Monday, September 30, 2013

Abe Lincoln In Illinois (1938)--Robert Sherwood

I've finally decided to start reading (or in many instances, re-reading) through the books on this ancient list. It is obvious as I get older that the spirit that came up with this list was more attuned with what is likely to bring me a few moments' of pleasant reprieve every day than what I will be able to find in the present times. This will be exceptionally slow going reading, for I will be continuing to read my main list that I have been working on since 1994 and have not attained the halfway point of yet. This Illustrated Encyclopedia list is something I will probably read 10-15 pages of a night before I go to bed, to put myself in a tranquil mood, regardless of the darkness of the story, because I associate it with a time in my life when I was optimistic.

I have always been perplexed about what order to read these books in, but I have finally decided that it is all right to just read them alphabetically, as they are listed, which is the easiest way to approach it. Also most of the really important books I have read once either for my primary reading list or at school. I do plan to read them again as they come up, and look forward in most instances for the excuse to do so, but if I should die before I get back to War and Peace I do have the consolation that I have read it twice already.

The first two selections on the list are short 20th century plays about Abraham Lincoln, which is good for jumping in and feeling one can make some headway through the list right away.

Abe Lincoln in Illinois is the perfect introduction to the worldview embodied in this list, at least for me. It is entertaining and well-written, it is simple and clear, it is optimistic--about America, about democracy, about human freedom, about the potential of the common person to live as a decent and contributing citizen. This optimism is probably rooted in symbols and ideals of men--of Lincoln mainly--rather than actual men, or even actual Lincoln, but it seems genuine to me, in the sense of being motivated by goodwill rather than being platitudes disguising baser instincts. Sherwood appears to have been something of an east coast Brahmin, New York money and connections, all the best schools, Harvard, etc, and he is under no delusions about there being a real hierarchy among men with regard to character, moral sense, mind, power of action and so on, and that the ability of these superior men to rise to their proper station is the most important task that a society faces in organizing itself. It is also suggested, of course, that the United States has known some fortune in this regard.


Sherwood wrote some notes that were appended to the end of the play in which he explained his sources for certain incidents and reasons for taking liberties in some of them or wholly inventing others. He wrote with high praise of Sandburg's once-celebrated biography, though only The Prairie Years (the first volume) had been published at that point. It was noted the The War Years was currently in preparation. I would guess Sherwood was looking forward to it:

"The Prairie Years is an incomparable portrait of Lincoln and of the young, boisterous America in which he grew up."

In another place he refers to a quote about Lincoln about his having a kind of poetry in his nature, and stating that this was why Sandburg was the perfect biographer.    

To give a taste of Sherwood's judgement where personal Greatness was not attained, however, I will quote his summation of the life and character of Lincoln's poor surviving son, Robert, who, to be honest, sounds like he could have been a lot worse. People nowadays would be in awe of his resume:

"Robert justified his name (after his maternal grandfather), by following in the dainty footsteps of the Todds rather than the huge ones of the Lincolns. He was educated at Exeter and Harvard, served as Secretary of War under President Garfield, as Minister to London under President Harrison, became a successful corporation lawyer and president of the Pullman Company--in which capacity his hostility to the interests of labor indicated that he had not paid strict attention to the opinions of his father. He spent the last fifteen years of his life in retirement at his New Hampshire home (sic--I believe Sherwood must be referring here to Hildene, which is actually in Manchester, Vermont, and remains open to the public to this day), playing golf and saying "No" to all who begged him for access to the private papers which had come to him with his father's meager estate. Indeed, he decided to burn these papers and was restrained from doing so only by the timely intervention of Nicholas Murray Butler, who persuaded him at least to place them under seal in the Library of Congress. Robert Lincoln left orders that they shall not be opened until 1976, when a new series of biographies and plays about Abraham Lincoln may be written."

I don't remember reading about anything spectacular being revealed about Lincoln in the 1976 unsealing of these papers. I suppose I ought to look it up.

The Bourgeois Surrender Challenge

Because there is a danger of my never reading anything published after 1960 again other than the occasional topical book that happens to pique my interest I have devised a Challenge in which using keywords culled from the archaic reading I come up with a list of books from internet searches and score them based on their Amazon ratings (This is exactly what Jonathan Franzen--whose assumption as the person in charge of contemporary literature is the sort of thing that is driving people like me into the arms of the past--does not want us to do, but as I am using this system--really a game--to generate at most 15% of my actual reading, and which I will tweak over time if it fails to produce the desired results, I think it is not going to be do damaging).Here are the results for Abe Lincoln in Illinois:



1. Wagner As I Knew Him--Ferdinand Praeger..................................................5.00
2. Team of Rivals--Doris Kearns Goodwin.........................................................4.71
3.Sailing Alone Around the Room--Billy Collins.................................................4.51
4. Children's Stories in American Literature 1660-1860--Henrietta C Wright...4.40
5. Abraham Lincoln & Coles County, Illinois--Charles H Coleman...................4.00
    The Good Doctors--John Dittmer...................................................................4.00
7. The Wrongs of Women: or, Maria--Mary Wollstonecraft...............................3.83
8. Areopagitica--John Milton..............................................................................3.73
9. The Story of Young Abraham Lincoln--Wayne Whipple................................3.50
10. The Rip Torn Handbook--Emily Smith..................................Received no reviews

The Wagner book vote is based on just one review, but based on the current rules of the Challenge it is our winner (and didn't I dodge that Doris Kearns Goodwin bullet?). Do I accept the Challenge? I would if the book were easily and cheaply obtained. However there is not a single library in the state of New Hampshire that owns the book, and the cheapest paper copy available online is $9, which in this instance is too much. So I will pass on this Challenge and move on to the 2nd book in the Encyclopedia series, John Drinkwater's play of Abraham Lincoln. 

This process turned up three Challengers that were musical recordings.Their tallies:

1. Rodrigo Costa Felix--Fados de Amor..........................................................5.00
    Dick Diver--New Start Again.....................................................................5.00
 3. Peter, Paul & Mary--Songs of Consciousness & Concern........................4.72

I haven't had time to explore these possibilities, though again both winners achieved their perfect scores on the strength of a single review.





Monday, August 26, 2013

London

1. Westminster........................................28



2. City......................................................17






3. Golders Green......................................7
    *Unknown*..........................................7
5. Hampstead...………………………….5
    Kensal Green........................................5
7. Marylebone...…………………………4
    Richmond...…………………………...4
9. Bloomsbury..........................................3
    Highgate................................................3
    Holborn.................................................3
    Twickenham..........................................3
13. Chiswick..............................................2
      Deptford...............................................2
     Greenwich.............................................2
     Kensington...………………………….2
     Lambeth................................................2
     Mayfair.................................................2
     Stepney.................................................2
     St James................................................2
     Strand...................................................2
     Walthamstow........................................2
23. Battersea.............................................1
    Bayswater.............................................1
    Belgravia...............................................1
    Bexleyheath..........................................1
    Bromley................................................1


    Camden.................................................1
    Chelsea..................................................1
    East Smithfield......................................1
    Enfield...................................................1
    Euston...................................................1
    Hackney.................................................1
    Hammersmith........................................1
    Harrow Weald......................................1
    Hounslow.............................................1
    Islington................................................1
    Kilburn..................................................1


    Kingston-Upon-Thames........................1
    Leytonstone...........................................1
    Newham................................................1
    Regent's Park.........................................1
    Smithfield..............................................1
    Somers Town.........................................1
    Southwark..............................................1
    Teddington.............................................1
    Waterloo.................................................1
    Wimbledon.............................................1
    Woodford..............................................1

Friday, August 16, 2013

Author List Volume III

Fannie Hurst (1889-1968) Back Street (1930) Born: Hamilton, Ohio. Buried: New Mount Sinai Cemetery & Mausoleum, Affton, Missouri. College: Washington (Missouri)

Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) Balder Dead (1855) Born: Laleham, Surrey, England. Buried: All Saints' Churchyard, Laleham, Surrey, England. College: Balliol (Oxford)

William Morris (1834-1896) Born: Fire Station, opposite site of Elm House, Walthamstow, London, England. Buried: St George's Churchyard, Kelmscott, Oxfordshire, England. William Morris Gallery, Lloyd Park, Forest Road, Walthamstow, London, England. Kelmscott Manor, Kelmscott, Oxfordshire, England. Red House, Red House Lane, Bexleyheath, London, England. Kelmscott House (William Morris Society), 26 Upper Mall, Hammersmith, London, England. College: Exeter (Oxford)

Felix Salten (1869-1945) Bambi (1929) Born: Budapest, Hungary. Buried: Israelitischen Friedhof, Zurich, Switzerland.

Walt Disney (1901-1966) Born: 2156 Tripp Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Buried: Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, Los Angeles, California. Walt Disney Family Museum, 104 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, California.  Walt Disney World, Lake Buena Vista, Florida. Disneyland, 1313 South Disneyland Drive, Anaheim, Orange, California.


Par Lagerkvist (1891-1974) Barabbas (1950) Born: Vaxjo, Sweden. Buried: Lidingo Kyrkogard, Lidingo, Sweden. College: Uppsala

Barabbas: Jerusalem, Israel. Creation Museum, 2800 Bullittsburg Church Road, Petersburg, Kentucky. Painting, Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York.

Jesus Christ (6 B.C.-27) Born: Bethlehem, Israel. Tombsite: Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Jerusalem, Israel. Baptism Site, Al-Maghtas, Jordan.

Pontius Pilate. Born: Bisenti, Abruzzo, Italy (tradition). Grave (tradition): Plan de l'Aiguille, Vienne, Rhone-Alpes, France. Pilate Stone, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel. Scala Santa, Chapel of San Lorenzo, Rome, Italy (the steps Jesus climbed to meet Pilate).

Alan Blair. Translator. I can find no biographical information.

Pierre Caron de Beaumarchais (1732-1799) The Barber of Seville (1775) Born: Rue Saint-Denis, 1ere, Paris, France. Buried: Pere Lachaise Cemetery, 20eme, Paris, France. Hotel Caron de Beaumarchais, 12 Rue Vieille du Temple, 4eme, Paris, France. Seville, Andalusia, Spain.

Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868) Born: 34 Via Rossini, Pesaro, Marches, Italy. Buried: Basilica di Santa Croce, Florence, Italy. Original Tomb (now empty), Pere Lachaise Cemetery, 20eme, Paris, France. College: Conservatorio di Bologna.


Charles Dickens (1812-1870) Pickwick Papers (1837), Oliver Twist (1839), Barnaby Rudge (1841), A Christmas Carol (1843), Martin Chuzzlewit (1844), David Copperfield (1850), Bleak House (1852-3), A Tale of Two Cities (1859), Great Expectations (1861) Born: Charles Dickens Birthplace Museum, 1 Mile End Terrace, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England*****(6-30?-99)***** Buried: Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England*****(9-7-96)***** Charles Dickens Museum, 48 Doughty Street, Holborn, London, England*****(6-24-99)***** Dickens World The Grand Tour, Leviathan Way, Chatham Maritime, Kent, England.

Lord George Gordon (1751-1793) Born: Upper Grosvenor Street, Mayfair, London, England. Buried: St James Chapel Piccadilly (destroyed), public garden, Hampstead Road, Euston (?), London, England. Wedgewood Cameo, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York.


Ellen Glasgow (1873-1945) Barren Ground (1926) Born: Richmond, Virginia. Buried: Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Virginia.

Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) The Warden (1855), Barchester Towers (1857) Born: 6 Keppel Street, Bloomsbury, London, England. Buried: Kensal Green Cemetery, Kensal Green, London, England. Trollope Collection, http://www.broxbourne.gov.uk/leisure_and_culture/museums%2C_galleries%2Cexhibitions/lowewood_museum.aspxLowewood Museum, High Street, Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, England.

Percival Christopher Wren (1875-1941) Beau Geste (1924) Born: Deptford, South London, England. Buried: Holy Trinity Churchyard, Amberley, Gloucestershire, England. College: St Catherine's (Oxford)

Ronald Colman (1891-1958) Born: Richmond, Surrey, England. Buried: Santa Barbara Cemetery, Santa Barbara, California. Niles Essenay Silent Film Museum http://www.nilesfilmmuseum.org/index.htm, 37417 Niles Boulevard, Niles (Fremont), Alameda, California.

George Farquhar (1677-1707) The Beaux' Stratagem (1707) Born: Shipquay Street, Derry, Northern Ireland. Buried: St Martin's-in-the-Field Churchyard, Strand, London, England. College: Trinity (Dublin).

Gerhardt Hauptmann (1862-1946) Before Dawn (1889), The Weavers (1892), The Beaver Coat (1893) Born: Szczawno-Zdroj, Poland. Buried: Near church, Hiddensee, Mecklenberg-Vorpommem, Germany. College: Friedrich Schiller University of Jena. Gerhardt Hauptmann Museum, Gerhardt-Hauptmann Strasse 1, Erkner, Brandenburg, Germany. Museum Agnetendorf (Gerhardt Hauptmann House, Jelenia Gora-Jagniatkov, Poland. Carl und Gerhardt Hauptmann House, 11 Listopada Street #23, Szklarska Poreba, Poland. Gerhart Hauptmann House, Hiddensee, Mecklenberg-Vorpommem, Germany.

Ludwig Lewisohn (1882-1955) Born: Berlin, Germany. Buried: Brookline, Norfolk, Massachusetts. College: College of Charleston.

John Gay (1685-1732) The Beggar's Opera (1728) Born: 35 High Street (plaque on Joy St side), Barnstaple, Devonshire, England. Buried: Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England.

Kurt Weill (1900-1950) Born: Dessau, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Buried: Mount Repose Cemetery, Haverstraw, Rockland, New York. College: Berlin University of the Arts. Kurt Weill Zentrum, Dessau, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.



John Hersey (1914-1993) A Bell For Adano (1944) Born: Tianjin, China. Buried: Martha's Vineyard, Dukes, Massachusetts. College: Yale. Bell Tower, Licata, Sicily, Italy.

George Patton (1885-1945) Born: San Gabriel, Los Angeles, California (on family ranch). Buried: American Cemetery and Memorial, Luxembourg City, Luxembourg. College: Army. General George Patton Museum of Leadership, 4554 Fayette Avenue, Fort Knox, Kentucky. General Patton Memorial Museum, 62-510 Chiriaco Road, Chiriaco Summit, Riverside, California. George Patton Memorial Museum, Pobrezni 10, Plzen, Czech Republic. General Patton Memorial Museum, Ettelbruck, Luxembourg.

Lew Wallace (1827-1905) Ben Hur (1880) Born: Brookville, Indiana. Buried: Oak Hill Cemetery, Crawfordsville, Indiana. General Lew Wallace Study and Museum (www.ben-hur.com/), 200 Wallace Avenue, Crawfordsville, Indiana. Circus Maximus, Rome, Italy.

Chester Alan Arthur (1830-1886) Born: Fairfield, Vermont (http://historicsites.vermont.gov/directory/arthur) Buried: Albany Rural Cemetery, Menands, Albany, New York. College: Union

Alessandro Manzoni (1785-1873) The Betrothed (1827) Born: Via Visconti di Modrone 16, Milan, Lombardy, Italy. Buried: Cimitero Monumentale, Milan, Lombardy, Italy. Casa del Manzoni (http://www.casadelmanzoni.mi.it/) Via Morone 1, Milan, Lombardy, Italy.

A.B. Guthrie, Jr. (1901-1991) The Big Sky (1947) Born: Bedford, Indiana. Buried: Mt Lebanon Cemetery, Glendale, Queens, New York. College: Harvard.

Aristophanes (448-385 B.C.) Lysistrata (411 B.C.), The Frogs (405 B.C.), The Birds (Date unknown?) Born/Buried: Athens, Attica, Greece.

Anna Sewell (1820-1878) Black Beauty (1877) Born: 26 Whitehorse Plain, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England. Buried: Quaker Burial Ground, Lamas, Norfolk, England.

Anna Sewell's birthplace was a museum for many decades, but is now a tea room. This appears to have happened some time within the past six years.

Gertrude Atherton (1857-1948) Black Oxen (1923) Born: Rincon Hill, San Francisco, California (plaque north Lafayette Park, at Octavia & Washington). Buried: Cypress Lawn Memorial Park, Colma, San Mateo, California.

Robert Browning (1812-1889) A Blot in the 'Scutcheon (1843) Born: Southhampton Street, Camberwell, England *****(6-28?-01)***** Buried: Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England. College: University College (London). Armstrong Browning Library (http://www.browninglibrary.org/), 710 Speight Avenue, Waco, Texas.

Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949) The Blue Bird (1907) Born: Ghent, Belgium. Buried: Stele of platform near Palais Maeterlinck, 8 Boulevard Maurice Maeterlinck, Nice, Provence-Alpes-Cote-d'Azur, France. College: U. of Ghent.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Emily Dickinson Birthplace & Grave, Amherst, Massachusetts 7-31-13

Far from sated with sites commemorating literary greatness, we went the very next day down to Amherst to invade the sanctuary of Emily Dickinson, whose birthplace and lifelong home is now a museum. 


In spite of the apparent size of the house, the tour only includes four rooms, one of which is not furnished other than with modern chairs. Nonetheless I enjoyed the tour, as the guide speaks for about ten minutes in each of the rooms, and the information is generally interesting. I find as I get older that I like going on guided tours, provided that the guide is at all capable. It is pleasant to walk leisurely through an old building listening to an intelligent person talk, regardless of the comparative importance of the facts being relayed.


The tour did not go into great detail as far as breaking down the actual poetry of Emily Dickinson, the greatness of which I must confess even at my advanced age I have a hard time truly convincing myself. And this is a real failure, because it is something that is so obvious to serious literary scholars that not to grasp it is to relegate oneself eternally to a lower status of literacy than all genuinely educated people. It is not that I do not like the poems of Emily Dickinson, or that I am not happy that they exist. To this point however I am incapable of seeing that they are great in the way that Donne or Sir Philip Sidney or Herrick seems to me to be really great. At this point I have no choice but to keep plugging away. It is too late for me to try to pursue expertise in any other worthwhile area of human endeavor.


I have noted this elsewhere on the internet, but I really enjoyed being in Amherst for the day. College towns are wonderful places, and it will be a sad day if they disappear because everybody is spending the years from 18-24 acquiring job skills on the computer at their parents' house, and not only because I have five children and am desperately counting on some of them leaving the house once in a while before they are thirty-five. The combination of youthful energies, above average intelligence, and free time in which to indulge in the course of an average day is highly attractive, to me anyway.   


Because we have little children still, we had to go on alternate tours, mother and children 1 & 3 on one, and myself and child 2 on the other. But I liked this, as it enabled us to wander around town a little, which we probably would have neglected to do otherwise. At one of the parks there were a number of hyper-progressive looking student types about, female mainly, unsmiling towards me, and reading and writing out longhand notes on paper just like the old times, when my two year old daughter decided to skip around the fountain singing "I'm a princess, I'm a princess", much to my horror as you can imagine. She did not pick this up from me, I assure you.


Along the walk to the other house on the property, where Emily Dickinson's brother lived. I would have liked to seen that too, but to see that required going on a combined tour that was an hour and forty minutes long, and seeing as we had to go on two separate tours as it was I thought that would be pushing it.


In front of the other house.


The main entrance, with a full view of the front of the house.


The West Cemetery in Amherst, where Emily Dickinson is buried, is a bit shabby, and is occupied by a number of people of the sort who look like they dropped out of college many years back and now hang around the cemetery all day acting weird.


I don't know why I included three different grave pictures, I guess to give a feel for the setting, which, in contrast to most cemeteries I go to, was not very peaceful. It is small and is bordered by a gas station and the business district of Amherst, and all sorts of people are constantly tramping through, and there are the aforementioned people who are camped out there for no apparent reason and watch you tramping dutifully to Emily Dickinson's grave.


I do not know what the significance of the toy chair is, though I suspect it is something obvious, even juvenile. Nonetheless, it eludes me.


One more--and then I have to go to bed.



Robert Penn Warren's Grave, Stratton, Vermont 7-30-13

We made a trip out to this very tiny graveyard, which lies within the Green Mountain National Forest in the vicinity of a settlement that I am not sure even qualifies as a town. The cemetery is down a long gravel road, and no other cars or people passed by in the entire 30-45 minutes that we were there.


We took our lunchboxes and had a picnic. The spot is tranquil and beautiful and well-maintained.


Given that Robert Penn Warren as an author is so strongly identified with the South, it was somewhat of a surprise to find his grave in this well-kept but obscure corner of Vermont. Evidently he summered there for many years.


What thoughts did I have at this memorial? Nothing pertinent. I do not know very much about Robert Penn Warren, other than that he had a successful career, and people trusted and respected his talent and knowledge in literary matters, which has always struck me, absurdly really, as the most desirable state to which a person could attain. I thought about the loneliness of the spot, the now complete passing of Warren's literary generation, which retained some prominence and authority even in my youth. I thought about the universal male desire for money, power, and sex, and thought that in his own milieu Warren seemed, compared to me anyway, to have attained a fair portion of the first two of these--I don't know about the sex. So yes, this is what I thought about, in between my major concerns about my children behaving, not climbing on or tipping over gravestones, and so on.  


This has a Vermont Life magazine feel to it, don't you think. I must confess, I love that magazine. Though the older numbers from the 60s and 70s are a world of their own that can never be recaptured, I like the newer issues too.


I thought this was an unusually beautiful tree. It reminded me of one that used to be in my grandparents' yard. 




Thursday, June 20, 2013

England

1. Middlesex (Greater London)..136


2. Yorkshire..................................23


3. Oxfordshire..............................15
4. Kent...………………………...13
    Surrey.......................................13
6. Norfolk.....................................12


7. Hampshire...………………….10
8. Berkshire...................................9
9. Somersetshire............................8
    Sussex........................................8
11. Devon...……………………...7
      Lancashire...............................7


13. Derbyshire...............................6
      Dorset......................................6
      Warwickshire..........................6
16. Bedfordshire............................5
      Cheshire..................................5
      Cornwall...…………………...5
      Cumbria...................................5
20. Hertfordshire............................4
      Leicestershire...........................4
22. Durham...........................…..…3
      Northamptonshire.....................3
      Nottinghamshire.......................3
      Staffordshire.............................3


      Worcestershire..........................3
27. Buckinghamshire......................2
      Gloucestershire.........................2
      Isle of Wight.............................2
      Lincolnshire..............................2
      Shropshire.................................2
      Suffolk...……………………...2
      Wiltshire...................................2
34. Cambridgeshire........................1
     Channel Islands.........................1
     Essex.........................................1
     Isle of Man................................1
      Northumberland...…………….1

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Author List Volume II

Plautus (254-184 B.C.) Amphitryon (200 B.C.). BP: Sarsina, Umbria, Italy. Buried: Rome, Lazio, Italy

Amphitryon: Tiryns (ruins) nr Nauplion, Peloponnese, Greece

Jean Giraudoux (1882-1944) BP: Musee Jean Giraudoux, 4 Avenue Jean Jaures, Bellac, Limousin, France. Buried: Cimitiere du Passy, 16eme, Paris, France. Les Deux Magots, 6 Place Saint-Germain-des-Pres, 6eme, Paris, France.

The birthplace museum does not appear to have a web page. Les Deux Magots is associated with many more renowned artists and writers than Giraudoux and is well-known to be an expensive tourist trap nowadays. I would not have put it up here except that it turned up numerous times in my researches as particularly associated with Jean Giraudoux, and perhaps I will want to go there at some point, seeing as I will likely be an old and from the social standpoint totally insignificant tourist if I ever do go back to Paris at this point, and people like that are supposed to go to places like this anyway.

Alcmene: Buried: nr Olympieum, Megara, Attica, Greece

Heracles: Heracles of Mantinea (sculpture), Louvre, 1ere, Paris, France. Torre de Hercules, La Coruna, Galicia, Spain. Heracles Gate, Ephesus, Turkey. Caves of Hercules, Tangier, Morocco

S. N. Behrman (1893-1973) Birthplace: 31 Providence Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. Died in New York, New York. College: Harvard

A playwright and New Yorker-type writer, widely admired by fellow writers of this school, from the 1930s-60s. Associated with the famous Lunts, who starred in several of his productions. I had never heard of him before.


Alfred Lunt (1892-1977) Birthplace: Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Buried: Forest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Ten Chimneys, Genessee Depot, Wisconsin. College: Carroll (Wisc.)

Lynn Fontanne (1887-1983) Birthplace: Woodford, London, England. Buried: Forest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Ten Chimneys, Genessee Depot, Wisconsin.

Robert Burton (1576-1640) The Anatomy of Melancholy (1628) Birthplace: in trees behind Motor Industries Association Research Building, Linley, Leicestershire, England. Buried: Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. College: Oxford (Brasenose).

Floyd Dell (1887-1969) Birthplace: Barry, Illinois. Buried: We don't know.

Paul Jordan-Smith (1885-1971) Birthplace: Wytheville, Virginia (?). Buried: Newbern Cemetery, Dublin, Virginia.

Democritus (460-370 B.C.) Birthplace: Abdera, East Macedonia & Thrace, Greece.

Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) Birthplace: Samuel Johnson Birthplace Museum, Breadmarket Street & Market Square, Lichfield, Staffordshire, England (*****7-6-01*****) Buried: Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England. Dr Johnson's House, 17 Gough Square, City, London, England

Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875) Andersen's Fairy Tales (fr. 1835) Birthplace: Bangs Boder 29, Odense, Denmark. Buried: Assistens Kirkegard, Copenhagen, Denmark Hans Christian Andersen Museum 1680 Mission Drive, Solvang, Santa Barbara, California. Hans Christian Andersen Fairy-Tale House, Radhuspldsen 57, Copenhagen, Denmark. Hans Christian Andersen Place, Hans Christian Andersens Boulevard 22, Copenhagen, Denmark.

The website for the birthplace museum no longer appears to be up. I hope it is still open. I believe there are a couple of other small sites in Copenhagen to see as well, but information on the internet is poor, or perhaps it is only available in Danish, though that seems unlikely to me.

The North Pole.

MacKinlay Kantor (1904-1977) Andersonville (1955) Birthplace: Webster City, Iowa. Buried: Graceland Cemetery, Webster City, Iowa.

Andersonville National Historic Site, Andersonville, Georgia

Mikhail Sholakhov (1905-1984) And Quiet Flows the Don (1928) Birthplace: State M.A. Sholokhov Museum Reserve, Veshenskaya, Rostov Oblast, Russia. Buried: Farm, Veshenskaya, Rostov Oblast, Russia. Museum Complex Mikhail Sholokhov, Daryinskoye, Kazakhstan. Don River, Russia.

Joseph Stalin (1878-1953) Birthplace: Joseph Stalin Museum, Gori, Georgia. Buried: Kremlin Wall Necropolis, Moscow, Russia.

I include him here because he was name dropped in one of the outlines and was obviously a significant historical figure of the 20th century. Obviously I am for some reason wary of seeming to honor bad people whose awfulness it will be assumed I can not begin to understand. No one cares about me or my lists or my politics or my historical or literary understanding. Intellectually I am about as alone in the world as one can be. I almost certainly will never go to these sites and maybe would not go to Gori even if I had endless leisure and money to visit every place on these lists. Though maybe I would, because the system calls for it and the purpose of the system is to lead me to certain kinds of experiences irrespective of their moral implications, and the two sites here certainly would be representative of those types of experiences.  

Philip Barry (1896-1949) The Animal Kingdom (1932) Birthplace: Rochester, Ulster, New York. Buried: Most Holy Trinity Catholic Cemetery, East Hampton, Suffolk, New York. College: Yale

George P Baker (1866-1935) Born: Providence, Rhode Island. Buried: Swan Point Cemetery, Providence, Rhode Island. College: Harvard

Margaret Landon (1903-1993) Anna and the King of Siam (1944). Born: Somers, Wisconsin. Buried: Wheaton Cemetery, Wheaton, Illinois. College: Wheaton (IL)

Anna Leonowens (1831-1915) Born: Ahmednagar, India. Buried: Mount Royal Cemetery, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Anna Leonowens Gallery, Nova Scotia College of Art & Design, 1891 Granville Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Rama IV of Thailand (1804-1868) Born: Old Thonburi Palace, Bangkok, Thailand. Buried: Wat Ratchapradit, Bangkok, Thailand. Somdet Phra Narai National Museum, Lopburi, Thailand. Bang Pa-In Royal Palace, Bang Pa-In, Thailand.

Rama V of Thailand (1853-1910) Born: Bangkok, Thailand. Buried: Royal Burial Ground, Wat Benchamabophit, Bangkok, Thailand. Phya Thai Palace, Bangkok, Thailand.

Richard Rodgers (1902-1979) Born: Brandreth Avenue, Hammels Station, Queens, New York. Buried: Ashes scattered at sea. College: Juilliard. Richard Rodgers Theatre, 226 West 46th Street, New York, New York.

Oscar Hammerstein (1895-1960) Born: New York, New York Buried: Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, Westchester, New York. Highland Farm Bed & Breakfast, 70 East Road, Doylestown, Pennsylvania. Highland House, Montego Bay, Jamaica. College: Columbia

Curious that both extant residences are inns now, though the Pennsylvania location begins at $160 a night while the Jamaica house ranges from $6,500 to $8,500 a week (I am assuming the Jamaican rates are in US dollars).



Pauline Lord (1890-1950) Born: Hanford, Kings, California. Buried: Kensico Cemetery, Valhalla, Westchester, New York.

Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910) War and Peace (1865-9), Anna Karenina (1877) Born: Yasnaya Polyana (Museum-Estate of Leo Tolstoy), Tula, Russia. Buried: Yasnaya Polyana, Tula, Russia. Leo Tolstoy State Museum, 11/8 Prechistenka, Moscow, Russia. Leo Tolstoy Museum, 21 Leo Tolstoy Street, Moscow, Russia. Leo Tolstoy Museum, 12 Patnitskaya, Moscow, Russia.

Hervey Allen (1889-1949) Anthony Adverse (1933) Born: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Buried: Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia. College: Pittsburgh

Sophocles (495-406 B.C.) Antigone (c. 440 B.C.), Oedipus Rex (429 B.C.), Electra (411-410 B.C.) Born: Colonus (Athens), Attica, Greece. Buried: Along road to Deceleia, (Athens), Attica, Greece. The Sophoclean, Louvre, 1ere, Paris, France. Bronze Head, British Museum, Bloomsbury, London, England.

Jean Anouilh (1910-1987) Born: Cerisole, Bordeaux, Gironde, France. Buried: Cimitiere de Pully, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Katharine Cornell (1893-1974) Born: Berlin, Germany. Buried: Tisbury Village Cemetery, Tisbury, Dukes, Massachusetts. College: SUNY-Buffalo

Cedric Hardwick (1893-1964) Born: Lye, Worcestershire, England. Buried: Golders Green Crematorium, Golders Green, London, England. College: Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

Creon (683 B.C.?-???) Born: Thebes, Central Greece, Greece

Plutarch (46-120) Born: Chaeronea, Central Greece, Greece. Bust, Museum of Delphi, Delphi, Central Greece, Greece.

Guthrie McClintic (1893-1961) Born: Seattle, Washington. College: Washington (Mo.)

Lepidus (c.89-12 B.C.) Born: Rome, Italy.

Pompey the Great (106-48 B.C.) Buried: Albano Laziale, Lazio, Italy.

Sholem Asch (1880-1957) The Apostle (1943) Born: Kutno, Poland. Buried: Golders Green Jewish Cemetery, Golders Green, London, England. Beit Sholem Asch Museum, 50 Arlozorov Street, Bat Yam, Israel.

St Paul (5-67) Born: Tarsus, Turkey. Buried: Basilica of St Paul Outside the Walls, Rome, Italy.

John O'Hara (1905-1970) Appointment in Samarra (1934) Born: 125 Mahantango St, Pottsville, Pennsylvania. Buried: Princeton Cemetery, Princeton, New Jersey. John O'Hara House, 606 Mahantango Street, Pottsville, Pennsylvania. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Don Marquis (1878-1937) archy and mehitabel (1927) Born: Walnut, Illinois. Buried: Maple Grove Cemetery, Kew Gardens, Queens, New York.

George Herriman (1880-1944) Born: 348 Villere Street, New Orleans, Louisiana. Buried: Monument Valley, Arizona (ashes scattered).



Geroge Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) Arms and the Man (1894), Caesar and Cleopatra (1900), Man and Superman (1903), Pygmalion (1912) Born: 33 Synge Street, Dublin, Ireland *****(9-3?-96)***** Buried: Garden of Shaw's Corner, Ayot St Lawrence, Hertfordshire, England.

When I visited in 1996, the Shaw birthplace was open as a museum, though several places on the internet state that it is not currently open.

Oscar Straus (1870-1954) Born: Vienna, Austria. Buried: Friedhof Bad Ischl, Bad Ischl, Austria.



Jules Verne (1828-1905) 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1870), Around the World in 80 Days (1873) Born: 4 Rue Olivier-de-Clisson, Ile Feydeau, Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Buried: La Madeline Cemetery, Amiens, Picardie, France. Musee Jules Verne de Nantes, 3 Rue de l'Hermitage, Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France. Le Jules Verne Restaurant, Tour Eiffel, 5 Avenue Gustave Eiffel, 7eme,  Paris, France. Maison de Jules Verne, 2 Rue Charles Dubois, Amiens, Picardie, France.

Nellie Bly (1864-1922) Born: Burrell Township, Pennsylvania. Buried: Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York. Nellie Bly's (Ice Cream Parlor), 529 Main Street, Riverton, New Jersey.

Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951) Main Street (1920), Babbitt (1922), Arrowsmith (1925), Dodsworth (1929) Born: Sinclair Lewis Boyhood Home, 812 Sinclair Lewis Avenue, Sauk Centre, Minnesota. Buried: Greenwood Cemetery, Sauk Centre, Minnesota. Sinclair Lewis Interpretive Center and Museum, I-94 & Highway 71, Sauk Centre, Minnesota. Sinclair Lewis Park, Sauk Centre, Minnesota. College: Yale

Gladys Hasty Carroll (1904-1999) As the Earth Turns (1933) Born: Rochester, New Hampshire. Buried: Hasty Family Cemetery, South Berwick, Maine. College: Bates.

Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936) Six Characters in Search of an Author (1921), As You Desire Me (1931) Born: Casa Museo de Luigi Pirandello, Contrada Caos SS 15, Agrigento, Sicily, Italy. Buried: Same as Birthplace, Agrigento, Sicily, Italy. College: Bonn

Greta Garbo (1905-1990) Born: Blekingegatan 32, Stockholm, Sweden. Buried: Skrogskyrkogarden Cemetery, Stockholm, Sweden. Villa Garbo (Hotel) 62 Boulevard d'Alsace. Cannes, Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur, France.



Thomas Lodge (1558-1625) Born: High Street, West Ham, Newham, London, England. College: Trinity (Oxford).

Robin Hood Born: Loxley, Sheffield, Yorkshire, England. Buried: Kirklees Priory, near Mirfield, Yorkshire, England. Nottingham Castle, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England.

There are currently plans for a 13-20 million pound Robin Hood-themed castle/tourist attraction to be built in Sherwood Forest. Stay tuned.

Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909) Atalanta in Calydon (1865) Born: 7 Chester Street, Belgravia, London, England. Buried: Churchyard, St Boniface Church, Bonchurch, Isle of Wight, England. College: Balliol (Oxford)

Atalanta: Calydon (Aetolia), West Greece, Greece. "Atalanta", Jay Gould's Railroad Car, Jefferson, Texas.

Andrew Lang (1844-1912) Born: Viewfield House, Selkirk, Borders, Scotland. Buried: East Cemetery, St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. College: Balliol (Oxford)

Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861) Aurora Leigh (1857) Born: nr intersection of Kelloe-Coxhoe Road & B6291, Kelloe, Durham, England. Buried: Cimitero Accatolico, Florence, Tuscany, Italy. Greenwood Great House, Montego Bay, Jamaica. Armstrong-Browning Library, 710 Speight Avenue, Waco, Texas. Casa Guidi, Piazza San Felice 8, Florence, Tuscany, Italy

Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) The Autobiography of Alice B Toklas (1933) Born: 850 Beech Avenue, Allegheny West, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Buried: Pere Lachaise Cemetery, 20eme, Paris, France. College: Radcliffe

Alice B Toklas (1877-1967) Born: San Francisco, California. Buried: Pere Lachaise Cemetery, 20eme, Paris, France.

Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894) The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table (1858) Born: Cambridge, Massachusetts (just north of Harvard Yard) Buried: Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts. College: Harvard.