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Norman Rosten

IN PRAISE OF THE WORLD WIDE WEB

For Steve Crewe

 

A journalist friend of mine in Jakarta

sends me articles online, which, in turn,

I share on Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter,

making me seem, after Francis Bacon –

who was purported to have read every

book ever written – the most erudite man

in Europe: an article, for example,

explaining that Plato was right when he claimed

the world is made of cubes, or another

about cougars in Yellowstone Park

occasionally dying from the plague.

 

The internet brings to my door swizzle sticks,

and tea-lights, the Selected Poems

of Norman Rosten, and the Complete Writings

of Phyllis Wheatley; provides unfettered

knowledge or illusions, the schooling that suits,

that sticks; takes instant messages of protest

to my MP, and the Prime Minister;

bonds me to an ubiquitous tribe

of iconoclasts; shows me not only

that the Emperor has no clothes but also

there is no Emperor nor ever was.

 

As I write I think of who might read this

published on my website – in sunlight

on their phones, beneath a lamp, rain drubbing

on window panes; at what latitudes

and longitudes, on what continents,

in what tropics and what temperate zones;

actual and virtual friends, and strangers;

a humbling fellowship.

 

 

 

‘MARILYN MONROE READING ULYSSES’: EVE ARNOLD (1955)

David Selzer By David Selzer3 Comments1 min read1.9K views

After the shoot on Long Island’s Cedar Beach

they drove next to a local playground.

While Eve loaded her camera, Marilyn sat

on some play equipment and read a book –

her worn copy of James Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’,

which she kept in her car, and had been reading

for some time, often aloud to get it’s sense.

(She looks to be about nine tenths through

so into Molly Bloom’s unpunctuated

soliloquy of love and longing).

This photograph of a pretty woman

in her late twenties, tanned, wearing short shorts

and a stripy top, reading an egghead’s book

was greeted with incredulity, “Oh yeah!” –

and, more harshly, “The thinking man’s shiksa!“.

 

Among the four hundred and thirty books

auctioned after her death were works by Flaubert,

Freud, Aristotle, Housman, as well as Joyce.

She was on Long Island that day visiting

her friend the poet Norman Rosten,

one of the last people she spoke to

the day before she died. Long before they met

he wrote, ‘Morning meets memory/and kills it’.