Reanimated Lavender Granola Switchblade Nun rides again.

Monday, February 24, 2025

Word Garden Word List--Across the River and into the Trees


 Hello my little Venetians, and pardon me for being a little bit early in getting this posted. In the breakneck pandemonium that is (not) my daily life, I got it twisted and thought it was Sunday when it was only Saturday. Oopsy. No matter! Our source this week is a novel that I just finished yesterday, Across the River and into the Trees  by Ernest Hemingway. Those who know me know that I love Papa, both the author and my own papa, who loved Hemingway and passed that on to me. I love his concise style. 


I have already read up most of his more celebrated works, and so I picked this one to read. Published in 1950 when Hemingway was past his glory days and writing narrators who were basically himself, I was disappointed in this one. Set in Venice, it's about the love affair of a 50-year-old colonel and a 19-year-old young woman. If that weren't cringe enough, he calls her "Daughter" and they spend most of their time with him telling her war stories and her being fascinated. And of course, the colonel drinks any time he is awake and possibly in his sleep as well. He is dying and that lends a bittersweet air to the tale, but that wasn't enough to make it believable or moving, in my view. I will say that, despite his talents having rusted, he is still Hemingway, and his writing, despite uncharacteristic lapses, is still wonderful in places. I don't recommend this book, but it's fine as a source for our List, and I am glad to have read it, even though I didn't enjoy the reading of it that much, if that makes sense. (There is also a beginning and ending section about a duck hunt, in which the narrator uses a hen tied to a string so that she will call and lure the ducks overhead to come in and be shot. All Renata, the love interest in this book, ever does is adore her older lover, and his destruction is entirely self-inflicted, but it does not surprise me that Hemingway at his worst would use this device.)

What we do here is to use at least 3 of the 20 words provided in a new, original poem of our own. Then simply link up, visit others, and visit Venice, it's a wonderful place from all I hear. This prompt stays active through next Saturday.

And now, your List:

ages
ceiling
dreams
drink
ducks
forget
fruit
handsome
ice
lovely
messiness
pine
rough
sleepy
stones
telescope
uniform
Venice
water
wind

11 comments:

  1. Thank you Shay - and for another book to read - Jae

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    1. You're very welcome, Jae, and if you're a Papa aficionado you might enjoy it.

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  2. When I was much younger and living in Paris, I had a copy of Moveable Feast with these words underlined: "'Do not worry. You have always written before and you will write now. All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence that you know.' " Then, as now, it was a north star.

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    1. Yes indeed. In the Ken Burns documentary, Jeff Daniels reads the direct quotes from Hemingway, and now I hear this one in his voice.

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  3. Thanks, Shay. Somehow, the list sent me on a memory frolic at the shore. Sigh.

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  4. Ah, I haven't read any Hemingway in a while. You have inspired me to consider reading some of his works again. Qbit mentioned Moveable Feast. I remember LOVING that one!

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    1. I have it but have not yet read it. It's the last of his most popular ones that I have not read.

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  5. Like Mary, I haven't read him in quite some time. You stirred me to remedy that. Which are your favorites/recommendations, Shay?

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  6. My head has been everywhere but poetry, but I found one. Thank you for the inspiration Shay!

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