pledging peace and
that he would not invade Czechoslovakia further, Hitler told his aides,
"Gentlemen, this has been my first international conference and I can
assure you that it will be my last."

Six months later, he violated the agreement and destroyed the Czech state.
He said, "It is my unshakable will that Czechoslovakia be wiped off the
map."

*Charles Darwin published The Formation of Vegetable Mould Through the
Action of Worms on this date in 1881* (books by this author). It was his
last scientific book, and his most successful. In it, he explains that the
very ground we walk upon has passed through the bodies of worms and emerged
as castings. He also estimated that there are more than 53,000 worms at
work in any given acre of land, and reported that they had turned a rocky
field behind his uncle's house into smooth soil over the course of many
years. He was fascinated by the work of the earthworm, which he called an
"unsung creature which, in its untold millions, transformed the land as the
coral polyps did the tropical sea." On the surface, the study of earthworms
seems to have little to do with the work on evolution and natural selection
that made him famous. But this book, too, was about the inexorable
processes of nature that, over long spans of time, can bring about dramatic
changes.

The book started as a paper, which Darwin presented before the Geological
Society of London in 1837. In 1842, Darwin spread a layer of chalk
fragments over a pasture near his house and observed the worms' effect on
it for almost 30 years. He placed a large, flat stone - which he dubbed the
worm stone-in a field and measured the movement of soil as the worms
digested the earth beneath the stone. He also kept worms inside the house,
examining the effects of bright light and sound. He figured out through
trial and error what the worms' favorite food was: carrots. He was fond of
the worms, which were unmoved by art or music - much as Darwin himself
remained unmoved by the arts.

By 1881, Darwin's health was failing, and he remarked to a friend that he
wanted to complete his book on worms before he joined them in the local
cemetery. He pushed his publisher to bring the book to press as soon as
possible. When it was first published, the work of 44 years, *Worms* was a
best-seller, and Darwin received a surprising amount of fan mail. He died
six months after the book was published.

*It's the birthday* of English playwright *Harold Pinter* (1930) (books by
this author), born in London and best known for his provocative plays,
including *The Birthday Party *(1958), about a piano player who receives a
visit from two sinister strangers on what may or may not be his birthday.
Pinter once said his work was about "the weasel under the cocktail cabinet."

Pinter's plays often take place in a single room and employ dramatic
pauses, which became his trademark. He would note the pauses in the text of
the play in three ways: he would note the longest break with "silence"; a
normal break with the word "pause"; and the briefest silence was noted with
just an ellipsis. The pauses came to be known as "Pinteresque" and are
included in the *Oxford English Dictionary. *A sports announcer even used
the term to describe the agonizing moments after a soccer loss. The term
frustrated Pinter, who said, "Those silences have achieved such
significance that they have overwhelmed the bloody plays - which is a
bloody pain in the arse."

Pinter was a boy during World War II and even though his parents sent him
to Cornwall to protect him, he never forgot the intense fear and
desperation of the city during the Blitz. At Hackney Downs School, he acted
in plays, played cricket, broke the school record in sprinting, and
devoured the novels of Virginia Woolf and Dostoevsky. He primed his future
ear for dialogue watching American gangster films and British war movies.
He was called up in 1948, but registered as a conscientious objector, an
imprisonable offense. Instead, he was fined, but over the years, his plays
would become increasingly political.

Pinter spent two years in drama school before dropping out and joining an
Irish theater troupe (1951). He performed under the name David Baron and
mostly played romantic leads and policemen. He was also working as a
doorman, dishwasher, waiter, and writing poems under the name "Harold
Pinta."

When a friend from drama school asked him to write a play, Pinter initially
declined, saying it would take six months. Instead, it only took him four
days. *The Room* premiered in 1957, when he was 27, and Pinter was hooked.
A producer happened to see it and asked if he had anything else. Pinter
wrote *The Birthday Party *and it premiered in 1958, but it was a disaster.
Audiences booed and even theater critic Kenneth Tynan said he "saw no
promise." The play closed after eight performances. Pinter kept writing,
though, and his next play, *The Caretaker* (1960), was a resounding
success. *The Birthday Party* is now considered a classic.

Harold Pinter wrote over 30 plays during his lifetime. He branched out into
directing and screenwriting, but he preferred the spontaneity of live
theater. He said, "Even old Sophocles didn't know what was going to happen
next."

His plays include *The Homecoming *(1965), *Old Times *(1971) *No Man's
Land* (1975), and *Betrayal *(1978)*, *an anxious and brutal play about an
affair, which is loosely based on Pinter's own extramarital affair with a
British television presenter.

On writing, Pinter was noncommittal. He said: "I have often been asked how
my plays come about. I cannot say. Nor can I ever sum up my plays, except
to say that this is what happened. That is what they said. That is what
they did." Whenever he started a new play, he simply called his characters
A, B, and C.

Harold Pinter won the Nobel Prize in drama (2005). He was ill and could not
attend the ceremony. His acceptance speech was delivered via video, and in
it he denounced American foreign policy. He died in 2008.

Pinter once said the character of Petey, the old man in the *The Birthday
Party, *utters the most important line in the play. Petey says, "Stan,
don't let them tell you what to do."

Pinter said, "I've been living that line all my damn life."

*It's the birthday* of the composer *Vernon Duke*, born Vladimir Dukelsky,
in Parafianovo, Belarus (1903). He was a talented classical musician,
educated at an elite conservatory, but his family fled Russia after the
revolution and he wound up playing piano in cafés in Constantinople (now
Istanbul). From there, his family rode steerage class on a ship to America,
went through Ellis Island, and ended up in New York in 1921. There the
teenage Dukelsky met George Gershwin, who was only a few years older, and
the two became good friends. Dukelsky played Gershwin what he described as
"an extremely cerebral piano sonata," and Gershwin, who was also trained in
classical music, suggested this: "There's no money in that kind of stuff,
and no heart in it, either. Try to write some real popular tunes - and
don't be scared about going low-brow. They will open you up." He also
suggested that Dukelsky shorten his name, as he himself had done -
Gershowitz to Gershwin. So Vladimir Dukelsky came up with the name Vernon
Duke, but he didn't use it for a while.

First, he went to Paris. There, he met and impressed the great ballet
impresario Sergei Diaghilev.  Dukelsky wrote later about their first
meeting - that Diaghilev had drawled: "'Ah, a good-looking boy. That in
itself is most unusual. Composers are seldom good-looking; neither
Stravinsky nor Prokofiev ever won any beauty prizes. How old are you?' I
told him I was 20. 'That's encouraging, too. I don't like young men over
25.'" And so Diaghilev commissioned him to write a ballet, and he
wrote *Zephire
et Flore, *with sets by Georges Braque, choreography by Léonide Massine,
and costumes by Coco Chanel. It got a great reception, and Dukelsky was
taken in by the not-quite-as-good-looking Stravinsky and Prokofiev. For a
few years he divided his time between Paris, where he continued to write
classical music, and London, where he wrote show tunes and used the name
Vernon Duke. Then in 1929, he decided to go back to America, and he wrote
some of the biggest hits of the 1930s - "April in Paris" (1932), "Autumn in
New York" (1934), "I Can't Get Started" (1936), and "Taking a Chance on
Love" (1940). And he wrote the music for the Broadway show and film *Cabin
in the Sky *(1940). By that time, he had become an American citizen and
officially changed his name to Vernon Duke.

He said, "Every dogma has its day, but good music lives forever."





------------------------------


------------------------------



------------------------------

-- 
-- 
USE INCREDIMAIL ONLY IN THIS GROUP
NO NUDITY ALLOWED
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"fiftiesoldiesmusicgroup" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to fiftiesoldiesmusicgroup+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to