Cat Has Had the Time of His Life

thin line

Our Daily Bleed...

--
love is a place
& through this place of
love
move
(with brightness of peace)
all places
yes is a world
& in this world of
yes live
(skillfully curled)
all worlds

— e.e. cummings (1894-1962), "love is a place"
http://www.gvsu.edu/english/cummings/Places.htm



--
JANUARY 4

C. L. R. JAMES
"Black Plato." Trinidadian philosopher & revolutionary.


16th to 19th century London: FROST FAIRS on the Thames, until the ice broke.

US: TRIVIA DAY.

FESTIVAL OF FUFLUNS, Etruscan God of Wine.

Great Dismal Swamp, North Carolina:
OLD CHRISTMAS FRIGHTS.
Old Nick (a great black goat/man) & hobby-horse seek out wayward children in a syncresis of English, Tuscarora & African tradition.





1653 -- Sir Isaac Newton, scientist ("Whatever goes up..."), lives.

Nature & Nature's laws
lay hid in night;
God said, Let Newton be!
& all was light




1758 -- Galib Dede, one of the last great classical poets of Ottoman literature, dies in Constantinople. His masterpiece is the allegorical romance, Hüsn ü Ask of two youths, "Beauty" & "Love."


1785 -- Philologist Jakob Grimm lives, Hanau, near Frankfurt-am-Main. With brother Wilhelm he collects Grimm's Fairy Tales (1812-22).
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jgrimm.htm
http://www.grimmfairytales.com/


1793 -- Swedish dramatic & epic poet, Bengt Lidner, dies in Stockholm.


1821 -- Mother Elizabeth Seton, founder of Sisters of Charity, dies.


Bakunin, anarchiste
1849 -- Germany: During this month the anarchist Michael Bakunin secretly arrives in Leipzig to prepare for an uprising in Bohemia.
http://www.iisg.nl/news/bakunincd.php



1855 -- US: Kalapuyan Ahant-Chuyuk signs treaty ceding lands & moving to Grande Ronde reservation, Oregon.


1856 --
Maurice Mac-Nab, anarchist

Maurice Mac-Nab (1856-1889) lives, in Vierzon.

French poet, singer, interpreter, began at the cabaret "Hydropathes" & then the Chat Noir ("Black Cat"), but died suddenly at age 33.

Author of the famous The Métingue of the Subway, a parody which became a classic of dispute.

Peuple français, la Bastille est détruite,
Et y a z'encor des cachots pour tes fils!...
Souviens-toi des géants de quarante-huite
Qu'étaient plus grands qu' ceuss' d'au jour d'aujourd'hui
Car c'est toujours l' pauvre ouverrier qui trinque,
Mêm' qu'on le fourre au violon pour un rien,
C'était tout d' même un bien chouette métingue,
Que le métingu' du métropolitain!

Demonstrators

Hyspa & Erik Satie each gained their first chances to perform at the Chat Noir. Hyspa filled in for the ailing Maurice Mac-Nab, a consumptive postal clerk who was one of the cabaret's best-loved satirists. Salis recognized the comic potential of Mac-Nab's repertory being presented in Hyspa's heavy southern accent, & he added to the joke by introducing him as 'le bon belge.

'

Satie, according to his first biographer Pierre-Daniel Templier, was hired as 'second pianist'...

     MAC-NAB. Chansons du Chat Noir. Nouvelles chansons du Chat Noir. Paris, Au Ménestrel, (1885), Un Vol. In-4°, 114 pp + 126 pp. Ill. de H.Gerbault. Couverture de Ferdinand Bac. Musique dans le texte de Camille Baron pour le premier volume et de Roland Kohr pour le second. Rel. demi chagrin vert clair, dos lisse à faux nerfs.couv. ill. cons.

    Toutes les rengaines du Chat Noir avec de savoureux dessins. Rare.

     MAC-NAB. Poèmes incongrus suite aux poèmes mobiles contenant ses nouveaux monologues et derniéres chansons. Paris, Léon vanier, 1891, Un Vol. In-12°, 72 pp. Cartonnage, dos toile. couv.cons.

     MAC-NAB. Poèmes Mobiles. Monologues de Mac-Nab avec illustrations de l'auteur et une préface de Coquelin Cadet. Paris, Albert Messein, 1927, Un Vol. In-12°, 140 pp. Br.

    Réimpression de l'édition de 1890.



1865 --
Strange Event: England: Unknown airship, with lights, seen over Dover & over the Bristol Channel [London Times, London Standard]
http://www.passarola.com/strange/decfort.html
http://www.sacred-texts.com/fort/damned/damn03.htm


1875 -- Anni Swan lives. Finnish writer/translator, who wrote mainly for children. Her fairy tales were influenced by world literature & folk tales, combining the realistic with fantasy. In many, differences between social classes create conflict.
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/anniswan.htm


1878 -- Poet & short story writer A. E. Coppard lives, Folkestone, Kent.


Freiheit, masthead
1879 -- anarchiste diamond dingbatEngland: German language magazine "Freiheit" (Freedom) begin publishing, in London, today (some sources indicate the 3rd). Founded by Johann Most for illegal distribution in Germany, it evolves with him to anarchism. Hans Magnus Enzensberger über Most



1883 -- One-time American lefty Max Eastman lives, Canandaigua, New York. Best known as the editor of the original "Masses" magazine.


Armand Guerra
1886 -- Armand Guerra (born José Estivalis Calvo) lives (1886-1939), Valence, Spain. Writer & Spanish anarchist scenario writer, filmmaker, member of the young C.N.T. Fought fascism with a camera.

As a 20-year old anarchist in France Guerra helps found a film co-operative where he did several films (two have recently been found: "The Old Docker" & "The Commune" [1914; 13 min.]) Guerra was both a producer & actor in his films & used old Communards & anarchists in his films.

His life is recalled in the film, Armand Guerra: Requiem for an Anarchistic Scenario Writer by Ezéquiel Fernandez & produced by Zangra productions (available in video).

See the Anarchist Encyclopedia,
http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/GuerraArmand.htm



1891 -- Trinidadian philosopher C. L. R. James lives. Author of The Black Jacobins (1938), Breaking a Boundary (1963), & volumes of essays involving class & race antagonism, West Indian self-determination, cricket, Marxism, & aesthetics.

... candidates for the Universal Republic are bound together by the fact that they work together on a whaling-ship. They are a world federation of modern industrial workers.

They owe allegiance to no nationality. There are Americans among them, but it is the officers who are American. Among the crew nobody is anything. They owe no allegiance to anybody or anything except the work they have to do & the relations with one another on which that work depends. & we may add that they are not to be confused with any labour movement or what is today known as the solidarity of labour.

       — C.L.R. James, Mariners, Renegades & Castaways
http://www.postcolonialweb.org/poldiscourse/james/james3.html
http://www.monthlyreview.org/1000buhl.htm



Anarchissten & Syndikalisten
1891 -- Switzerland: The Congress of Capolago, founding of the Revolutionary Anarchist Socialist Party (PSAR), January 4-6th. Amilcare Cipriani, Malatesta, Francesco Saverio Merlino, Ettore Molinari, Luigi Galleani, & Pietro Gori are the chief backers & propagandists of this party.

Further details/ context, click here[Details / context]





1898 -- First installment of William Dean Howell's Life & Letters appears in "Harper's Weekly."
http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/howells/index.html


1904 -- US: Supreme Court rules Puerto Rican citizens cannot be refused admission to the US.


1908 -- US: During this month Emma Goldman lectures in German, English, & Yiddish on "Trade Unionism," "The Woman in the Future," & "The Child & its Enemies," among other topics, in cities throughout New York State. Large crowd turns out to hear Emma in Baltimore. Emma Goldman, anarchist feminist

But in a melodrama, the cops prevent Goldman from delivering her lecture on "The Revolutionary Spirit in Modern Drama" in Washington, D.C. Also lectures in Pittsburgh.

Claimed they didn't like her act?





1909 -- Ireland: A union lives. Some of the most active members, grouped around Jim Larkin, broke away & founded the Irish Transport Workers Union.

Ireland, red & black

The union, the ITGWU, began in humble surroundings. Its first office was a bare room in a tenement in Townsend Street, Dublin. Its assets were "a couple of chairs, a table, two empty bottles & a candle."

Many of the founding members came from the infant socialist movement. Among their influences was syndicalism. This was the idea that all workers, regardless of trade, should be in 'one big union' & use whatever methods were necessary to win their battles with the bosses.

A man who played a significant role in the union was James Connolly. At the time the ITGWU was set up he was in America where, along with fellow-Irishman Patrick Quinlan, he formed a branch of the syndicalist Industrial Workers of the World in Newark, New Jersey. Shortly after he became secretary of the IWW Building & Constructional Workers Industrial Union there. When Jim Larkin went to America in 1914 to raise funds for the impoverished ITGWU he also joined the IWW. (The IWW saw itself as a revolutionary union, a fair proportion of its founders & prominent activists were anarchists).



Moon
1912 -- Smallest earth-moon distance during this century, 356,375 km center-to-center.
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA00434


1914 -- Physician/author S. Weir Mitchell dies, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Most of his work reflects his medical & war experience; Wear & Tear (1871), Roland Blake (1886), The Red City (1908).



1914 -- Emma Goldman, anarchist feministUS: Asleep at the Wheel? Philadelphia police expel audience & lock the hall where Emma Goldman is scheduled to lecture on "The Awakening of Labor"; the event moves to another location where the lecture proceeds without interruption.


1917 -- France: Leo Voline lives, in Paris, third child of anarchist poet/historian & Russian refugee, Voline (Vsevolod Eichenbaum).

Leo shares with his father the libertarian ideal. At age 20 (in 1937) Leo went to Spain to fight in one of the military columns of the C.N.T. [Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo]. In February 1938, his unit was encircled & decimated by the fascists.




1932 -- India: Gandhi arrested for restarting satyagraha campaign.
http://www.gandhiinstitute.org/


1933 -- US: Angered by increasing farm foreclosures, members of Iowa's Farmers Holiday Association threaten to lynch banking representatives & law officials who institute foreclosure proceedings for the duration of the Depression.

In April at Primghar, 600 farmers battle the sheriff & his deputies to prevent a foreclosure. During the battle many farmers take a beating. A group of them then turn up at the courthouse, drag a district judge from his chair, put a rope around his neck, & threaten to hang him unless he promises not to issue any more eviction notices. That same month, when state officers in Crawford County are beaten & driven off, the Iowa governor put three counties under martial law, & the National Guard starts rounding up farmers who are fighting foreclosures.




1935 -- Canada: During this month Emma Goldman is absorbed Emma Goldman, anarchiste feministwriting lectures with the hope that a new lecture series & published articles will provide a meager livelihood, as well as spread anarchist ideas. She considers writing a book of portraits of famous people she has known, an idea first suggested by Frank Heiner. She suggests that the sustaining fund Jeanne Levey is helping to raise might be designated to support its writing.



Jaime Balius, anarchist
1938 -- Spain: During this month the pamphlet Towards a Fresh Revolution is drafted by Jaime Balius & published by the anarchist militant group Friends of Durruti.




Orwell
1939 -- George Orwell signs Breton/Rivera manifesto, "Towards a Free Revolutionary Art."

Orwell, a novelist best known for his book 1984 was a political activist who wrote, for example, Homage to Catalonia, a book of his experiences during the Spanish Revolution, which was very sympathetic to the anarchists.




1945 -- Italy: In Raguse, Sicily, Maria Occhipinti, lies down in front of army trucks which come to find new young conscripts to incorporate into the new Italian army. Within minutes, a crowd surrounds the soldiers, forcing them to release their recruits, but kill a demonstrator & set off a major revolt. Maria Occhipinti, anarchist



1945 -- Netherlands: German soldiers execute resistance fighters in Amsterdam.


1951 -- Bob Black, anarchist critic, lives.

"A Critic is like the house-niggers of yore who looked down on the field hands because, as household servants, they got to dress up & bask in the presence of quality folks. The Critic is Culture's liveried footman. But just beneath the surface (there isn't much room down there) he seethes with impotent envy like a eunuch in a seraglio.... The Critic is nothing in particular...is only an nth-generation photocopy...who in turn might best be characterized as what Jean Baudrillard calls a "simulacrum": a copy without an original."

      — Bob Black

http://www.t0.or.at/bobblack/bobblack.htm



KPFA coffee mug
1952 -- US: 1,600 subscribers reportedly belong to KPFA in Berkeley, California. first aired April 15, 1949, founded by Lewis Hill, poet, pacifist & journalist. Recently the scene of management attempts to destroy the power of the community & its workers in controlling the station & mainstream it. No unlike KRAB-FM in Seattle, where a management coup resulted in selling the its prime airwave postion, 107.7, for 11 million bucks.

Bill Triest was an early KPFA announcer. His brother, Frank, was also conscientious objector & probably the poet/anarchist Kenneth Rexroth's only close friend. Rexroth was a long-time book reviewer for the station.

Al Partridge was a conscientious objector during the Second World War. He later served as KPFA's manager during the height of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement, in 1964 & 1965.



1952 -- The use of the term ‘Ms’ as a courtesy title for a woman where ‘Miss’ or ‘Mrs’ are deemed inappropriate, dates from The Simplified Letter, published by the Philadelphia-based National Office of the Management Association today.


1955 -- US: America agrees to pay Japan two million bucks for damages resulting from atomic tests in Marshall Islands.


1958 -- Sputnik I, the first satellite, burns up on reentry into earth's atmosphere.


Camus
1960 -- France: Albert Camus (The Plague) killed at age 46, in an automobile accident near Sens. French-Algerian author who wrote for many years for the anarchist & left wing press in France.

"You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life."

      — Albert Camus


  • http://www.splut.com/sub/c/camus.html
  • Albert Camus und der Anarchismus
  • Select Bibliography for Albert Camus
  • Colin Ward, Albert Camus & the Algerian Legacy
  • http://recollectionbooks.com/siml/library/anarchQuotes.htm#CamusQuote1



    1960 -- US: United Steel workers end longest strike in US, begun on July 15, 1959.


    Socorro poster
    1960 -- Spain: Spanish guérilla Francisco Sabaté is wounded as his group is trapped in a shoot-out with the Guardia Civil.

    At dawn, in the neighborhood of Banolas (Gerona), a fight occurs between the Guardia Civil & an anarchist commando group which had crossed the frontier six days ago. Four members of the action group die in the gunfire (Rogelio Madrigal, Antonio Miracle, Francisco Conesa & Martin Ruiz), as well as the officer commanding the Civil Guards. The leader of the group, the famous "El Quico" (Sabaté), is badly wounded, & although he manages an inspired escape, he is killed tomorrow in San Celoni, while seeking medical help, by sometén (Catalan militia). His death, flashed on radio & television, causes a sensation in the country, a reminder of the old resistance days & continuing efforts to overthrow the fascists.

    Grave stone, Sabate, anarquista http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/Encyclopedia/SabateFrancisco.htm
    http://www.nodo50.org/age/quicosabate/quicosabate2.htm

    1961 -- Denmark: Shaggy Dog Story?: Longest recorded strike ends — 33 years!! Danish barbers' assistants began their strike in 1938 in Copenhagen.


    1965 -- US: Sam Rayburn House Office Building, costing "more than the pyramids at Giza, the hanging gardens of Babylon, & the Colossus of Rhodes," according to the "NY Times," opens in Washington, D.C.

    The congressional bill authorizing its construction appropriated $2 million plus "such additional sums as may be necessary." "Such additional sums" eventually totaled $88 million, making the Rayburn Building the most expensive public structure in the world.




    Eliot
    1965 -- Right-wing modernist poet T.S. Eliot, expatriate American dies in England, his adopted country.

    How can they write or paint
    In a country where it
    Would be nicer to be
    Fed intravenously?

           — Kenneth Rexroth




    1965 -- US: Free Speech Movement (FSM) holds first legal rally on Sproul Plaza, University of California at Berkeley.


    1971 -- Vietnam: An angry American soldier in Vietnam, George Mellendorf, sends a letter to Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader Dick M Nixon complaining about slow delivery of mail to soldiers;

    "It seems as if nobody cares if we get our mail."

    Nixon may have responded quickly with his letter of denial, but Mellendorf didn't get it until 1978 — seven years after it was sent.


    cstar
    1975 -- Carlo Levi dies. Italian writer, journalist, artist, doctor, whose first documentary novel, Christ Stopped at Eboli, became an international sensation & enhanced the trend toward social realism in postwar Italian literature. Along with Carlo & Nello Rosselli he founded an anti-fascist movement called Giustizia e Libertà.

    CARLO LEVI 1997, 2005 SAINT, 16 MAY
    Italian anti-fascist activist, author, humanitarian.

    http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/clevi.htm
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Levi

    1976 -- Mal Evans, former roadie & bodyguard of the Beatles, is shot to death by police at his Los Angeles apartment.

    His girlfriend, Fran Hughes, found him upset & despondent & when friends couldn't get Evans to release the unloaded rifle he was holding, they called police. At one point, Evans supposedly pointed the gun at police officers; they opened fire. He was 40 years old.




    1976 -- Spain: Major wildcat strike wave starts; at its height over 500,00 workers are involved.



    Four Dead in Ohio, book cover
    1979 -- US: In an out-of-court settlement of $675,000 awarded to the victims of the Kent State University shootings of 1970, & the legal battle over the controversial killings is put to rest.

    On May 4, 1970, National Guard troops, called in to suppress students protesting the Vietnam War, killed four Kent State students & injured nine when they fired over 60 rounds into a crowd of demonstrators.

    One of the killed, Allison Krause, the day before her murder, was reported to have put a flower on a National Guardsman's rifle, saying,

    "Flowers are better than bullets."

    http://members.aol.com/nrbooks/newinfo.htm




    1980 -- US: Citing "an extremely serious threat to peace," Beloved & Respected Comrade Leader President Carter announces a series of punitive measures against the U.S.S.R., most notably an embargo of grain & high technology, in retaliation for the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.


    1983 -- US: Colorado farmers protest foreclosures.



    Vedanta book cover
    1986 -- British gay writer Christopher Isherwood dies. His novels Mr. Norris Changes Trains & Goodbye to Berlin were based on his experience of post-slump, pre-Hitler Berlin. These became the basis, first of the play (1952) & film (1955) I Am a Camera, & then of the musical (1966) & film (1972) Cabaret.
    http://knittingcircle.org.uk/isherwood.html
    http://www.buddybuddy.com/famous.html

    1987 -- Thomas Stevens becomes first man to bicycle around the world. Wet but wiser.


    1987 -- US: Reverend Oral Roberts tells viewers, "God will call me home" if they don't help him raise $4.5 million in three months. "I need some very quick money," says the preacher. "I mean, I need it now."



    1990 -- US: Chuck It All? Chuck Stewart commits suicide by jumping into the Mystic River 10 weeks after he killed his pregnant wife, injured himself, & blamed an imaginary black assailant, in Boston. Inspires "mystical" experiences in the '90s New Age movement.


    Don't Let shell Kill Again
    1997 -- Nigeria: 80,000 rally in Ogoni portions of the populace against military dictatorship & Shell Oil's plans to destroy Ogoni land. The Army opens fire on peaceful demonstration, wounding four.
    Since 1958 Royal Dutch/Shell has extracted $30 billion worth of oil form the Niger River Delta, & in the process wreaked havoc upon the environment.

    Soot from flaring oil wells pollutes the air & oil from leaky pipelines permeates much of the land. Ken Saro-Wiwa & others protested the destruction seeking compensation for the Ogoni people & a cleanup of the mess. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Saro-Wiwa
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Dutch_Shell#Nigeria



    2007 -- anarchist diamond dingbat; new entry, remove 2008France: Henri Portier (b.1941) dies. Anarcho-syndicaliste, pacifiste, antimilitariste, & historien du mouvement Freinet.
    http://recollectionbooks.com/bleed/gallery/galleryindex.htm#HenriPortier



  • 4000 --

    Camus quote

    Albert Camus, quote



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