Dear Zazie, So, howzit goin’ Z? Hope all is well. Hot and dry here. We could sure use some rain. Here is today’s Lovers’ Chronicle from Mac Tag to his muse. Follow us on twitter @cowboycoleridge. Oh and hey, another Z featured and quoted below! Do you agree with the other Z? Love first, live incidentally? Are you searchin’? See ya’, Rhett
The Lovers’ Chronicle
Dear Muse,
gotta go southern classic rock;
‘’He sent me searchin’ to find my love’’
written by Ronnie Van Zant and Allen Collins
and recorded by Lynyrd Skynyrd
’’Everyone was or is searching’’
right, for somethin’ or someone
’’Ours has narrowed down
to new places to go and good wine’’
and i will keep on searchin’
for words for you
© copyright 2023.2024 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
the scene; a man confident in who he is and what he has found, sits at a desk and writes in a journal; on the desk there should be a large, heavy highball glass with one large ice cube and half full with mezcal; it is night, the desk is near a window with moonlight slanting in; he is intent on finding the right words for his muse
© copyright 2022.2023 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
glad, almost beyond words,
*this next line delivered sotto voce*
ha, you should be so lucky,
that i am all done with that
i was gettin’ exhausted
as it pertains to
findin’ myself and you,
the one to share
this vision with
it still continues
for good light
and verse
that resonates
© copyright 2021.2023 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
Pale Love, Pale Rider
the one thing i think i do, decent,
is write what i am feelin’
funny how you cannot see
through the self-made confusion
and how the searchin’ brings no end
and how did it all get so contorted
twists that cannot be explained
sooner or later, ya gotta take it straight
© copyright 2020 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
and you will still
go to heaven
because you
have earned it
and i will still
go to hell because
you cannot
buy redemption
everybody wins
……
ah, my old friend
return so soon
cannot say
i am surprised
none have been
truer
“You deserve
to be happy!”
keep tellin’ ya
deserves got
nothin’
to do with it
and your happy
presumes it must
come in twos
but it can
come in ones
and for some
it is the only
best way
© copyright 2019 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved
“I ain’t askin’ nobody for nuthin’
If I cain’t git it on my own
If you don’t like the way i’m livin’
You just leave this long haired country boy alone”
you really should
divorce yourself of need
it will be your undoin’
but, i will admit
still the highest purpose
the reason for bein’
if you find it
take care of it
and hold on
till your knuckles turn white
if not
well, there you have it
move on to the next best
reason for bein’
the search
for mirrors of your pain

Bookcase

writing desk
© copyright 2018 mac tag/cowboy coleridge all rights reserved

a dream, a haunt,
a memory
been so long
been so long
funny how you cannot see
through the self-made confusion
and how the searchin’ brings no end
you should have gotten the word
and how did it all get so contorted
twists that cannot be explained
sooner or later, you gotta take it straight
the one thing i think i do, decent,
is write what i am feelin’
but often words fail
when it comes to missin’ you
it is a particular brew of perdition
that some must taste
again and again
© copyright 2017 mac tag/cowboy Coleridge all rights reserved
“What do you want?”
Your thoughts,
Your verse
You show me yours
I will show you mine
I do not want your body
(Well I would if I had
The strength, but I do not)
I want your thoughts,
Your words, your mind
© copyright 2016 mac tag/cowboy Coleridge all rights reserved
Love First, Live Incidentally
Zelda was right
Which makes love
The highest purpose
The reason for bein’
If you have love
Life will take care of itself
No worries man
Be happy
If love finds you
Grab a hold
Till your knuckles turn white
And do not let go
If love does not find you
Take a chance
Reach for it
And do not give up
And if you reach and fail
Well, that happens
And it hurts
But you tried
So love first, live incidentally
Love well, live by the by
Love true, live carefree
Love first and live
© Cowboy Coleridge mac tag copyright 2012 all rights reserved
| Alexandre Dumas | |
|---|---|
Today is the birthday of Alexandre Dumas (born Dumas Davy de la Pailleterie; Villers-Cotterêts, Aisne, France; 24 July 1802 – 5 December 1870 Puys (near Dieppe), Seine-Maritime, France), also known as Alexandre Dumas, père; writer. One of the most widely read French authors, his works have been translated into nearly 100 languages. Many of his historical novels of high adventure were originally published as serials, including The Count of Monte Cristo, The Three Musketeers, Twenty Years After, and The Vicomte de Bragelonne: Ten Years Later. His novels have been adapted since the early twentieth century for nearly 200 films. Dumas’ last novel, The Knight of Sainte-Hermine, unfinished at his death, was completed by a scholar and published in 2005, becoming a bestseller. It was published in English in 2008 as The Last Cavalier.
On 1 February 1840, Dumas married actress Ida Ferrier (born Marguerite-Joséphine Ferrand) (1811–1859). He had numerous liaisons with other women, in the tradition of Frenchmen of higher social class. He was known to have several illegitimate children, including a boy named after him. This son became a successful novelist and playwright and was known as Alexandre Dumas fils (son), while the elder Dumas became conventionally known in French as Alexandre Dumas père (father). Among his affairs, in 1866 Dumas had one with Adah Isaacs Menken, an American actress then less than half his age and at the height of her career.
Les Mohicans de Paris (The Mohicans of Paris) (1854 novel)
- Cherchez la femme, pardieu! cherchez la femme!»
- Dumas, Alexandre (1871) (in French). Les Mohicans de Paris. I. Paris: Michel Lévy frères, éditeurs. p. 232. Retrieved on 2009-08-07.
Les Mohicans de Paris (The Mohicans of Paris) (1864 play)
- Il y a une femme dans toutes les affaires; aussitôt qu’on me fait un rapport, je dis: «Cherchez la femme!»
- There is a woman in every case; as soon as they bring me a report, I say, ‘Look for the woman’.
- Dumas, Alexandre (1889) (in French). Théâtre complet. XXIV. Paris: Michel Lévy frères, éditeurs. p. 103
- There is a woman in every case; as soon as they bring me a report, I say, ‘Look for the woman’.
Today is the birthday of Raimundo de Madrazo y Garreta (Rome 24 July 1841 – 15 September 1920 Versailles); painter from the Madrazo family of artists who worked in the Realistic style, although his later work shows signs of Rococo and Japanese influence. He was known primarily for his genre paintings and portraits. His grandfather was José de Madrazo, his father was the portrait painter Federico de Madrazo and his brother was Ricardo de Madrazo.

He was a frequent exhibitor at the Paris Salon, won a major medal at the Exposition Universelle (1889) and was a regular at the salon of Madeleine Lemaire. The model for nearly all of the female figures in his genre paintings was Aline Masson, the daughter of the doorman at the Paris residence of the Marqués de Casa Riera [es].
After 1862, he lived in Paris for much of his life. In the late 1860s, he spent some time in Rome with his brother, working in the studios of Mariano Fortuny, who had married their sister Cecilia. During the Franco-Prussian War, he lived in Granada. His wife died during childbirth in 1874, the same year as his brother-in-law, Fortuny.
In 1894, he donated a collection of works by Francisco de Goya that he had acquired in 1869 to the Museo del Prado. In 1914, he moved to Versailles, where he died six years later. His son, Federico de Madrazo y Ochoa (known as “Coco”) also became a notable painter.
Gallery

After the Bath, c. 1895


Antics of the model, c. 1885

chocolate caliente

Confidences (The Morning Visit), c. 1870. Clark Art Institute

Portrait Of A Lady In Pink Ribbons

- Reading, c. 1880-85

Aline with mask

Spring Beauty

Fond Memories


Portrait of Aline Masson in a Mantilla, c. 1875

Aline Masson con tocado de gasa, ca. 1880

- A gypsy, 1872

María Hahn, wife of the painter, 1901

Preparing for the Costume Ball

Beautiful and singing

The Beautiful Bandurria Player, 1870

- The Reluctant Mistress

Portrait of María Guerrero as Doña Inés. 1891

Girl on swing

Portrait of Aline Masson Leaning on a Sofa

Salida del baile de máscaras, Raimundo Madrazo, ca 1885, óleo sobre cartón, 49 × 80.5 cm, Museo Carmen Thyssen, Málaga
Today is the birthday of Alphonse Mucha (Alfons Maria Mucha; Ivančice, Margraviate of Moravia, Austrian Empire 24 July 1860 – 14 July 1939 Prague); Art Nouveau painter and decorative artist, perhaps best known for his distinct style. He produced many paintings, illustrations, advertisements, postcards, and designs.
in about 1906
Mucha married Maruška (Marie/Maria) Chytilová on 10 June 1906, in Prague. The couple visited the U.S. from 1906 to 1910, during which time their daughter, Jaroslava, was born in New York City.
Gallery


Sarah Bernhardt as Medea (1898)

Bernhardt in La Dame aux Camélias (1896)

Poster for an evening of theater honoring Bernhardt (1896)

Zodiac calendar for La Plume(1897)

Cover design for the magazine La Plume (1898)

The Moon, 1902


Painting of Josephine Crane Bradley as Slavia (1908)

Poster of Bernhardt as Gismonda (1895)

Moët & Chandon Crémant Impérial (1899)



Poster for JOB cigarette papers (1898)

Bernhardt in La Tosca (1898)

Railroad poster advertising travel to Monaco and Monte-Carlo (1897)

A scene from the decoration of pavilion of Bosnia-Herzegovina at the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, now in the Museum of the Petit Palais, Paris (1900)

Image from the Bosnia Pavilion murals, now in Petit Palais (1900)

F. Champenois Imprimeur-Éditeur, lithograph, 1897

Summer 1896

The Seasons − Spring(1897)

The Arts − Painting (1898)

The Arts − Dance (1898)

Flowers − the Rose(1898)

Flowers − the Lily(1898)

Woman in the Wilderness, depicting a Russian peasant dying during a famine (detail; 1923)

fate
| Zelda Fitzgerald | |
|---|---|
Today is the birthday of Zelda Fitzgerald (née Sayre; Montgomery, Alabama; July 24, 1900 – March 10, 1948 Asheville, North Carolina); socialite and novelist, and the wife and muse of American author F. Scott Fitzgerald, whose work she strongly influenced.
The Fitzgeralds were icons of the 1920s; she was dubbed by her husband “the first American Flapper”. After the success of his first novel, This Side of Paradise (1920), the Fitzgeralds became celebrities and were seen as embodiments of the Jazz Age and the Roaring Twenties: young, seemingly wealthy, beautiful, and energetic. They were the center of attention at parties, where their drunken exploits became the stuff of legend. The couple has been the subject of popular books, movies and scholarly attention. Their love ended not well. The marriage was plagued by wild drinking, infidelity and bitter recriminations. After being diagnosed with schizophrenia, she was increasingly confined to specialist clinics, and the couple were living apart when Scott died suddenly in 1940. Zelda died later in a fire at her hospital in Asheville, North Carolina.
But I think she was right; love first, live incidentally……
Today is the birthday of Wilhelm Gallhof (24 July 1878 in Iserlohn, Märkischer Kreis district, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany – June 1918
Iserlohn); painter and sculptor. At the beginning of the 20th century he was one of the most important German painters of female nudes in the Impressionist and Jugendstil movements.
Gallery

The coral necklace

In Front of the Mirror (Vor dem Spiegel) (1910)

Temptation of the Knight (Die Versuchung des Ritters), 1910

nude

Today is the birthday of John D. MacDonald (John Dann MacDonald; Sharon, Pennsylvania; July 24, 1916 – December 28, 1986 Milwaukee, Wisconsin); writer of novels and short stories. MacDonald was a prolific author of crime and suspense novels, many of them set in his adopted home of Florida. His best-known works include the popular and critically acclaimed Travis McGee series, and his novel The Executioners, which was filmed twice as Cape Fear in 1962 and again in 1991. Travis McGee is one of my literary heroes. Wish I had a Busted Flush moored somewhere.
After graduating from high school, he enrolled at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, but he quit during his sophomore year. MacDonald worked at menial jobs in New York City, then was admitted to Syracuse University, where he met his future wife, Dorothy Prentiss. They married secretly in Pennsylvania in 1937, and had a public ceremony in Utica later that year. He graduated from Syracuse University the next year. The couple had one son, Maynard.
In 1939, MacDonald received an MBA from Harvard University. MacDonald later used his education in business and economics in crafting his fiction. Several of his novels are either set in the business world or involve shady financial or real estate deals.
In 1940, MacDonald accepted a direct commission as a first lieutenant of the United States Army Ordnance Corps. During World War II, he served in the Office of Strategic Services in the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations; this region featured in many of his earlier short stories and novels. He was discharged in September 1945 as a lieutenant colonel. “Dear Dordo: The World War II Letters of Dorothy and John D. MacDonald” was published by Peppertree Press in 2022.
In 1951 he moved his family from Utica, New York to Florida, eventually settling in Sarasota.
In 1964, MacDonald published The Deep Blue Good-by, the first of 21 novels starring Travis McGee, a self-described “salvage consultant” who recovers stolen property for a fee of 50 percent, and who narrates his adventures in the first person. McGee originally was to be called Dallas McGee, but MacDonald dropped that name after the Kennedy assassination, borrowing instead the name of Travis Air Force Base. The McGee adventures, each of which has a color in the title, mostly play out in Florida (where McGee lives a hedonistic bachelor life on a houseboat), the Caribbean, or Mexico, and many of them feature his friend and sidekick Dr. Meyer (“Just ‘Meyer’, please”) Meyer, a renowned economist who helps Travis deconstruct elaborate swindles and cases of business corruption.
McGee lives on a 52-foot houseboat dubbed The Busted Flush. The boat is named after the circumstances in which he won the boat in what McGee describes as a “poker siege” of 30 hours of intensive effort in Palm Beach—the run of luck started with a bluff of four hearts (2-3-7-10) and a club (2), which created a “busted flush,” as described in Chapter 3 of The Deep Blue Good-by. The books are all narrated by McGee, writing in the first-person past-tense. The boat is generally docked at slip F-18 at Bahia Mar Marina, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. A self-described “beach bum” who “takes his retirement in installments,” McGee prefers to take on new cases only when the spare cash (besides a reserve fund) in a hidden safe in the Flush runs low. McGee also owns a custom 1936 vintage Rolls-Royce that had been converted into a pickup truck by some previous owner long before he bought it, and another previous owner painted it “that horrid blue.” McGee named it Miss Agnes, after one of his elementary school teachers whose hair was the same shade.
Travis McGee series
The Deep Blue Good-By (1964)
- I am wary of a lot of things, such as plastic credit cards, payroll deductions, insurance programs, retirement benefits, savings accounts, Green Stamps, time clocks, newspapers, mortgages, sermons, miracle fabrics, deodorants, check lists, time payments, political parties, lending libraries, television, actresses, junior chambers of commerce, pageants, progress, and manifest destiny. I am wary of the whole dreary deadening structured mess we have built into such a glittering top-heavy structure that there is nothing left to see but the glitter, and the brute routines of maintaining it.
- These are the playmate years, and they are demonstrably fraudulent. The scene is reputed to be acrawl with adorably amoral bunnies to whom sex is a pleasant social favor. The new culture. And they are indeed present and available, in exhausting quantity, but there is a curious tastelessness about them. A woman who does not guard and treasure herself cannot be of much value to anyone else. They become a pretty little convenience, like a guest towel. And the cute little things they say, and their dainty little squeals of pleasure and release are as contrived as the embroidered initials on the guest towels. Only a woman of pride, complexity and emotional tension is genuinely worthy of the act of love, and there are only two ways to get yourself one of them. Either you lie, and stain the relationship with your own sense of guile, or you accept the involvement, the emotional responsibility, the permanence she must by nature crave. I love you can be said only two ways.
- They have been taught that if you are sunny, cheery, sincere, group-adjusted, popular, the world is yours, including barbecue pits, charge plates, diaper service, percale sheets, friends for dinner, washer-dryer combinations, color slides of the kiddies on the home projector, and eternal whimsical romance — with crinkly smiles and Rock Hudson dialogue. So they all come smiling and confident and unskilled into a technician’s world, and in a few years they learn that it is all going to be grinding and brutal and hateful and precarious. These are the slums of the heart.
A Purple Place For Dying (1964)
- …it is like what we have done to chickens. Forced growth under optimum conditions, so that in eight weeks they are ready for the mechanical picker. The most forlorn and comical statements are the ones made by the grateful young who say Now I can be ready in two years and nine months to go out in and earn a living rather than wasting 4 years in college. Education is something that should be apart from the necessities of earning a living, not a tool therefore. It needs contemplation, fallow periods, the measured and guided study of the history of man’s reiteration of the most agonizing question of all: Why? Today the good ones, the ones who want to ask why, find no one around with any interest in answering the question, so they drop out, because theirs is the type of mind which becomes monstrously bored at the trade-school concept. A devoted technician is seldom an educated man. He can be a useful man, a contented man, a busy man. But he has no more sense of the mystery and wonder and paradox of existence than does one of those chickens fattening itself for the mechanical plucking, freezing and packaging.
Nightmare In Pink (1964)
- …it isn’t foolish or wicked to enjoy. Wickedness is hurting people on purpose. I love what you are and who you are and how you are. You give me great joy. And you make horrible coffee.
- By feeling insecure about our making love, Nina, you make the inference that we are a pair of cheap people involved in some cheap pleasant friction. Pull on the pants and walk away, adding up the score. I think we’re interested in each other, involved with each other, curious about each other. This was a part of exploring and learning. When it’s good you learn something about yourself too. If the spirit is involved, if there is tenderness and respect and awareness of need, that’s all the morality I care about.
A Deadly Shade of Gold (1965)
- The only thing in the world worth a damn is the strange, touching, pathetic, awesome nobility of the individual human spirit.
- I know just enough about myself to know I cannot settle for one of those simplifications which indignant people seize upon to make understandable a world too complex for their comprehension. Astrology, health food, flag waving, bible thumping, Zen, nudism, nihilism — all of these are grotesque simplifications which small dreary people adopt in the hope of thereby finding The Answer, because the very concept that maybe there is no answer, never has been, never will be, terrifies them.
- I think there is some kind of divine order in the universe. Every leaf on every tree in the world is unique. As far as we can see, there are other galaxies, all slowly spinning, numerous as the leaves in the forest. In an infinite number of planets, there has to be an infinite number with life forms on them. Maybe this planet is one of the discarded mistakes. Maybe it’s one of the victories. We’ll never know.
The Girl in the Plain Brown Wrapper (1965)
- It’s no good telling somebody they’re trying too hard. It’s very much like ordering a child to go stand in a corner for a half hour and never once think about elephants.
- I am not suited to the role of going around selling the life-can-be-beautiful idea. It can be, indeed. But you don’t buy the concept from your friendly door-to-door lecture salesman.
Dress Her in Indigo (1969)
- Any man who outgrows the myths of childhood is ninety-nine percent aware and convinced of his own mortality. But then comes the chilly breath on the nape of the neck, a stirring of the air by the wings of the bleak angel. When a man becomes one hundred percent certain of his inevitable death, he gets The Look.
- And that, of course, is the tragic flaw in the narcotics laws — that possession of marijuana is a felony. Regardless of whether it is as harmless as some believe, or as evil and vicious as others believe, savage and uncompromising law is bad law, and the good and humane judge will jump at any technicality that will keep him from imposing a penalty so barbaric and so cruel. The self-righteous pillars of church and society demand that “the drug traffic be stamped out” and think that making possession a felony will do the trick. Their ignorance of the roots of the drug traffic is as extensive as their ignorance of the law.
The Long Lavender Look (1970)
- The only thing that prisons demonstrably cure is heterosexuality.
A Tan and Sandy Silence (1972)
- Up with life. Stamp out all small and large indignities. Leave everyone alone to make it without pressure. Down with hurting. Lower the standard of living. Do without plastics. Smash the servo-mechanisms. Stop grabbing. Snuff the breeze and hug the kids. Love all love. Hate all hate.
- We’re all children. We invent the adult facade and don it and try to keep the buttons and the medals polished. We’re all trying to give such a good imitation of being an adult that the real adults in the world won’t catch on. Each of us takes up the shticks that compose the adult image we seek. I’d gone the route of lazy, ironic bravado, of amiable, unaffiliated insouciance. Tinhorn knights of a stumbling Rocinante from Rent-A-Steed, maybe with one little area of the heart so pinched, so parched, I never dared let anything really lasting happen to me. Or dared admit the the flaw…The adult you pretend to be convinces himself that the risk is worth the game, the game worth the risk. Tells himself the choice of life style could get him killed — on the Daytona track, in the bull ring, falling from the raw steel framework forty stories up, catching a rodeo hoof in the side of the head.Adult pretenses are never a perfect fit for the child underneath, and when there is the presentiment of death, like a hard black light making panther eyes glow in the back of the cave, the cry is, “Mommy, mommy, mommy, it’s so dark out there, so dark and so forever.”
The Scarlet Ruse (1973)
- Way over half the murders committed in this country are by close friends or relatives of the deceased. A gun makes a loud and satisfying noise in a moment of passion and requires no agility and very little strength. How many murders wouldn’t happen, if they all had to use hammers and knives?
The Turquoise Lament (1973)
- Integrity is not a conditional word. It doesn’t blow in the wind or change with the weather. It is your inner image of yourself, and if you look in there and see a man who won’t cheat, then you know he never will. Integrity is not a search for the rewards of integrity. Maybe all you ever get for it is the largest kick in the ass the world can provide. It is not supposed to be a productive asset.
The Green Ripper (1979)
- When you see the ugliness behind the tears of another person, it makes you take a closer look at your own.
Ever, Mac Tag
The song of the day is Nazareth – “Love Hurts” – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pHNkOQCIzk
I am wary of a lot of things, such as … time clocks, mortgages, sermons, … pageants, progress, and manifest destiny. – John D MacDonald
I don’t want to live — I want to love first, and live incidentally. – Zelda Fitzgerald
To be a poet is a condition rather than a profession. – Robert Graves
I thought of the perpetual desire of all lovers to talk of their love and how many lovers’ quarrels have come from it. – W.B. Yeats
Quiet – as when long bitterness breaks in tears… – Dag Hammarskjöld

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