Thursday, May 14, 2020

May  14,   2020




MY  CEMETERY


It’s not a fenced in green – filled
with grey granite gravestones,  
or green Styrofoam discarded 
wreathes and dead flowers.

It’s this mahogany wooden box –
filled with hundreds of memorial cards.

And instead of walking among the stones,
I let my fingers - my mind and my prayers -  
do the walking through the cards and the 
lives of the people I have known and met.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

May  14,  2020



May 14,  2020

Thought for today:

"Everyone, deep down within, 
carries a small cemetery of 
those  he  has  loved." 

Romain  Rolland

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

May  13,   2020




CURVE


Up ahead, the road sign
said, “CURVE AHEAD”.
They usually do, don’t they?

Okay I saw several roads
when I lived in Ohio  that
kept straight forever and ever.

But back east it was always
something – another road –
an old building – a curve.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


May  13, 2020




Thought  for  Today

“Distrust  all  in whom the impulse to punish is powerful.”  



Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche [1844-1900]







Tuesday, May 12, 2020

May  12,  2020




ST.  PANCRAS  LONDON


Today, May 12th, is the feast of Saint Pancras.

Talk to enough people and you find out folks
have places they hope to visit before they die. 
Mine was St. Paul’s Cathedral in London.

Reason: when we were practicing public speaking
there was one exercise that began: “Finding myself
before St. Paul’s, I went in. I mounted to the dome ….”

This was all before I got to St. Pancras in London.
For starters it’s one of the oldest places of worship
In England – going back perhaps the 4th century.




Then I saw the red brick St. Pancras Train Station
and International Hotel. Different folks wanted it torndown – that is till John Betjeman, the poet, screamed.

Then I checked out the history of the church there. It’s
the place of dozens of parishes, churches going up and
churches going down – built and rebuilt - through the ages.

Then I read about the cemetery there – the names
associated with that place: for example the burial
place of Johann Christian Bach – the 18th son of Bach.

It's also the burial place - listen to this - of Ben Franklin's
illegitimate son - as well as the place where Percy Bysshe
Shelley planned his elopement with Mary at his mom's grave.

Then there’s mention of Dickens mentioning it in
The Tale of Two Cities - the Beatles promoting, 

"Hey Jude" and on and on and on and on.




So check it out: put St. Pancras on your list of must see -
especially the train station - and by the way, St. Pancras
- is a by the way - a 14 year old kid killed for his faith.


 © Andy Costello, Reflections 2020






May 12, 2020



Thought  for  Today 


“You  take  delight not in a city's seven or  seventy wonders, but in the answer it gives to a question of  yours.”

Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

Monday, May 11, 2020