This journal is mostly public because most of it contains poetry, quotations, pictures, jokes, videos, and news (medical and otherwise). If you like what you see, you are welcome to drop by, anytime. I update frequently.

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Posts Tagged: 'dorothy+parker'

May. 11th, 2020

med_cat: (Spring tulips)
med_cat: (Spring tulips)

A painting and a poem

med_cat: (Spring tulips)
Marie Egner. Flowery Pergola (1893)

Marie Egner, Flowery Pergola (1893). Austrian.



Threnody

Lilacs blossom just as sweet
Now my heart is shattered.
If I bowled it down the street,
Who's to say it mattered?
If there's one that rode away
What would I be missing?
Lips that taste of tears, they say,
Are the best for kissing.

Eyes that watch the morning star
Seem a little brighter;
Arms held out to darkness are
Usually whiter.
Shall I bar the strolling guest,
Bind my brow with willow,
When, they say, the empty breast
Is the softer pillow?

That a heart falls tinkling down,
Never think it ceases.
Every likely lad in town
Gathers up the pieces.
If there's one gone whistling by
Would I let it grieve me?
Let him wonder if I lie;
Let him half believe me.

Dorothy Parker

Sep. 1st, 2018

med_cat: (cat in dress)
med_cat: (cat in dress)

"The Little Old Lady in Lavender Silk", by Dorothy Parker

med_cat: (cat in dress)
The Little Old Lady in Lavender Silk
by Dorothy Parker


I was seventy-seven, come August,
I shall shortly be losing my bloom;
I've experienced zephyr and raw gust
And (symbolical) flood and simoom.

When you come to this time of abatement,
To this passing from Summer to Fall,
It is manners to issue a statement
As to what you got out of it all.

So I'll say, though reflection unnerves me
And pronouncements I dodge as I can,
That I think (if my memory serves me)
There was nothing more fun than a man!

In my youth, when the crescent was too wan
To embarrass with beams from above,
By the aid of some local Don Juan
I fell into the habit of love.

And I learned how to kiss and be merry- an
Education left better unsung.
My neglect of the waters Pierian
Was a scandal, when Grandma was young.

Though the shabby unbalanced the splendid,
And the bitter outmeasured the sweet,
I should certainly do as I then did,
Were I given the chance to repeat.

For contrition is hollow and wraithful,
And regret is no part of my plan,
And I think (if my memory's faithful)
There was nothing more fun than a man!

Oct. 27th, 2016

med_cat: (woman reading)
med_cat: (woman reading)

"Afternoon", by Dorothy Parker

med_cat: (woman reading)

When I am old, and comforted,
And done with this desire,
With Memory to share my bed
And Peace to share my fire,

I'll comb my hair in scalloped bands
Beneath my laundered cap,
And watch my cool and fragile hands
Lie light upon my lap.

And I will have a sprigged gown
With lace to kiss my throat;
I'll draw my curtain to the town,
And hum a purring note.

And I'll forget the way of tears,
And rock, and stir my tea.
But oh, I wish those blessed years
Were further than they be!

Dec. 7th, 2015

med_cat: (dog and book)
med_cat: (dog and book)

Two dog poems

med_cat: (dog and book)
To Flush, My Dog

by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

LOVING friend, the gift of one,
Who, her own true faith, hath run,
Through thy lower nature ;
Be my benediction said
With my hand upon thy head,
Gentle fellow-creature !

Like a lady's ringlets brown,
Flow thy silken ears adown
Either side demurely,
Of thy silver-suited breast
Shining out from all the rest
Of thy body purely.

Darkly brown thy body is, / Till the sunshine, striking this, / Alchemize its dulness,-- )

And as a counterpoint:

Verse For A Certain Dog

by Dorothy Parker

Such glorious faith as fills your limpid eyes,
Dear little friend of mine, I never knew.
All-innocent are you, and yet all-wise.
(For Heaven's sake, stop worrying that shoe!)
You look about, and all you see is fair;
This mighty globe was made for you alone.
Of all the thunderous ages, you're the heir.
(Get off the pillow with that dirty bone!)

A skeptic world you face with steady gaze:... )

Aug. 22nd, 2013

med_cat: (cat in dress)
med_cat: (cat in dress)

Dorothy Parker's 120th birthday

med_cat: (cat in dress)
Some very interesting facts...

One of my favourite quotes (it's the first line of one of her stories): "Seen from a far end of a dimly lit room, Mrs. Ewing was a pretty woman."

:P

http://mentalfloss.com/article/25538/10-things-you-might-not-know-about-dorothy-parker

Jun. 1st, 2013

med_cat: (cat in dress)
med_cat: (cat in dress)

Roundel

med_cat: (cat in dress)
Roundel

She’s passing fair; but so demure is she,
So quiet is her gown, so smooth her hair,
That few there are who note her and agree
     She’s passing fair.

Yet when was ever beauty held more rare
Than simple heart and maiden modesty?
What fostered charms with virtue could compare?

Alas, no lover ever stops to see;
The best that she is offered is the air.
Yet—if the passing mark is minus D—
She’s passing fair.

(Dorothy Parker)

Nov. 7th, 2012

med_cat: (dog and book)
med_cat: (dog and book)

Verse For a Certain Dog

med_cat: (dog and book)

Verse For a Certain Dog

Such glorious faith as fills your limpid eyes,
Dear little friend of mine, I never knew.
All-innocent are you, and yet all-wise.
(For Heaven's sake, stop worrying that shoe!)
You look about, and all you see is fair;
This mighty globe was made for you alone.
Of all the thunderous ages, you're the heir.
(Get off the pillow with that dirty bone!)

A skeptic world you face with steady gaze;
High in young pride you hold your noble head,
Gayly you meet the rush of roaring days.
(Must you eat puppy biscuit on the bed?)
Lancelike your courage, gleaming swift and strong,
Yours the white rapture of a winged soul,
Yours is a spirit like a Mayday song.
(God help you, if you break the goldfish bowl!)

"Whatever is, is good" - your gracious creed.
You wear your joy of living like a crown.
Love lights your simplest act, your every deed.
(Drop it, I tell you- put that kitten down!)
You are God's kindliest gift of all - a friend.
Your shining loyalty unflecked by doubt,
You ask but leave to follow to the end.
(Couldn't you wait until I took you out?)

Nov. 12th, 2010

med_cat: (Lady silver dress)
med_cat: (Lady silver dress)

"I want to be evil"

med_cat: (Lady silver dress)

P.S. Doesn't this remind you of smth? It does me...this:

"Oh, I would like to ride the seas,
A roaring buccaneer,
A cutlass swinging at my neck,
A dirk behind my ear..." ;)

Sep. 22nd, 2010

med_cat: (Hourglass)
med_cat: (Hourglass)

Ninon De Lenclos, On Her Last Birthday

med_cat: (Hourglass)

Ninon De Lenclos, On Her Last Birthday

So let me have the rouge again,
And comb my hair the curly way.
The poor young men, the dear young men
They'll all be here by noon today.

And I shall wear the blue, I think-
They beg to touch its rippled lace;
Or do they love me best in pink,
So sweetly flattering the face?

And are you sure my eyes are bright,
And is it true my cheek is clear?
Young what's-his-name stayed half the night;
He vows to cut his throat, poor dear!

So bring my scarlet slippers, then,
And fetch the powder-puff to me.
The dear young men, the poor young men-
They think I'm only seventy!

Dorothy Parker

http://www.poemhunter.com/

Feb. 16th, 2010

med_cat: (Reading)
med_cat: (Reading)

Reading...

med_cat: (Reading)
Some snippets from "The Late Mrs. Dorothy Parker" by Leslie Frewin:

"Happiness is rarely the lot of the searching, contemplative mind and clearly Dorothy Rothschild had precisely that kind of mind, the kind that had a passion for books."

 "Let's get out of these wet clothes and into a dry martini."

"It took me fifteen years to discover that I had no talent for writing but I couldn't give it up because by that time I was famous."--Robert Benchley

Dorothy Parker reviewing plays in her role as a drama critic:

Her ever-so-gentle, sardonic underplaying reached out to the late, benighted Oscar Wilde in her review of his An Ideal Husband:
"Beatrice Beckley has the thankless job of playing Lady Chiltern, one of those frightfully virtuous women of Wilde's who can't utter the simplest observations without dragging in such Sabbatical expressions as 'we needs must'...Somehow, no matter how well done an Oscar Wilde play may be, I am always far more absorbed in the audience than in the drama...they have a conscious exquisiteness...a sort of Crolier-than-thou air.  'Look at us,' they seem to say, 'we are the cognoscenti. We have come because we can appreciate this thing--we are not as you, poor bonehead, who are here because you couldn't get tickets to the Winter Garden...' "

Feb. 10th, 2010

med_cat: (Watson bookworm)
med_cat: (Watson bookworm)

Reading...

med_cat: (Watson bookworm)
Reading The late Mrs. Dorothy Parker--The first complete biography of America's wittiest woman by Leslie Frewin.

Publisher's blurb on inside the dust jacket:

At last, the first full-scale biography of Dorothy Parker, known above all for her satiric wit and now perceived as one of the most gifted writers of her time. Poet, critic, playwright--no one epitomized the Jazz Age and its contradictions as she did.  Flippant, fast, funny, a flouter of convention, Dorothy Parker was a romantic and a sentimentalist. In the words of Brendan Gill, she was "one of the wittiest people in the world and  one of the saddest."

Her ripostes became legendary; her pen scathing. When Alexander Woolcott once asked in her presence: "After all, what's so rare as a Woolcott first edition?" Dorothy Parker shot back, "A Woolcott second edition."

In her early twenties, Parker displayed what were to become her great gifts and flamboyant character as a writer for Vanity Fair and Vogue.  After she was fired from Vanity Fair by Conde' Nast for her reviews, her two great friends Robert Sherwood and Robert Benchley quit their jobs in protest, and together with Woolcott, Franklin Pierce Adams, and Harold Ross helped to form the legendary Algonquin Round Table.

But beneath the brittle humor and bravado was a surprisingly fragile individual and serious writer dealing with the pain and sorrow of being a woman.  She displayed a consistently fatal attraction to the wrong men and three times tried to take her own life.  In many ways, her wit was the only weapon of a woman who saw the world utterly without illusion.

Dorothy Parker died in relative obscurity in New York in 1967. Many people thought she had been dead for years.  It was an irony she would have relished.

Nov. 28th, 2009

med_cat: (Hourglass)
med_cat: (Hourglass)

The Maid-Servant at the Inn

med_cat: (Hourglass)
Continuing in honour of the season...
Enjoy,
Cat

The Maid-Servant at the Inn

"It's queer," she said; "I see the light
As plain as I beheld it then,
All silver-like and calm and bright--
We've not had stars like that again!

"And she was such a gentle thing
To birth a baby in the cold.
The barn was dark and frightening--
This new one's better than the old.

"I mind my eyes were full of tears,
For I was young, and quick distressed,
But she was less than me in years
That held a son against her breast.

"I never saw a sweeter child--
The little one, the darling one!--
I mind I told her, when he smiled
You'd know he was his mother's son.

"It's queer that I should see them so--
The time they came to Bethlehem
Was more than thirty years ago;
I've prayed that all is well with them."

(Dorothy Parker)

Nov. 27th, 2009

med_cat: (H&W in COPP)
med_cat: (H&W in COPP)

Chant for Dark Hours

med_cat: (H&W in COPP)

Chant For Dark Hours

Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Book shop.
(Lady, make your mind up, and wait your life away.)


Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Crap game.
(He said he'd come at moonrise, and here's another day!)


Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Bar-room.
(Wait about, and hang about, and that's the way it goes.)


Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Woman.
(Heaven never send me another one of those!)


Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Golf course.
(Read a book, and sew a seam, and slumber if you can.)


Some men, some men
Cannot pass a
Haberdasher's.
(All your life you wait around for some damn man!)

Dorothy Parker

Nov. 26th, 2009

med_cat: (Hourglass)
med_cat: (Hourglass)

Autumn Valentine

med_cat: (Hourglass)

Autumn Valentine

In May my heart was breaking-
Oh, wide the wound, and deep!
And bitter it beat at waking,
And sore it split in sleep.

And when it came November,
I sought my heart, and sighed,
"Poor thing, do you remember?"
"What heart was that?" it cried.

Dorothy Parker
med_cat: (dog and book)
med_cat: (dog and book)

Prayer For A New Mother

med_cat: (dog and book)

Prayer For a New Mother

The things she knew, let her forget again-
The voices in the sky, the fear, the cold,
The gaping shepherds, and the queer old men
Piling their clumsy gifts of foreign gold.

Let her have laughter with her little one;
Teach her the endless, tuneless songs to sing,
Grant her her right to whisper to her son
The foolish names one dare not call a king.

Keep from her dreams the rumble of a crowd,
The smell of rough-cut wood, the trail of red,
The thick and chilly whiteness of the shroud
That wraps the strange new body of the dead.

Ah, let her go, kind Lord, where mothers go
And boast his pretty words and ways, and plan
The proud and happy years that they shall know
Together, when her son is grown a man.

Dorothy Parker

Nov. 19th, 2009

med_cat: (red rose)
med_cat: (red rose)

One Perfect Rose

med_cat: (red rose)
One Perfect Rose

A single flow'r he sent me, when we met,
All tenderly his messenger he chose;
Deep-hearted, pure, with scented dew still wet,
One perfect rose.

I knew the language of the floweret,
"My scented leaves," it said, "his heart enclose."
Love long has taken for its amulet
One perfect rose.

Why is it no one ever sent me yet
One perfect limousine, do you suppose?
Ah no, it's always just my luck to get
One perfect rose.

(Dorothy Parker)

Oct. 14th, 2009

med_cat: (Hourglass)
med_cat: (Hourglass)

Threnody

med_cat: (Hourglass)

Threnody

Dorothy Parker

Lilacs blossom just as sweet
Now my heart is shattered.
If I bowled it down the street,
Who's to say it mattered?
If there's one that rode away
What would I be missing?
Lips that taste of tears, they say,
Are the best for kissing.

Eyes that watch the morning star
Seem a little brighter;
Arms held out to darkness are
Usually whiter.
Shall I bar the strolling guest,
Bind my brow with willow,
When, they say, the empty breast
Is the softer pillow?

That a heart falls tinkling down,
Never think it ceases.
Every likely lad in town
Gathers up the pieces.
If there's one gone whistling by
Would I let it grieve me?
Let him wonder if I lie;
Let him half believe me.

Aug. 27th, 2009

med_cat: (Default)
med_cat: (Default)

Poem of the day, take 3

med_cat: (Default)
I have but this to say: the author did _not_ take her own advice!

Cat

2 short poems here: )

Aug. 11th, 2009

med_cat: (WW prompts Granada icon)
med_cat: (WW prompts Granada icon)

Poem of the day

med_cat: (WW prompts Granada icon)

Song of Perfect Propriety

Oh, I should like to ride the seas,
A roaring buccaneer;
A cutlass banging at my knees,
A dirk behind my ear.
And when my captives' chains would clank
I'd howl with glee and drink,
And then fling out the quivering plank
And watch the beggars sink.

I'd like to straddle gory decks,
And dig in laden sands,
And know the feel of throbbing necks
Between my knotted hands.
Oh, I should like to strut and curse
Among my blackguard crew....
But I am writing little verse,
As little ladies do.

Oh, I should like to dance and laugh
And pose and preen and sway,
And rip the hearts of men in half,
And toss the bits away.
I'd like to view the reeling years
Through unastonished eyes,
And dip my finger-tips in tears,
And give my smiles for sighs.

I'd stroll beyond the ancient bounds,
And tap at fastened gates,
And hear the prettiest of sound-
The clink of shattered fates.
My slaves I'd like to bind with thongs
That cut and burn and chill....
But I am writing little songs,
As little ladies will.

Dorothy Parker

Aug. 5th, 2009

med_cat: (Mouses don't approve)
med_cat: (Mouses don't approve)

Poem of the day

med_cat: (Mouses don't approve)

Braggart

The days will rally, wreathing
Their crazy tarantelle;
And you must go on breathing,
But I'll be safe in hell.

Like January weather,
The years will bite and smart,
And pull your bones together
To wrap your chattering heart.

The pretty stuff you're made of
Will crack and crease and dry.
The thing you are afraid of
Will look from every eye.

You will go faltering after
The bright, imperious line,
And split your throat on laughter,
And burn your eyes with brine.

You will be frail and musty
With peering, furtive head,
Whilst I am young and lusty
Among the roaring dead.

Dorothy Parker