Friday, August 1, 2008
Queen's Bloomers Bring In $9000 At Auction
LONDON - Her majesty would not be amused. A pair of Queen Victoria's bloomers, with a 50-inch waist, were snapped up for $9,000 by a Canadian buyer at a central England auction Wednesday.
Auctioneer Charles Hanson said Queen Victoria's underpants belonged to "a very big lady of quite small stature with a very wide girth." She was said to be 5 feet (1.52 meters) tall.
....
The royal drawers belonged to a family in western England whose ancestor was a lady-in-waiting for the queen.
I'd call that a bloomin' windfall for the seller.
The subject line of the email from Phil stated, "Old Queen's crotchless panties bring $9000". I decided against using that for my headline.
From Yahoo News.
Shall I Ban Lapin For This?
From MadPriest...
OCICBW... got attacked by a particularly vicious troll last night. It was so bad I had to close down the comments overnight.
He seems to have got his revenge by reporting me as a spam blog to Blogger and they have blocked my blog. I have asked for reinstatement but it's taking up to a week to sort out at the moment.
Would you please notify people of this on your blog and tell them to put it on their blogs. I don't want them thinking I've done a runner or been disappeared by the Church Police.
Jonathan
UPDATE: To all bloggers: the best way to help is to copy Jonathan's email and post it on your own blog.
UPDATE 2: A good laugh is always in order. Padre Mickey posted the same email, but he added a picture with a caption that is priceless.
He seems to have got his revenge by reporting me as a spam blog to Blogger and they have blocked my blog. I have asked for reinstatement but it's taking up to a week to sort out at the moment.
Would you please notify people of this on your blog and tell them to put it on their blogs. I don't want them thinking I've done a runner or been disappeared by the Church Police.
Jonathan
UPDATE: To all bloggers: the best way to help is to copy Jonathan's email and post it on your own blog.
UPDATE 2: A good laugh is always in order. Padre Mickey posted the same email, but he added a picture with a caption that is priceless.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Let Me Know
More Good News
From TPM Muckraker:
The House Judiciary Committee has won the first round of its lawsuit against the White House over contempt of Congress in House Judiciary Committee v. Harriet Miers et al.
From the order:
"Harriet Miers is not immune from compelled congressional process; she is legally required to testify pursuant to a duly issued congressional subpoena from plaintiff; and Ms. Miers may invoke executive privilege in response to specific questions as appropriate."
and that. . .
"Joshua Bolten and Ms. Miers shall produce all non-privileged documents requested by the applicable subpoenas and shall provide to plaintiff a specific description of any documents withheld from production on the basis of executive privilege consistent with the terms of the Memorandum Opinion issued on this date."
Yes! Thanks be to God for the courts. Let's pray the House Judiciary Committee wins future rounds. The folks who worked for the Cheney/Bush maladministration are not above the law.
The House Judiciary Committee has won the first round of its lawsuit against the White House over contempt of Congress in House Judiciary Committee v. Harriet Miers et al.
From the order:
"Harriet Miers is not immune from compelled congressional process; she is legally required to testify pursuant to a duly issued congressional subpoena from plaintiff; and Ms. Miers may invoke executive privilege in response to specific questions as appropriate."
and that. . .
"Joshua Bolten and Ms. Miers shall produce all non-privileged documents requested by the applicable subpoenas and shall provide to plaintiff a specific description of any documents withheld from production on the basis of executive privilege consistent with the terms of the Memorandum Opinion issued on this date."
Yes! Thanks be to God for the courts. Let's pray the House Judiciary Committee wins future rounds. The folks who worked for the Cheney/Bush maladministration are not above the law.
Feast Day Of Ignatius Of Loyola
MONTAÑÉS, Juan Martínez
St Ignatius Loyola (detail)
c. 1610
Polychromed wood
Chapel, Seville University
Iñigo de Recalde de Loyola, youngest of thirteen (one of my sources says eleven) children of Don Beltran Ya'ñez de Loyola and Maria Sa'enz de Licona y Balda, was born in 1491 in the family castle in the Basque province of Gu'ipozcoa, in northeastern Spain, near the French border. As befitted a boy from an aristocratic family, he spent some time as a page at the court of Ferdinand and Isabella, the rulers of Spain. Here, by his later testimony, he was involved in gambling, wenching, and duelling.
He became a soldier and was wounded in the leg in his first battle. During his convalescence, [h]e asked for tales of knightly adventure, but instead was given a "Life of Christ", written by a Carthusian monk. He read it, and his life was transformed. He went on pilgrimage to Montserrat (near Barcelona), where he hung up his sword over the altar, and then spent about a year at Manresa near Montserrat first working as a nurse and orderly in a hospital there, and then retiring to a cave to live as a hermit and study "The Imitation of Christ", by Thomas a Kempis, a book urging the Christian to take Christ as example, and seek daily to follow in His footsteps. It is probably during this year that he wrote his Spiritual Exercises, a manual of Christian prayer and meditation.
He became a preacher, but was told that in order to preach, he needed an education.
Back in Spain, he spent ten years (1524-1534) getting an education at Barcelona, Alcala', Salamanca, and Paris, beginning by going to elementary school to learn Latin grammar, and ending with a Master of Arts degree from the University of Paris.
He founded the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits, beginning with ten men, including Francis Xavier.
In 1537 the Jesuits (now ten in number) gathered in Venice and (having found that renewed war in Palestine made journeying there impossible) offered their services to Pope Paul III. Ignatius and some of the others were ordained to the priesthood, and they were assigned various tasks. In 1540 they became a formal organization, with the usual monastic vows, plus a fourth vow of personal obedience to the Pope.
Hmmm. The Jesuits seemed a bit free-wheeling, even back in ancient days when I was a student at my Jesuit University. Perhaps, even then, they allowed themselves a bit of leeway in the personal obedience to the pope vow.
I owe the Jesuits a huge debt, because they put me on the way toward ending my racist ways. Racism was all I knew before my university days, because that's what I was taught. The Jesuits taught me differently.
Also, we were required to take a number of theology and philosophy courses, which I did not take too seriously back then, but, in spite of my bad attitude, a little learning rubbed off as I was studying for the tests, even as I forgot the great bulk of the material once the test was over.
I really liked the courses in logic and ontology, so I absorbed and retained more of what was taught in those classes. I do believe that I learned a bit about how to think and reason, and I am appalled by the absence of logical reasoning that abounds today. Geometry was the only math I ever liked, and I think it's because it's based on logic, rather than numbers.
On a personal note, my family was poor when I attended the university, but even as I thought my clothes were few and not really good enough, I was somehow voted one of the ten best-dressed co-eds while I was there. How that happened is still a mystery to me. After that, how could I complain at home that I did not have nice enough clothes? One old philosophy professor, who was a brilliant teacher in his prime, but during my time should have been retired, never called me by my name after that, but called me Miss Best Dressed. As I write this, he reminds me of someone else I know.
A prayer of Ignatius Loyola:
Teach us, good Lord, to serve thee as thou deservest;
to give, and not to count the cost,
to fight, and not to heed the wounds,
to toil, and not to seek for rest,
to labor, and not to ask for any reward,
save that of knowing that we do thy will.
From James Kiefer at the The Lectionary.
PRAYER
O God, by whose grace your servant Ignatius, enkindled with the fire of your love, became a burning and a shining light in your Church: Grant that we also may be aflame with the spirit of love and discipline, and may ever walk before you as children of light; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever.
READINGS
Psalm 34:1-8
1 Corinthians 10:31 - 11:1
Luke 9:57-62
Image from The Web Gallery of Art.
Note: The text is from my post on the feast day from last year.
Good Golly, Miss Molly - Little Richard
Miss Molly is three, going on four. She lives in Kansas City. I found this video on YouTube while I was visiting her house. I was excited, because I danced to the song lo! these many years ago. I showed the video to the other adults of the appropriate age, but they were not entertained. However, when I played it for Miss Molly, she danced away and asked for it again. I believe that some of the lyrics are not age-appropriate for her, but they went over her head, and she and I passed a good time with Little Richard. In truth, I don't know quite what some of the lyrics mean, myself, but I fear that they are not innocent. Enjoy. This is the sort of music that Roman Catholic convent school girls danced to in the fifties in New Orleans. Look at all the white kids in the video.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
"Sad News"
Dear Jonathan,
It is with deep regret that I inform you of the passing of Elizabeth Kaeton's mother, Lydia.
I don't know if you have been told yet. Elizabeth will be flying directly to Massachusetts. Her mom had been ill on and off for the past year. Elizabeth has traveled up to visit her on several near death occasions. We ask all her friends for prayers.*
May Lydia rest in peace and rise in glory. Godspeed, Elizabeth.
For Elizabeth and all those who love Lydia, may the Spirit of the living God enfold them in an abundance of love and grant them comfort, consolation, and the peace that passes understanding to keep their minds and hearts in Christ Jesus.
*Sent to MadPriest.
UPDATE: Elizabeth's extraordinary post and pictures titled "Pictorial Reflection: A little tour through an Olde English Church Yard" is definitely worth having a look at:
One of the most comforting places - the place where I visit at least twice a day - is the Church Yard of St. Stephen's, Hackington.
It is a place of solace, surrounded as it is by 'all the saints who from their labors rest'. Indeed, several of the previous rectors are buried in the church proper, their graves marked with their tombstones over which one must walk to the altar rail to receive Holy Eucharist.
I have read most of the tombstones, many of which reveal much about their lives. In between the names and the dates, one can read some of the lines of the stories of their lives - or, at least, their deaths.
It is with deep regret that I inform you of the passing of Elizabeth Kaeton's mother, Lydia.
I don't know if you have been told yet. Elizabeth will be flying directly to Massachusetts. Her mom had been ill on and off for the past year. Elizabeth has traveled up to visit her on several near death occasions. We ask all her friends for prayers.*
May Lydia rest in peace and rise in glory. Godspeed, Elizabeth.
For Elizabeth and all those who love Lydia, may the Spirit of the living God enfold them in an abundance of love and grant them comfort, consolation, and the peace that passes understanding to keep their minds and hearts in Christ Jesus.
*Sent to MadPriest.
UPDATE: Elizabeth's extraordinary post and pictures titled "Pictorial Reflection: A little tour through an Olde English Church Yard" is definitely worth having a look at:
One of the most comforting places - the place where I visit at least twice a day - is the Church Yard of St. Stephen's, Hackington.
It is a place of solace, surrounded as it is by 'all the saints who from their labors rest'. Indeed, several of the previous rectors are buried in the church proper, their graves marked with their tombstones over which one must walk to the altar rail to receive Holy Eucharist.
I have read most of the tombstones, many of which reveal much about their lives. In between the names and the dates, one can read some of the lines of the stories of their lives - or, at least, their deaths.
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