I told you there were more than one hundred pens, so clearly there will be several posts about my pen collection!
One subset is the dry erase pens for the dry erase calendar board that is currently at work. I once had a big idea that I'd plan out my workouts on a changing calendar. Never happened but, these days, I am putting stickers in my regular calendar for every day I go to yoga class.
I think my favorite collection is the Arlington Park Race Course set of pens and pencils. All of these were found in either my orange or black "travel" purses that go diagonally over a shoulder and settle flat against my body. Every time I go to Arlington (or Dairyland before they closed)I use one of these purses. Don't know why. I never win, I always choose horses or dogs based on name and a complete lack of wins in their history.
I love mechanical pencils but I write like a ham-fisted first grader. really, I should have those big fatty pencils and huge pieces of paper for everything I do. I have never been able to use a mechanical pencil without breaking the lead every 4 or 5 words.
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Thursday, January 26, 2012
How Many Pens Does One Woman Need?
I have a favorite fork.
A back up fork.
And lots of other forks that disappointment me every single time I pull them out of the drawer.
I was raised right: when I have company, I let my guest use my favorite fork ... but I secretly want it for myself.
I also have a favorite kind of pen to use.
I hate using other types of pens.
And yet, a couple weeks ago, I cleaned out my office and cleaned out my book bags and cleaned out my purses and I had more than 100 pens.
My sister has a legitimate pen collection.
She collects floaty pens.
In the process of buying her pens when I've been out an about, I have also picked some up for myself.
I don't like using them, they are not good pens.
I have an Alamo pen and a Liberace pen and a roaming buffalo pen.
I also have the sperm meets egg pen from my sister's baby shower.
Archives
"My special problem was with archivists. The University Library, not content with the promise of a splendid haul of manuscripts and rare books, wanted all Cornish’s papers. The National Library in Ottawa, which had been left nothing, put in a courteous but determined request for Cornish’s letters, records, papers, everything that could be found relating to his career as a collector and patron. The two libraries squared off and began, politely but intensely, to fight it out. Cornish had never, I suppose, thought that his old letters and junk might be of any interest to anyone; he kept no records, his method of filing was to throw stuff into cardboard cartons in whatever order came to hand; his notebooks—preserved simply because he never threw anything away—were a muddle of scribbled reminders of appointments, notes of unspecified sums of money, addresses, and occasional words and phrases that had meant something to him at some time ...
There were treasures, too, and nobody knew about them except myself, because I would not permit the librarians to snoop. There were letters from painters who had subsequently become celebrated, but who wrote to Cornish when they were young and poor, letters of friendship and often of touching need. They illustrated their letters with sketches and scribbles that were funny and delightful, and sometimes of beauty. When I explained all of this to Arthur Cornish, he said: “I leave it up to you; Uncle Frank trusted you and that’s quite good enough for me.” Which was complimentary but unhelpful, because the librarians were tough.
The National Library’s case was that Cornish had been a Great Canadian (how he would have laughed, for he had as little vanity as any man I ever knew) and everything about him that could be preserved should be given the archival treatment, catalogued, cross-indexed, and preserved in acid-free containers so that it would never perish. But the University Library saw Cornish as a great benefactor of the University who had shown his esteem for its Library by leaving it a splendid collection of fine books and manuscripts; his memory should repose, so far as possible, in their hands.
Why? I asked. Were not the treasures themselves sufficient without all the rubbish, much of which seemed to me to be good for nothing but the incinerator? No, said the archivists, in controlled voices beneath which I could hear suppressed shrieks of rage and horror at my ignorance and obtuseness. Surely I was not forgetting Research, that giant scholarly industry? Students of art, students of history, students of God knows what else, would want to know everything about Cornish that could be recovered. How did I expect that the official biography of Cornish could be written if all his papers were not in responsible hands, forever?"
There were treasures, too, and nobody knew about them except myself, because I would not permit the librarians to snoop. There were letters from painters who had subsequently become celebrated, but who wrote to Cornish when they were young and poor, letters of friendship and often of touching need. They illustrated their letters with sketches and scribbles that were funny and delightful, and sometimes of beauty. When I explained all of this to Arthur Cornish, he said: “I leave it up to you; Uncle Frank trusted you and that’s quite good enough for me.” Which was complimentary but unhelpful, because the librarians were tough.
The National Library’s case was that Cornish had been a Great Canadian (how he would have laughed, for he had as little vanity as any man I ever knew) and everything about him that could be preserved should be given the archival treatment, catalogued, cross-indexed, and preserved in acid-free containers so that it would never perish. But the University Library saw Cornish as a great benefactor of the University who had shown his esteem for its Library by leaving it a splendid collection of fine books and manuscripts; his memory should repose, so far as possible, in their hands.
Why? I asked. Were not the treasures themselves sufficient without all the rubbish, much of which seemed to me to be good for nothing but the incinerator? No, said the archivists, in controlled voices beneath which I could hear suppressed shrieks of rage and horror at my ignorance and obtuseness. Surely I was not forgetting Research, that giant scholarly industry? Students of art, students of history, students of God knows what else, would want to know everything about Cornish that could be recovered. How did I expect that the official biography of Cornish could be written if all his papers were not in responsible hands, forever?"
Friday, January 6, 2012
Grumio enters the Dining Room
One interesting thing about having a million notebooks is that I stumble across long forgotten things, things I recognize ... a little bit.
I was just packing up my bag to go have a pot of tea and do some writing before a yoga class and I grabbed a green, Stuart Hall, 80-sheet, "Clean Scene" wireless notebook. A notebook that i remember exactly when and where I got it, but that's a different story.
I flipped through to see if there were blank pages to use and came across this, in my writing:
Grumio enters the dining room.
Grumio is carrying the peacock.
Clemens carries the wine.
It was so familiar but I had no idea what it was.
It was disorienting.
Did I write that?
Was I crazy?
Drunk?
Is it something I read and copied out because it was important to me?
Why?
Grumio.
So familiar.
Wait .... no, not Gollum.
Grumio.
Who is Grumio?
And then I remembered.
This was Latin homework.
Cambridge Latin Course, Book 1.
What a relief.
I was just packing up my bag to go have a pot of tea and do some writing before a yoga class and I grabbed a green, Stuart Hall, 80-sheet, "Clean Scene" wireless notebook. A notebook that i remember exactly when and where I got it, but that's a different story.
I flipped through to see if there were blank pages to use and came across this, in my writing:
Grumio enters the dining room.
Grumio is carrying the peacock.
Clemens carries the wine.
It was so familiar but I had no idea what it was.
It was disorienting.
Did I write that?
Was I crazy?
Drunk?
Is it something I read and copied out because it was important to me?
Why?
Grumio.
So familiar.
Wait .... no, not Gollum.
Grumio.
Who is Grumio?
And then I remembered.
This was Latin homework.
Cambridge Latin Course, Book 1.
What a relief.
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