Membre : benwaugh
CollectionsBooks (6,507), Votre bibliothèque (9,638), Anthologies (273), Reference (250), Music Library (3,077), Decadence (817), Poetry (433), En cours de lecture (4), Favoris (145), Toutes les collections (9,650)
Critiques78 critiques
Mots-clésbooks (6,477), literature (5,126), 20th_century (3,527), musical_recording (3,087), lp (2,825), rock_and_roll (2,013), non-fiction (1,891), english_literature (1,640), 19th_century (1,324), have_read (1,198) — voir tous les mots-clés
NuagesNuage des mots-clés, nuage des auteurs
GroupesArab, North African and Middle Eastern Literature, Book Collectors, Club Read 2009, Hanns Heinz Ewers, Medieval Europe, Rock 'n' Roll, Records and Record Collections, Scyballa, The Chapel of the Abyss
Auteurs préférésGamal Al-Ghitani, Leonid Andreyev, Apuleius, Charles Baudelaire, Samuel Beckett, William Beckford, Max Beerbohm, Thomas Bernhard, Giovanni Boccaccio, Roberto Bolaño, Jorge Luis Borges, Jocelyn Brooke, Norman Oliver Brown, Giordano Bruno, Joseph Conrad, Jules Barbey D'Aurevilly, De Goncourt (Edmond et Jules), Mircea Eliade, Ronald Firbank, Sigmund Freud, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Nikolai Gogol, Witold Gombrowicz, Edward Gorey, Remy de Gourmont, Julien Gracq, Henry Green, Ṣādiq Hidāyat, Heraclitus, Edward Heron-Allen, E. T. A. Hoffmann, Friedrich Hölderlin, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Robert Irwin, Henry James, Ma Jian, James Joyce, Franz Kafka, Yasunari Kawabata, Karl Kerenyi, Heinrich von Kleist, Alexander Lernet-Holenia, Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam, Leopoldo Lugones, Arthur Machen, Stéphane Mallarmé, Walter de la Mare, Javier Marías, Gustav Meyrink, Octave Mirbeau, Adolf Muschg, Robert Musil, Clemente Palma, Walter Pater, Petronius, Marcel Proust, Thomas De Quincey, Rainer Maria Rilke, Frederick Rolfe, Arthur Schnitzler, Marcel Schwob, Hjalmar Söderberg, W. G. Sebald, Matthew Phipps Shiel, Stendhal, Laurence Sterne, Antal Szerb, Alexander Theroux, Georg Trakl, Hermes Trismegistus, Paul Valéry, Émile Verhaeren, Evelyn Waugh, Oscar Wilde, P.G. Wodehouse (Favoris partagés)
Librairie(s) préférée(s)All Books Considered, Bartleby's Books, Bookhouse, Daedalus Bookshop, Heartwood Books, Hole In the Wall Books, Read it Again Sam, Second Story Books, Second Story Books - Rockville, MD
À mon sujet"As knowledge comes, so comes also recollection. Knowledge and recollection are one and the same thing."
- Gustav Meyrink, from The Golem
“Last night dreamed of the boil on my cheek. The perpetually shifting border between ordinary life and the terror that would seem more real.”
- Franz Kafka
"I see so clearly that there are no conclusive signs by means of which one can distinguish clearly between being awake and being asleep, that I am quite astonished by it; and my astonishment is such that it is almost capable of persuading me that I am asleep now."
- Rene Descartes
"It is better to dream one's life than to live it."
- Marcel Proust
"La seule excuse qu'un homme ait d'écrire, c'est de s'écrire lui-même, de dévoiler aux autres la sorte de monde qui se mire en son miroir individuel; sa seule excuse est d'être original.... Il doit se créer sa propre esthétique."
- Remy de Gourmont
"And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind...."
- Romans 12:2
In his classic novel of the occult, La-Bas, Joris Huysmans wrote “Now from lofty Mysticism to base Satanism there is but one step. In the Beyond all things touch.” Jeanne d’Arc is paired with Giles de Rais. Abomination painstakingly decocted yields its transcendental osmazome to make a monstrance of those palates too jaded to lend themselves to utterance of shopworn, vulgar prayers. The distinction between depravity and piety becomes a matter of sensibility. There are sacred precedents. In Virgil we have the story of the calf that was bludgeoned to death so that the divine bees would make a hive of its corpse and leave behind their honey. A similar story exists in the Old Testament's Book of Judges. Scientists claim that these bees were in fact droneflies and the "honey" they produced, an ichorous filth.
There is an innocent under every cornerstone.
Out of the strong came forth the nectar of les fleurs du mal. We feed on the world and the world feeds within us. Consumption is fundamental. The bulbs that swell under the soil to flower the garden call to the cancer dreaming in the marrow of our bones. This is fearful symmetry.
"And they made a compact with me,
and wrote it in my heart, that it might not be forgotten:
'If thou goest down into Egypt,
and bringest the one pearl,
which is in the midst of the sea
around the loud-breathing serpent,
thou shalt put on thy glittering robe...'."
(Acts of Thomas)
I am lustrous fetation stewing in a golden bowl.
I am the perturbing guest. A nowt, a null, I am a sickness unto death, a lesion on the dark back of time. Early on, I am given to understand, I had faith that my flower would bear, some day, the prescribed fruit. Somewhere along the garden path, the angel of idleness waylaid me and informed me that I knew nothing but how to behave, and what generally to expect; I am the story of the faith of my fathers.
Idleness: larder of crime, fruit-basket of perversity... the fanatic idler finds time to ask "what have I received and at what (or whose) cost?" In a crucible of filth, an homunculus grows; a fruiting body for the eucharist of swine.
In Myth and Reality, Mircea Eliade tells us that the dead are those who have lost their memories. To the early Hermetists, as to Proust and Denton Welch, salvation is an act of memory. To remember is to gather and articulate something that has been forgotten, lost, destroyed, to restore to life and consciousness what has been given over to death and forgetfulness. The history of Osiris and Hermaphroditus. It is interesting that memory and salvation are acts of rebellion, au rebours, against nature, time and destiny. Rebellion and knowledge, the good book tells us, are one.
Imagination sings of Memory. Thus Hermes, god of Eloquence and Imagination: "Of all the gods he first honoured Memory with his song, Memory, mother of the Muses; for the son of Maia was in her portion." In Hermes in Paris, Peter Vansittart writes that "a god fuses hindsight with foresight." Lord of transgression, Hermes is a double agent. He plays both sides, trafficking between the lost and the unbegotten, the explicit and the implied. All borders meet in his eccentric person.
Mnemosyne, goddess of Memory, is the muse of poetry. Francois Villon wrote “I know everything, but I do not know myself.” The gnosis is that, with the assumption of the veils of received ideas, the self must be re-membered, which is to say, reborn of a poetic act. Salvation, as in the tragedy of schizophrenia, is being made whole again: remembering. Cosmogony is God recovering his memory. ذكر Do this in memory of me. Remembrance as commandment: Zakhor. In the present, make the past and the future one.
"When you make the two one, and when you make the
inner as the outer and the outer as the inner
and the above as the below, and when you make the
male and the female into a single one, so that the
male will not be male and the female will [not] be
female, ... then you shall enter the Kingdom."
--------- Gospel of Thomas
Herakleitos: "the beginning of a circle is also its end." Jesus: "...Where the beginning is, there shall be the end." Out in East Coker, it is always January.
The boundless present. Hermann Broch called it "the immensity of the here and now." An immensity such as resembles an "infinite sphere, the centre of which is everywhere, the circumference nowhere." (Pascal, after Bruno).
In the name of the now binding the Nothing and the Infinite, and of action's fruit and the back of the deed. Amon.
À propos de ma bibliothèqueA breeding ground for apostasy and silverfish. Miroir d'anthracite. It is, by virtue of what it contains and what it excludes, all reasons therefore unknown to me, my daemon, my secret sharer; as an admirer once described George Brummel: "a palace in a labyrinth."
Reading
Have Read

Site Internethttp://thechapeloftheabyss.blogspot.com/
Vrai nomBen Waugh
LieuUnder the all-overs
Type de compteaccès public, abonnement à vie
Nouvelles des relationsNouvelles des relations
URLs
http://www.librarything.com/profile/benwaugh (profil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/benwaugh (bibliothèque)
Membre depuisSep 6, 2006
En cours de lectureMelmoth the Wanderer par Charles Maturin
The Histories par Herodotus
The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy par Jacob Burckhardt
The Experience of the Night par Marcel Bealu
Laisser un commentaire
Inscrivez-vous ou identifiez-vous pour laisser un commentaire.
Also, please tell me what you think of Rorty's Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity. I just recently purchased it after it was recommended to me by a Philosophy professor when I took his intro class.
I'm reading Toole's Confederacy of Dunces right now. Amusing stuff.
écrit par poetontheone à 8:33 pm (EST) le Mar 6, 2010
écrit par benwaugh à 4:03 pm (EST) le Mar 5, 2010
Brown's Life Against Death is definitely a book that I plan to read in the future. I just finished reading Ozzy's autobiography, it was an alright read. The exciting part is that I met him at the book signing. Quite awesome. Black Sabbath has been my favorite band since I was ten years old.
écrit par poetontheone à 12:41 am (EST) le Feb 26, 2010
http://www.librarything.com/work/1217688
écrit par Makifat à 10:44 am (EST) le Feb 25, 2010
écrit par Makifat à 5:28 pm (EST) le Feb 24, 2010
écrit par EnriqueFreeque à 8:15 pm (EST) le Feb 23, 2010
M notes that whatever else a Prince might do, "never take a man's land or his woman without understanding that the man will always remain your enemy."
In other words, Wilson's theory is that M wrote The Prince as a sword designed for Borgia to thrust into his own after-life to insure his eternal damnation. Brill. Of course, we now take the fictional "history" and bogus heuristic "examples" as if M meant to design a manual of state-craft, and consider him the Father of Modern Political Science. So, your thoughts on Niccolo?
écrit par keylawk à 6:37 am (EST) le Feb 21, 2010
écrit par slickdpdx à 12:26 pm (EST) le Feb 19, 2010
I've been astonished at the wealth of out-of-print material available on IA (see my "online text" collection). Right now, I'm interested in the novel - if I enjoy it well enough, I'll move onto the plays. I took notice of SP in the Dedalus book of German Decadent literature. I'd really love it if his book on psychology/Nietzsche were available in translation.
écrit par Makifat à 10:43 am (EST) le Feb 18, 2010
écrit par Crypto-Willobie à 1:01 pm (EST) le Feb 11, 2010
How do you search for music titles? I only get books from amazon et al. ?
écrit par tros à 9:01 am (EST) le Feb 11, 2010
Just finished reading McCarthy's Child of God. His writing is always so gripping and unique and I love it, really, but his writing for me enver crosses that chasm into the realm of sheer revelation and ecstasy that is given to me by other books. Jsut the littlest osmething is lacking.
Also read Joyce's Dubliners recently and was a bit underwhelmed. Maybe Joyce has been too built up in my mind, or maybe Dubliners is merely preparing for the sheer majesty purportedly within his other works, Ulysses in particular.
What are you're opinions on Bataille's Erotism (Death and Sensuality)? I thought it was great.
Your library is a continuous inspiration for my reading habits. So thanks for that.
écrit par poetontheone à 2:16 am (EST) le Feb 5, 2010
Alex
écrit par AlexAustin à 6:53 pm (EST) le Feb 3, 2010
;-)
Lately picked up "Blackwater" series by Michael McDowell. Pretty creepy. Some
Lovecraft overtones. Gotta love the matriarch who changes into a crocodilian creature.
écrit par tros à 9:34 pm (EST) le Jan 24, 2010
écrit par jfclark à 6:16 pm (EST) le Jan 7, 2010
I hope your Roman Holiday went well, and that no one tried to ignite their underwear on your return trip.
écrit par Makifat à 6:41 pm (EST) le Jan 3, 2010
Man, I got the new year blues!
"Sassy Mama" Big Mama Thorton '75
Bobby Blue Bland, I love his snorting pig sounds! Kind of reminds me of
"House on the Borderland". !!!!
écrit par tros à 1:11 pm (EST) le Jan 3, 2010
José Joaquim de Campos Leão (1829-1883). He is from Vila do Triunfo, in Rio Grande do Sul and started life as a teacher that managed at one time to get himself elected to the city council. He married, had three children and moved to Porto Alegre. At 35 years of age his altered behavior led him to be legally charged with madness. An accusation he fought to the end of his life, being ultimately defeated. His Enciqlopédia (again the strange spelling, the correct form in portuguese would be Enciclopédia), published in 9 volumes in 1877 is his sole work. It contains several drama pieces, all written in his strange spelling, which seem to foreshadow surrealism.
écrit par griscat à 10:17 am (EST) le Jan 3, 2010
écrit par arthurfrayn à 11:56 pm (EST) le Dec 21, 2009
If you're still in country, you might be helpful in identifying this dapper fellow. He has that sort of "punch me twice and make it hard" look that you once spoke of.
écrit par Makifat à 6:18 pm (EST) le Dec 11, 2009
True. I spent a few bucks this morning ordering a volume to plug a gaping hole where Arthur Symons ought to be, based on his "Confessions" as published in the Bachelor's anthology.
écrit par Makifat à 2:12 pm (EST) le Dec 3, 2009
If I remember correctly, you'll be off for Italia soon. Have a wonderful trip!
-Makif
écrit par Makifat à 3:42 pm (EST) le Nov 25, 2009
écrit par slickdpdx à 12:13 am (EST) le Nov 14, 2009
écrit par slickdpdx à 3:35 pm (EST) le Nov 13, 2009
écrit par Crypto-Willobie à 12:50 pm (EST) le Nov 7, 2009
écrit par benwaugh à 3:06 pm (EST) le Oct 27, 2009
écrit par DVanderlinde à 8:55 pm (EST) le Oct 16, 2009
écrit par Makifat à 11:11 am (EST) le Oct 6, 2009
écrit par Makifat à 1:16 am (EST) le Sep 8, 2009
I mean to add a photo of the author or a Cabell-related image, but so far have produced only error codes. Also, there is some sort of textual glitch that Forbids the used of the word ‘style’ in Group Descriptions (I know this sounds too weird to be true, but ‘tis so), and in the last paragraph of the Group Description where you see the words ‘forbidden forbidden’ please substitute ‘style.’
Bookhouse! I had almost forgotten about Bookhouse... I haven't been there in at least 15 years... don't get to Virginia much...but I remember a specific book I bought there, The Amazing Career of Sir Giles Overreach, about the the long theatrical life (a couple centuries) of Philip Massinger's play A New Way to Pay Old Debts.
écrit par Crypto-Willobie à 9:00 pm (EST) le Aug 15, 2009
I was just lamenting with a friend who I encountered in 2nd Story Rockville how between the 80s and the early 2000s there must have been almost a dozen different good used bookstores in Bethesda alone and now they're ALL gone-- moved or outtabiz.
I don't get around to 2ndhand stores as I once did due to a less flexible schedule, living further out in the burbs and my wife's health, so I do a lot more buying from the net and remainder lists.
écrit par Crypto-Willobie à 1:05 pm (EST) le Aug 15, 2009
Did you know Cabell corresponded with Machen? I read one Machen in the 70s but don't remember it very well (or at all). I was just looking him up the other day though, thinking I should do more...
écrit par Crypto-Willobie à 10:55 am (EST) le Aug 15, 2009
Jurgen is always a good place to start though if I had to designate a masterpiece it might be The High Place; and there are several others that could keep those company. If you don't like Jurgen you probably won't like anything else by him. His detractors might point to his overwrought style and his tongue planted so firmly in his cheek it threatens to burst out the other side, and claim excess of nudge-nudge wink-wink. But I think that he is truly clever, and does the droll thing very well, and I enjoy his high-falutin style.
Although come to think of it, with your Virginia interest you might like his earlier relatively fantasy-free novels of Richmond society --- still droll but more conventional.
écrit par Crypto-Willobie à 10:51 am (EST) le Aug 15, 2009
Just finished "Beckett on Film", 4 dvds from netflix. The "definitive"
Beckett, new films of all the plays. Highly recommended if you haven't seen it.
Some controversy from the "purists".
écrit par tros à 11:17 am (EST) le Aug 4, 2009
écrit par EnriqueFreeque à 9:33 pm (EST) le Jul 19, 2009
I had a funny reaction to the film. I kept turning to my wife and asking "Is this for real?" It almost seemed like one of those "Spinal Tap" mockumentaries.
I began hating his voice, with all the cheesy MOR arrangements, but ultimately intrigued. Anyway, if you find yourself in the mood for something different, you ought to dial this up sometime.
*Curious as to what influence he had on The Doors. Definitely some similarities between his vocal style and lyric content with that of Morrison.
écrit par Makifat à 11:05 am (EST) le Jun 29, 2009
écrit par slickdpdx à 3:17 pm (EST) le Jun 18, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMeE1tNJiwA
écrit par Makifat à 3:31 pm (EST) le Jun 11, 2009
"Take a bite of peach..." in that slow Geeorgiaa drawl.
écrit par Makifat à 3:55 pm (EST) le May 28, 2009
écrit par Makifat à 5:18 pm (EST) le May 27, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYke5d-ErOs
écrit par Makifat à 12:19 pm (EST) le May 23, 2009
écrit par ThomasCWilliams à 11:33 pm (EST) le Apr 11, 2009
écrit par ThomasCWilliams à 3:32 pm (EST) le Apr 8, 2009
I noticed that you posted several poems by the American writer Donald Evans elsewhere on this site, and that you noted you possessed a photograph of Evans. Evans is a favorite poet of mine, and I've never known what he looked like!
If it would be at all possible for you to send me this picture, to algabal[AT]inbox.com, I would be forever in debt to you.
Dominic
écrit par algabal à 6:58 am (EST) le Mar 28, 2009
écrit par Makifat à 11:48 am (EST) le Mar 24, 2009