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fpb ([personal profile] fpb) wrote2007-03-13 09:37 am
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Ten remarkable days

Two weeks ago, after a certain amount of palaver and uncertainty, I managed more or less at the last minute to fly down to Rome for my father's sixty-ninth birthday party. Well, for a start the party itself was very pleasant, with a number of charming and interesting people. Then I went to stay to my mother's place for the night, and just coincidentally - I swear! - came home in time to look at the first complete lunar eclypse for nineteen years, which I would probably not have caught in London.

The next day was a Sunday. I went to mass at Noon - only to find the local parish full and several cameramen hanging around. Now to understand this next bit, you have to realize that each of the Cardinals of the Catholic Church is also the titular parish priest of a Roman parish church. This creates a bond between the city and the world Church, and obeys the legal fiction that the bishop of Rome should be elected by the clergy of Rome. Well, I had happened upon the installation of a new Cardinal in our modest and rather ugly (concrete modern) parish - Cardinal Gaudencio Flores of Manila, Philippines (hi, [profile] purple_mirie!). The Cardinal came in with as imposing a procession as the parish could bring in, and the pride of the parish, a small but excellent choir, sang brilliantly. The Cardinal preached the sermon, in English, Italian and Spanish. I was probably the only person there who could follow it all, although I have to admit that if he had started in Tagalog I might have had a few problems. He was charming and gracious, concluding with an invitation to all parishioners to be his guests if they ever happened in Manila. I doubt whether many will take the opportunity, given the distance, but who knows? I might. (Cardinal Flores has two enormous shoes to fill. His predecessor, Cardinal Jaime Sin, was one of the greatest figures of the world Church and a national hero in his own country. God be with him.)

So, two days, two exceptional events. On Monday, having nothing to do, I set out to complete and publish my sixth "A plague on both your houses" essay. My impression that it turned out rather well seems confirmed by the fact that in the next few days it received a snowfall of almost wholly positive comments, including some from people I had never met before, and that I find that at least half a dozen people have friended me out of the blue. Including someone who calls herself [personal profile] theswordmaiden, and who could not possibly have known that swordmaidens are also a fixation of mine! (cf.http://fpb.livejournal.com/107275.html)

So altogether a remarkable few days. I could do with a few more like these.

P.S.: As if that wasn't enough, there is a long-dreamed-of fulfilment about to take place for all Buffy fans in the world - http://frelling-tralk.livejournal.com/552895.html?mode=reply. I know that this is wholly unsuitable for a forty-four-year-old portly intellectual male, but - SQUEEEEEEEEEE!!!

[identity profile] super-pan.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 01:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I am so glad you had such a string of nice days! I myself missed the lunar eclipse, as I was working. If we hadn't been so busy, I could have stepped outside to look, but no dice. So at least you got to see!

The mass also seemed like a very nice experience, and I'm glad your essay brought on some new friends.

All in all it does sound like a really nice ten days!

[identity profile] cette-vie.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 02:35 pm (UTC)(link)
How does one preach a sermon in three different languages? That sounds like it would have lasted a while...

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, if you are Cardinal Flores, you start off in English, turn to Italian after a few sentences (with apologies to the public for your deficiencies in the language, which draw applause) and finish off with a few paragraphs in Spanish. And sermons in general last a while, ten minutes at least - enough to use more than one language. In the olden days, Catholic and Protestant preachers could go on for an hour or two, but we are lazy little sods now.

[identity profile] cette-vie.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 02:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, I've always read little books about how the boring preacher (i.e. in Pride and Prejudice) went on and on about sinners in Hell for hours at a time, and the parishoners would either get glaze-eyed or just fall asleep.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 02:59 pm (UTC)(link)
There are such things as great preachers. You should have heard the omily at my sister's wedding. And by all accounts, Billy Graham is or used to be magnetic. I remember that a few years ago, London's local newspaper - the Evening Standard - drew up a list of London's five best teachers, and it turned out that one of them was a female Rev. from a Pentecostal church just down the road from where I then lived. I never did go to listen to her myself - for one thing I am Catholic, and for another it was a black church - but I had in fact noticed that the chapel was always full at services.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 03:01 pm (UTC)(link)
BTW, if you want a different description of a professional preacher, read Stevenson's Catriona. Well, read it anyway; but in the scene in Inverary there is an excellent and realistic account of a professional sermon from the great days.

[identity profile] patchworkmind.livejournal.com 2007-03-13 04:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay, ten remarkable days!

I'm always a big fan of such days. I hope you have more and soon.

[identity profile] headnoises.livejournal.com 2007-03-14 05:02 pm (UTC)(link)
That's so cool....

Oh, and I'm one of the out-of-the-blues because I want to be sure I'll read more good thinking. It's encouraging.

[identity profile] theswordmaiden.livejournal.com 2007-03-17 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
It's always lovely to meet another person with a fixation on swordmaidens (good drawing!). I might have a lot to talk about on the subject someday if you like.

Also I thought that your icon looks like Athena, but then you could have liked her for many reasons, true.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2007-03-17 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
It is Athena all right. I am a Classical scholar who also has been a cartoonist in the course of a wasted life, and created a whole superhero mythology with her as Queen of Olympus. Here are the links to a couple of prose stories crossing my superheroes over with the Harry Potter universe: http://www.fictionalley.org/authors/fabio_p_barbieri/HPATSA01a.html and http://www.fictionalley.org/authors/fabio_p_barbieri/HGATN01a.html.