Sunday, January 29, 2012

The Beatitudes, and power and spirit. Or is it power vs. spirit...

Prayer and Meditation
Jan 22, 2012

The last time I did get up and dance, though, someone came up and danced with me and showed me what a terrible dancer I was.  But anyway, it was just a fun party.  And thank you for setting up my prayer so nicely with that happy interlude.

What a week, with the snow and rain, sleet and wind, and here we are all stir crazy enough to come to church on Sunday morning.  If we had kids at home, we're really glad they're downstairs because they're as tired of us as we are tired of them, and here we are, some of us beating ourselves up because we weren't here to do what we are supposed to do and feeling terrible and useless and all that, not paying attention to what really is important -- and that is being centered and content where one is, because that's all that there is, really, is right where you are. 

So hopefully we're moving more to that place in our old rhythms with a little more kindness for ourselves.  I invite you to join me in the spirit of prayer and meditation.

This life we have is such a strange yet common gift, so fraught with twists and storms, betrayals, mercies, and inspirations, revelations, and hidden treasures buried before us.  There is pain in it sometimes, often loneliness; riddles and enigmas, wounds endured, inflicted in terror we cannot name.  Yes, in glories too, seen, heard, felt, borne beyond all ability of words to express. 

May we become wise enough, merciful at least to measure ourselves not by our fears or failures, however large, but by our faith and our hopes and our loves, however small; that we may truly live this mortal gift and be a source of light for others, so that by grace, all our struggles and all our joys will be daily rehearsals in what it means to be human, to be finite, to be magnificent. 

To these imperfect words we add the silent intention of our hearts.  ~Jon Luopa

(and later)

I spent a good part of this past week worrying whether or not I should share this reading with you this morning, because I was afraid of what you might think -- about me, not about the reading.  They are words I heard often as a child and were precious to me because they were enigmatic.  They are words that were often requested at memorial services in congregations on the East Coast that tend to be a little more traditional than we are here.  Families would remember this and, Would you do that?  Would you say these words for us there? 

And then I remembered that yesterday was the first anniversary of my heart attack, and I'm still here.

Audience member:  Praise be.

Praise be.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  And maybe one of the things I hope I learned from that event is that it's important to say things that are really meaningful to you when you have the time to do it, because we, none of us, know what time we have. 

So we should say what's in our heart, and for those who are able to hear it, they will hear and take it in, and those who cannot, cannot.  So just say it.

The reading comes from what we call today the New Testament.  They were words attributed to Jesus of Nazareth.  They are considered by Biblical scholars and literary professionals probably the only authentic words that we have that Jesus actually said, because they are found in all of the primary sources virtually all in the same form.  And so we think inasmuch as we have an inaugural speech of Jesus, these are his words. 

They are found most commonly in Matthew in the 5th Chapter and are known as the Beatitudes, and I'm going to read them to you in the old English translation, which is what most of us are familiar with, but then I'm going to go back and paraphrase them in the Aramaic in which they were written because the meaning is very different, indeed.

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of Heaven. 

Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted. 

Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.

Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled. 

Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. 

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the Children of God. 

Blessed are those who are persecuted for justice's sake, for theirs in the kingdom of Heaven. 

This was typical of Jesus' teaching style to match two seemingly opposing phrases to each other, such that the meaning of them is really to be found in the exchange between them.  So here they are, then, in Aramaic and we think closer to what He meant when He uttered them first.

Blessed are the poor in spirit really means blessed are the empty in spirit, those who have no spirit, who have no hope, who have no dreams.  They are empty in their spirit.  There is nothing there.  When you're this way, the kingdom and all Heaven is yours.

Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted.  Mourn means only those who are able to cry with the poor, with the marginalized, with the weak, with the abandoned, and understand the pain of the world.  And most of us are so insulated from those states of being that we are no longer able to cry with the immigrant, to cry with the poor, to cry with the oppressed and the rejected.  If we are able to reclaim that natural human right, we shall be comforted.

Blessed the meek means blessed are they who own nothing, who are not possessed by their possessions; they have nothing.  Blessed are these people for they shall inherit everything. 

Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, meaning those who hunger after justice, fairness, equity, for they shall be filled.

Blessed are the merciful means blessed are those who are seeking to be forgiven.  You will be forgiven, and you will be able to forgive.

Blessed are the pure in heart.  This is one of the most ancient Jewish teachings, claiming that if your heart is not pure, you will not be able to see.  But when your heart is right, you will be able to see the world as it really is.  Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see the grandeur of the source of all being.

Blessed are the peacemakers.  Blessed are the people who attempt to reconcile the things that separate us, one from another, to reconcile differences.  Blessed are these because they will be called Children.

Blessed are those who are persecuted for justice's sake.  Interesting; one must be persecuted seeking justice in order to understand what Heaven truly is.  To live a just life is to have identified with the longing and hunger of the poor, of the empty, of the meek, of those who own nothing, and of those who weep; who stand in solidarity with the oppressed, for it was His understanding that human tears are more important than human words to understand who God is. 

Curious for us enlightened modern, post-modern people that we dismiss the concept of God because it is a concept.  But if you're able to cry in solidarity with the oppressed, you will see God, and God will be with you, because you will own the tragic nature of all existence. 

Jesus taught that as long as only a few of us believed these things, we would be like leaven in the whole loaf, and that is all that would matter.  ~Jon



(Below is a link to the third of three readings that lucky day by Jon Luopa.  His spoken words are even better than the written.)

http://www.uuchurch.org/sermon/3850

Sunday, September 25, 2011

A quest for forgiveness


Meditation on forgiveness

I choose to be willing to forgive
I choose to let the past go
  once and for all
I choose to let the peace of forgiveness
  rest in my heart
I choose to let the quietness of forgiveness
  rest in my mind
I choose to let the tranquility of forgiveness
  rest in my body
I choose to forgive now
I feel ready to forgive now
I feel a burden being lifted from me
  as I accept forgiveness as my path to freedom
I feel open to love filling the space in which
  anger and hurt and sadness used to be locked,
  keeping me a prisoner
I feel relieved
I feel free
I am ready to forgive
I am forgiving myself and others
  for all the words, actions, and inactions I have perceived
  in the past as having wronged me or hurt me
I am forgiving myself for having been unwilling to forgive in the past
I am allowing and welcoming the peace of forgiveness to rest in my heart,
  the quietness of forgiveness to rest in my mind,
  and the tranquility of forgiveness to rest in my body
I am forgiven
I forgive 
I am loved
I love
I am grateful.

(Thanks to Bea Resnick)

E-How on Forgiveness

"When someone else causes us emotional harm, whether unintentional or intentional, learning to let go of this pain can be one of the most difficult transitions we go through.  Carrying emotional pain, anger, anxiety, and other distressing thoughts about a situation or someone often is easier for us than beginning the forgiveness process.  We can choose either to become bitter and angry or view the end result as an opportunity for personal growth and change.  Even without an apology, make up your mind to forgive, forget, and eventually let go…"




Saturday, September 17, 2011

*** "The Sunne in Splendour" ***

Warwick Castle near Banbury, UK


"The Sunne In Splendour" is about the controversial King Richard III, about whom Will Shakespeare got it very wrong.  It's about the derring-do, bravery, treachery, and passion of the English court (1459-1492) beginning with Richard as a child, his brother Edward on the throne.  These stories inspired Shakespeare (1564-1616) and we can see why.  In my opinion, Penman writes as Shakespeare in a modern-day fashion, her language illustrative and clever.  It's 936 pages, including an Afterward and Author's Note, both of which should not be missed. 

As Caroline Kennedy said the other day to Jon Stewart, There’s so much humanity that goes into the making of history.

“The Sunne in Splendour,” by Sharon Kay Penman (1982)


"What of Salisbury?" His voice was thick, roughened with the embittered outrage of a man who feels himself unjustly accused but can find few to champion his cause."  p. 46

***
But what disturbed Marguerite the most about the young Yorkist Duke now calling himself King was that he was seducer as well as soldier.  He'd won London with his smile as much as with his sword ... as his father could never have done. p. 67

***
"You'd do best not to measure yourself by Ned's standards.  Ned is a law unto himself, in more ways than one!  You needn't look so troubled.  I'm not saying Ned's standards are at fault, merely that they're his.  And anytime you try to walk around in someone else's boots, you're apt to find them a poor fit."  p. 126

***
His Woodville in-laws had sorely disillusioned him within months of his marriage.  An extraordinarily handsome family, they soon showed themselves to be endowed with little more than good looks, to be grasping and inept at all but making enemies, at which they excelled.  Edward was not long in reaching the conclusion that his interests would’ve been better served had his wife been an only child. p. 165

 ***
Elizabeth was a poor judge of people, for she was not curious enough to speculate upon the needs and wants that motivated others.  But even to her, it was clear that her husband felt somehow threatened by the realization that her sexual needs existed independently of his own desires.  p. 172

***
He [Francis Lovell] was spurred on by apprehension, and by Monday, August 27, he was in sight of the white limestone city walls of York.  There he was welcomed with enthusiasm by Richard and with flattering friendliness by the King.  Almost at once, he blurted out the reason for his mission, and solemnly assured them that Lovell loyalty was pledge unwaveringly to York, for now and for all time to come. 

At that, Edward laughed and said he demanded no avowal of loyalty that extended beyond the length of a man’s lifetime.  p. 186

***
Alison closed the door softly behind her, moved toward the bed.  Elizabeth watched in silence; she never bothered to make polite conversation, never addressed Alison at all unless she had some need she wanted met.

Alison had not been witness to Elizabeth’s initial response to the devastating news of Doncaster.  Rumor had it that she’d at first refused to believe it, stubbornly rejected all evidence brought before her, and continued to do so until she was confronted with a hastily scribbled warning in her husband’s own hand.  It was said that she’d then given in to hysterics, an emotional outburst so violent that she’d raised fears for the well-being of the child she carried.  Her recovery had been rapid enough, however, for her to have thought to take with her into sanctuary all her jewelry and much of her wardrobe.   p. 211

***
“…It was then that I first suspected you might be an ally worth having!  And I confess, time has not proven me wrong in that.”

Richard was pleased by shy to show it.  “And for my part, I think I might safely say as much for you,” he said generously.”

Edward grinned.  “Hell, you’d trust me unto death and we both do know it.  Face it, Dickon, you’ve always been a faulty judge of character!”  p. 235

***
Philippe grinned, bringing his hand up belatedly to hide it, and after a pause, Charles laughed grudgingly.

“I admit I like you better than I thought I would,” he conceded.  “But I doubt that I like you well enough to finance an expedition doomed to failure.”

Edward was still smiling.  “My sister told me you do speak your mind.  If I might do likewise… You can lose only by doing nothing.  If you back me, I can assure you that I’ll keep my cousin Warwick too busy to concern himself with wars of conquest!  If you don’t, you’re sure to face an Anglo-French force before the spring thaw.”  p. 242

***
From the white city walls of Coventry, the Yorkist army stretched as far as the eye could see, spread out in battle formation under the Sunne in Splendour banner of Edward of York.  The Yorkist herald had just given challenge to combat, as he had on each of the two preceding days, and as he had done then, the Earl of Warwick refused to pick up the gauntlet, staring down in silence from the city walls at the army of his cousin of York.  p. 262

***
“Men are born to sin, Richard.  What does matter most is not that we err…  It is that we do benefit from our mistakes, that we are capable of sincere repentance, of genuine contrition.”  p. 276

***  
…Edward drummed on the table with his pen, absently applying so much pressure that the quill point split.  He tossed it aside, said, “Will, I do want you to take the rear again, as at Barnet.”

Will strove for nonchalance, did not quite carry it off.  He’d had some uneasy days this week past, wondering if Edward would entrust him again with a command after the disaster that had overtaken his left wing at Barnet.   p. 330

***
Rob and Francis were looking on with admiration, and Richard grinned.  He was very proud of the white polished armor, thought it a veritable work of art, perfect in every piece, as well it should be for it had been custom-made for him by one of the Flemish masters… [Richard] laughed now as they assured him the whole of the Lancastrian army would be most grateful that he’d thus made it so easy to distinguish Gloucester from the other knights of York.  p. 346

***
Edward gave no commands; he knew the knights of his household would follow.  He was in the saddle in a swift smooth motion that denied the weight of the armor he wore; and then the giant destrier was bearing down upon the men emerging from the woods, men who scattered in panic before the plunging hooves, the ravaging teeth, the sword that with each downstroke sheathed itself in flesh and bone. 

Edward was just six days past his twenty-ninth birthday, and for fully half of that lifetime he’d practiced the bloody arts of war.  But he’d never fought as he did now.  p. 348
***
“You could hardly have expected otherwise, Dickon.  What does surprise me is that you didn’t see this coming.  The signs were there, as far back as Windsor.”

“For God’s sake, Ned, don’t gloat!”

Edward looked mildly offended.  “I assure you that was not my intent.”  But after a moment, the corner of his mouth twitched.

“Yes, I guess it was!  But can you honestly fault me for it?  There’s no sweeter temptation, save one, than to say ‘I told you so,’ after all!”  p. 397

***
“I’m beginning to think that what you know could be inscribed upon the head of a pin, and with space to spare!” Richard snapped.  P. 399

***
“You could hardly have expected otherwise, Dickson.  What does surprise me is that you didn’t see this coming.  The signs were there, as far back as Windsor.”

“For God’s sake, Ned, don’t gloat!”

Edward looked mildly offended.  “I assure you that was not my intent.”  But after a moment, the corner of his mouth twitched.

“Yes, I guess it was!  But can you honestly fault me for it?  There’s no sweeter temptation, save one, than to say ‘I told you so,’ after all!”  p. 397

***
“I’m beginning to think that what you know could be inscribed upon the head of a pin, and with space to spare!” Richard snapped.  p. 399

***
“That be right!  She’s a redhead, too, isn’t she, Francis? . . . the lass who bore this Kathryn?”

“That be none of your concern, Rob!” he said sharply, more sharply than he’d intended.  Rob looked surprised and then hurt, and Richard relented, said with a smile meant to redeem his flare of temper.”  If you must know, the first love of my life was a thoroughly bewitching redhead named Joan. . . and I adored her with all the steadfast devotion you’d expect from a boy of six!”  p. 435

***
“Logically, a man should be congratulated that he’s gaining a wife, Francis, and commiserated with upon losing a mistress.”  p. 435

***
“Ned, you cannot. . . My God, I’m your brother!”

“Do you think it to be a relationship born of your convenience, to be called upon when it does suit you and ignore when it does not?  What have you ever done to make me think of you as a brother?  Did you truly think that because we did share the same womb, you’d be forever spared a reckoning, that you’d never be held to account for your crimes, your sins, your betrayals?”  p. 459

***
Her lashes lifted, giving him a glimpse of lucent liquid darkness.  A man could drown in eyes like hers, he thought, and then laughed at his own foolishness.  She laughed, too, for no other reason than that he did. 

***
“The art of governing, Dickon, is that of making use of talent wherever you do find it.  Trust is too rare an attribute to make it your prime prerequisite for holding office.  If I relied only upon those I truly do trust, we’d have a council of empty chairs!”  p. 476

***

He hesitated and then touched his lips lightly to hers.  But as he drew back. Her arms went up around his neck and suddenly she was in his arms; he felt the familiar warmth of her body pressing against his; her mouth was clinging, sweet, and it was as if the past year had never been.  p. 507

***

“Do you want go to war, Will?”

“Not particularly,” he conceded carelessly, and then held out his hand.  “Come here,” he said, and she laughed, rose sleek and dripping from the bath water.  She was reaching for a bath towel when the bedchamber door burst open.  Will sat up with an oath, and she hastily splashed down into the tub again as Will’s steward stumbled into the chamber.

“My lord, the King is here!  They be below the great hall even now and –“  He spun around in the doorway; they heard him gasp, “Your Grace!” and Edward strode past him into the chamber.

“In bed at midday, Will?  What ails you?”  But if the question was directed at Will, his eyes were directed elsewhere, were taking in the girl in the bathing tub, eyes that missed no detail of glistening wet skin, open red mouth, tumbled blonde hair.

“I withdraw the question,” he said, and laughed.  p. 524

***

Roger yearned to ask Edward what he meant to do.  Would Edward give Clarence the justice that had been denied his grandmother?  Or was this to be yet another crime for which Clarence would not be called to account?  But he dared not push it further.  He’d been dismissed.  In a turmoil of conflicting emotions, he made an awkward obeisance, and then fled the chamber.

Jane didn’t move, kept her eyes upon her lover.  “Ned?” she ventured at last.  “Was I wrong, my lord, to bring him to you?”

Edward turned to face her, and she caught her breath, seeing then the deadly controlled rage that thinned his mouth, filled his eyes.  Pray God he does never look thus at me, she thought and shivered.

“No,” he said flatly.  “No, you were not wrong.”  p. 566

***

That George was dangerous, Elizabeth did not doubt.  He was clumsy in his intrigues; he’d so far shown an uncanny knack for alienating people, had no friends, only lackeys and enemies, and he seemed queerly blind to the consequences of his actions, but he was dangerous withal.  Edward laughed at her when she tried to tell him that, but Elizabeth couldn’t afford to laugh.  George hated her with all the passions of a notoriously unstable nature.  He hated her and never forgot for a moment that he stood by blood very close, indeed, to the English throne.  Her son was not yet seven.  Should anything happen to Ned…”  p. 579

***

“…No . . . No, I couldn’t.  You’re right and I’m sorry, Lisbet.  I don’t blame you, in truth I don’t.”  The corner of his mouth twisted upward, counterfeited a smile.  “I would to God I could!  But I do know better; it be one of life’s little ironies that I do lie convincingly to everyone but myself.”  p. 626

***

Surrounded by clergy and city officials, Edward stood on the steps of the west door of St. Peter’s, awaiting his brother’s entry into the precincts of the Minster.  He was able to gauge Richard’s progress up Stonegate by the volume of cheering; it grew louder and he knew Richard had turned now onto Petergate, was approaching the High-Minster Gate.  p. 630

***

Elizabeth’s mouth was drawn down at the corners, as expressive as any denunciation she might have made.  p. 630  . . . Damn Lisbet and her venom!  He’d breathed her poison in like air, absorbed it without even being aware of it.  p. 631

***

“Papa. . . . If the Duke of Albany be willing to betray his brother the Scots King, how can you be sure he won’t be willing to betray you?”

Richard gave Johnny a look of surprised approval.  “We cannot be sure.  It’s unfortunate but true that we have to take our allies as we find them, and all too often they do have feet of clay.”  p. 642

***

“…For certes, some will find kin to give them shelter.  But I’ll not lie to you, sweetheart.  There will be others who’ll take ill and die.”  Edward shifted so he could better see her face, said with sudden seriousness, “The innocent will always suffer in the time of war, Cecily.  That just be the way of it.  Your pity does you credit, but tell me this.  Would you rather the homeless and hungry be English women and children?”  p. 647

***

Anne was no longer listening, was watching the man being ushered into the hall.  She’d seen enough couriers in her life to recognize one on sight.  It was unusual, however, for a messenger to appear before a lord like Richard in such travel-stained disarray.  That he was unshaven, grimy with days of hard riding told a tale in itself; his message must be urgent.  p. 669

***

Behind him he heard John Scrope say gruffly, “I hope to Christ you’ve not blundered, Dickon, in keeping our numbers so small.”

Was Scrope right?  Had he erred on the side of caution?  If so, God help them all; that was not a mistake a man would get to make twice.  p. 676

***

It was not a congenial gathering, the atmosphere charged with dark undercurrents of strain, much like the static electricity that foretold a coming storm.  p. 722

***

“My first lesson in betrayal came at seventeen, when I did learn that […]  I’d have thought no degree of double-dealing could surprise me after that, but I was wrong.  Last night I did discover all over again just what men will do in the name of ambition.  Even men who profess to love honor…”  His mouth contorted suddenly.  “Men who cloak heir betrayals in friendship.”  p. 723

***

Emerging from one of the ground-floor garderobes in the southwest tower, Francis caught his breath, dazzled by the beauty of the red-gold sky above his head.  Even the river was ablaze, reflecting the flaming brilliance of the dying sun.  He stood there for a time by the river wall, savoring the moment.  p. 751

***

Since Richard’s coronation, Stanley had thrown himself into the role of a loyal and prudent councilor with all the zeal of a reformed heretic, and he addressed himself now to Richard with an earnestness that just missed being obsequious.  p. 752

***

Even assuming he could find grounds to dissolve the marriage, and he was by no means certain that he could, even then, it was just not that simple.  For nineteen years Anna had been his wife, his responsibility, and it was not her fault that he could not love her.  She’d done all he’d ever asked of her – ran his household, entertained his friends, befriended his sisters, ignored his infidelities.  She’d failed in only one of her duties as a wife, and in that, he could not be sure if the failing was hers or his.  p. 765

***

Even if she’d succeeded in silencing Bray, the damage had already been done; she was enough of a realist to know that.  He’d already planted the seeds, and nothing took root faster than rumor.  People didn’t have to believe it; it was enough that they’d pass it on.  p. 837

***

She struggled to stave off sleep for a few minutes more, for Richard’s sake, and then felt him lifting her up, brushing her hair back from her neck, and she opened her eyes, saw that he’d taken from his own throat the silver pilgrim cross he’d worn since boyhood.  He fumbled with the catch, and it took several tries before he could fasten it securely around her neck.  It was tarnished, dulled with age, but warm against her skin, as it still held the heat drawn from his body.  p. 856

***

The shadow-world of sleep recognized no borders.  There, the past and present were one country, shaped by memory and peopled by need.  Richard had been dreaming of Anne…  p. 876

***

“It’s not only my own life I must wager this Monday, it be yours, too, the lives of so many men.  Well, never again, that I swear to you.  Should God grant me the victory, I’ll do what I must to make secure my kingship.  I’m done with forgiving treasons, forgetting treachery.  Leniency lends itself only to further betrayals.  But that is not the way I ever wanted it to be, and that is not a future I can look to with any expectation.”

Rob and Francis looked at each other, neither knowing what to say.  But Richard was already turning away, moving to meet the scout just dicking under the tent flap.  p. 894


***

"I don't mean to malign the man, Dickon, but he's a mediocrity whose only known talent has been for equivocation.  But what have you, the title he bears be one of England's proudest.  Can you trust him?"

"Do we have a choice?"

"No," Howard conceded.  p. 896


***

"I've known the Stanleys for nigh on thirty years, Dickon, and while they're long on promises, they're invariably short on delivery.  If Tudor be counting on them to throw him a lifeline, he's like to find it a hangman's noose, instead."  p. 898

***
"I have consented to be your wife, Henry.  I want no more war, no more killing, will do what I can to reconcile Yorkist and Lancastrian loyalties.  I will do all that is expected of a wife, of a Queen, and God willing, I will give you sons.  But there is one thing I will not do.  I will not discuss Richard of Gloucester with you. . . not now, not ever."  p. 916

***

Dear Reader:  I was in the process of including here the last few lines of the novel, they're so good, but I'll leave that to you. 

PS:  Even the Afterward and the Author's Note are enjoyable, so I recommend those, too.  Thank you, Sharon Kay Penman, for the longest, best novel I've ever read.  ~mandy

***

The author uses such beautiful language that I wanted to understand every word of it:

asperity  310 - harshness or sharpness of tone, temper, or manner
malmsey  387 - a strong, sweet wine, usually from Greece
sangfroid 580 - calm, composure
surcease 656 - to cease from some action; desist
gainsay 680 - to deny, dispute, or contradict
obeisance 810 - a movement of the body expressing deep respect or deferential courtesy, as before a superior; a bow, curtsy, or other similar gesture.
destrier 904 - a war horse
immur(e)ing 925 - to enclose within walls, to shut in, seclude or confine; to imprison
 
For the past year and several months I have been in the thralls of the best book I have ever enjoyed in my life, a historical novel by Sharon Key Penman, made better by the number of pages -- 933 -- making it the longest book I've ever read, and I’m fifteen or so pages until the end… and would that I could make it go on...  It has been a few pages short of 931 of engrossing sometimes blissful enjoyment of the telling of history with lush language, landscape and geography, intrigue at court, bravery and superstitions, betrayal and valor, treachery, love, faith and bloody battles, rebellion, cowardice, imprisonments in the tower, and romantic trysts.  For more than a year this book has been my companion and I've loved every page of it.  I would sometimes put it down now and then but rarely for more than a couple of weeks, although I did have that long stretch for a while...  I’ve taken it with me everywhere.

"The Sunne in Splendour:  A Novel of Richard III," is as much about Richard's older brother, Ned -- the savvy and charasmatic King Edward IV.  There were parts of the book that made me gasp out loud and occasionally cry. 
I have been very careful not to reveal too much in the passages I've shared; just enough to share the beauty of the prose of a true, historical recounting.  Lest you think I may have revealed too much, I can assure you, that should matter not at all, for I have read the entire book, word for word, and I'm excited to start it again.  I would start it immediately were there not other books on my list, and I really must get on with those, but this book is a joy.  And it's all true or as close to true as possible.  And yes, Shakespeare got the story of Richard III entirely wrong!  (I look forward to a new production more in line with this telling.)

This blog is my small thanks to a story beautifully and imaginatively told that opened up my imagination of and understanding of life in England in 1459 through 1485, some 80 years before Will Shakespeare was born, who might have admitted, if he were pressed, that these stories practically wrote themselves.  But nobody told those tales like he.  I hope you enjoy it like I did.
----------

Sept 12, 2012:  “Bones found in hunt for King Richard III’s remains”




***