“Deep winter, yellow sky last night when I went to bed and yellow sky when I woke up. All the streets and skies and buses and people merge into a gelatinous muddy mess. I am depressed by the inability to walk freely—the sky comes down on me from morning on.” —American literary critic and memoirist Alfred Kazin (1915-1998), A Lifetime Burning in Every Moment: From the Journals of Alfred Kazin (1996)
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Quote of the Day (Alfred Kazin, on a ‘Gelatinous Muddy Mess’ of Deep Winter)
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Quote of the Day (Theodore Roosevelt, Warning About 'Special Interests’ vs. Democracy)
"At many stages in the advance of humanity, this conflict between the men who possess more than they have earned and the men who have earned more than they possess is the central condition of progress. In our day it appears as the struggle of freemen to gain and hold the right of self-government as against the special interests, who twist the methods of free government into machinery for defeating the popular will. At every stage, and under all circumstances, the essence of the struggle is to equalize opportunity, destroy privilege, and give to the life and citizenship of every individual the highest possible value both to himself and to the commonwealth.” —U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919), “The New Nationalism,” speech at Osawatomie, Kansas, August 31, 1910
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Quote of the Day (Samuel Butler, on ‘True Inspiration’)
“Inspiration is never genuine if it is known as inspiration at the time. True inspiration always steals on a person; its importance not being fully recognised for some time. So men of genius always escape their own immediate belongings, and indeed generally their own age.”—English novelist and critic Samuel Butler (1835-1902), Samuel Butler's Note-Books, edited by Geoffrey Keynes and Brian Hill (1952)
Monday, February 23, 2026
Verse of the Day (W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood, on a Long-Kept Secret)
as it always must come in the end,
the delicious story is ripe to tell
to tell to the intimate friend;
over the tea-cups and into the square
the tongues has its desire;
still waters run deep, my dear,
there's never smoke without fire.”— English-born American poet, critic and playwright W. H. Auden (1907-1973) and Anglo-American novelist, playwright, screenwriter, memoirist, and diarist Christopher Isherwood (1904-1986), The Ascent of F6: A Tragedy in Two Acts (1936)
Sunday, February 22, 2026
Photo of the Day: The Calm Before the Snowstorm
Like so many New Jerseyites, I waited patiently for the 12-plus inches of snow from the storm in late January to melt away. In the past week, courtesy of higher temperatures and rain, it finally receded to a more manageable level.
Then came
the news that four weeks to the day of that big storm, another, with maybe even
more snow and higher winds, was going to hit.
I wasn’t
in the best frame of mind, then, when I drove out to Overpeck Park,
not far from where I live in Bergen County, NJ, for the kind of walk I hadn’t been
able to take in weeks. Despite large puddles in spots, many other area
residents felt similarly and circled the large track on the field.
If
anything heartened me as I thought of what was to come within 24 hours (and
even as I type this, I can see the flakes following), it was that earlier this
winter, the days would have been shorter and I wouldn’t have able to take the attached
picture of the glorious late-afternoon sky—and that it might take less time for
traces of this latest brutal storm to disappear.
Spiritual Quote of the Day (Abraham Heschel, on How the Prophet Disdains ‘Conventional Lies’)
"The prophet is a person who suffers from a profound maladjustment to the spirit of society, with its conventional lies, with its concessions to man's weakness. Compromise is an attitude the prophet abhors. This seems to be the implication of his thinking: compromise has corrupted the human species. All elements within his soul are insurgent against indifference to aberration. The prophet’s maladaptation to his environment may be characterized as moral madness (as distinguished from madness in a psychological sense)." — Polish-born American Jewish theologian Rabbi Abraham J. Heschel (1907-1972), The Prophets (1962)
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Quote of the Day (Tom Robbins, on Being ‘Extremely Reverent’)
“I’m extremely reverent; it just depends what I’m looking at. From the outside, my life may look chaotic, but inside I feel like some kind of monk licking an ice cream cone while straddling a runaway horse.” —American novelist Tom Robbins (1932-2025), quoted by Rob Liguori, “ ‘I Don't Let It Snow on My Fiesta,’” The New York Times Sunday Magazine, May 25, 2014
This cropped
image of Tom Robbins, in San Francisco at a reading sponsored by Booksmith, was
taken on Sept. 24, 2005, by 48states (talk).






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