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David L Rowlands
(Dammit! I missed the 1,000th post mark! Oh well, I might as well post the item I was saving for that spot: The following is an article I wrote about Dalton Trumbo some time ago but have not yet published; because the kind of the kind of ‘outsiders” life he must have lived reminded me of a certain feral cat I once knew, I also wrote those thoughts down as a sequel and I’m presenting them together because they seem to me to go together).
Emmjay’s note: No THIS is the 1,000th article. My post of the Steve Jobs speech doesn’t count as an article – it’s just a cut and paste – but it’s a worthy listen given the sad circumstances !
I just watched the second half of a fascinating documentary TV program on ABC2, entitled, “Trumbo”, all about one of my favorite authors of (relatively) modern times… damn shame I missed the first half; I do hope they’ll show it again soon… perhaps on one of the other channels, although I don’t think there’s much chance of that happening really, as it’s a ‘load of leftie bullshit’…
For some of our younger readers who may not be familiar with the name, Dalton Trumbo is perhaps one of the most influential of writers this century, in spite of the fact that his work was usually credited under a plethora of pseudonyms because Mr Trumbo himself was suppressed, oppressed, repressed, unimpressed and depressed, not to mention frequently incarcerated, when not on the run or overseas, by the infamous Senator Joe McCarthy’s anti-communist witch-hunt.
Trumbo was so hated by the establishment that hate and smear campaigns against him were carried out so effectively that even his kids were systematically shunned and socially isolated even by the kids they went to school with, who aped their parents’ malicious gossip and social ostracism, systematically and completely refusing to speak to or play with them… His pre-teen daughter was so damaged by this treatment that she begged her parents not to make her go to school; treatment by medical health professionals was necessary, but who knows how effective? She seems, however, to be very sane and remarkably balanced now in her old age, but what she must have suffered!
Our younger readers may well ask, what was this witch-hunt all about? And why persecute anyone like this, let alone his kids, just because they didn’t like some of the things he wrote about, because it had a negative reflection on contemporaneous American society? Doesn’t the USA have ‘freedom of speech’, ‘freedom of the press’ and ‘freedom of association’? Well, the answer to that (said Sir Humphrey) is both ‘yes’ and ‘no’; yes it does in theory, but it doesn’t always pay to put the theory into practice… Even Socrates came a cropper when it came to criticizing his own society…
As a recovering anthropologist, I sympathize; they should put a government health warning on university courses in Social and Cultural Anthropology, stating that they could seriously damage your relationship to the society you lived in, unless, like Oedipus, you put out your own eyes… and simply choose no longer to see the world as it is, simply because it’s just too awful; far too oppressive; far too painful; and impossible to change…
You’d better cut off your ears too, or stop them up with wax, as Odysseus had his crew do, so they might not become entranced by the sirens’ songs and dash their boat onto the rocks. Odysseus himself of course, thinking man that he is, must first be tied to the mast and his own ears left unblocked so he was able to listen to those sirens’ songs… And Freedom, Democracy and Justice, the three most seductive sirens are closely followed by two pairs of twins: ‘History and ‘Mythology’ and ‘Anthropology’ and ‘Sociology’ and abandon hope all you who, entranced by their songs are lured onto the rocks of isolation and social alienation… for those who hear the songs of these seven sirens are given ways of seeing and understanding the world which often puts them at odds with even the society in which they may have grown up in and lived in all their lives, since analysis implies critique and in a scapegoating culture, anyone who offers any serious critique of it will be seen as ‘volunteering’ for the sacrifice, as was Dalton Trumbo…
Oh, and cut out your tongue too… The ‘Thee Wise Monkeys’ were right, only way to survive in today’s modern, western, postindustrial, capitalist-colonial-imperialist societies, is to ‘see no evil, hear no evil and speak no evil’… And, since I write, and am ambidextrous to a degree, I suppose I’d have to cut off both my hands and possibly even my feet, ’cause I’m also that stubborn and persistent…
But what would be left of me but one big stump? A basket case?
Which brings me back to Dalton Trumbo… One of his best pieces of work was about a basket case and it made one of the most profoundly disturbing and effective anti-war statements I’ve ever read. “Johnny Got his Gun” is about a victim of a shell explosion in the trenches of WWI, who loses everything I’ve just mentioned. I should perhaps warn you that, although I’m not usually prone to nightmares, this slim volume gave me nightmares for weeks… I won’t spoil the story for you, but let you discover it for yourselves if you haven’t already read it… And the profoundly anti-war statement made by this book was so hated and feared by the McCarthy regime, that the book was banned for thirty years and its author incarcerated for many years too.
Now, I’ll bet you’re all wondering what he’s written under that plethora of pseudonyms, eh? Well, apart from books he wrote movies, here are the titles of just a few of them, “Roman Holiday”, “The Brave One”, “Johnny Got His Gun” (of course!) and, one of my all-time favorites, “Spartacus”… but there are dozens more (at least!), so if I’ve whetted your appetite for more, all I can say is, “Happy Googling!”
Oh! And:
“I’m Spartacus!”
***** ******* *****
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about a cat I knew… No, I haven’t reverted to the beatnik slang of the ’50s, I mean a real cat; a stray I brought home at the age of about seven (me, not the cat! The cat was probably significantly older!)
I’d just found it wandering the streets in the neighborhood, and, impulsive as I was then, I couldn’t resist a childish impulse to pick it up and cuddle it… But it didn’t want to be cuddled… not one bit! It bit and clawed and scratched at my face in its efforts to regain its lost liberty, yet I kept it cuddled so tight to my chest it couldn’t get away… Maybe it was scratching partially in an effort to breathe; I didn’t really notice at the time; but by the time I’d carried it the twenty-or-so yards to our back door, excitedly gasping ‘Can I keep it, Mum? Can I keep it?!” my face looked a bit like a red tartan shirt; criss-crossed with broad red weals.
Needless to say, Mum wasn’t exactly ‘enthusiastic’ about the idea, but after much persuasion, I made her promise a saucer of milk for the ‘poor critter’, and she made me promise I’d put the animal down and let it go if it wanted to… But I hung onto it until the saucer of milk was delivered, because I just knew that without some inducement, Tom, as I’d (very originally) thought of calling him, would be off like a rocket; and I’d gone to so much trouble to get him here, this durned animal was gonna be my friend if it killed me (And it might have if I hadn’t eventually let go!)
Now the word for lost and abandoned cats in the UK is ‘stray’, and in that environment that name suits most of them… But not Tom… Tom was a huge black and white cat with partly white legs and a white underneath; it’s face was mostly white with a perfect ‘pirate’s eyepatch’ over its left eye, which also bore a scar right down from its forehead to its cheek through its eyelid; fortunately for Tom the ancient wound had not been deep enough to actually injure the eyeball itself. When I first came out to Australia some thirty years ago, I found a cartoon strip called ‘Footrot Flats’, written by a Kiwi, I believe, in the Sunday paper, which featured a cat by the name of ‘Horse’… As soon as I saw Horse, I realized I was looking at the reincarnation of Tom. Almost as big and as strong as… well… in the northeast of England, lets say, a pit-pony, if not a horse.
Yep! ‘Stray’ is too tame an adjective for Tom; for Tom, the word has to be ‘feral’: Tom was most definitely a wild creature and most definitely his own master. He would not stay in the house very long at all, ever, but as he was lapping up the milk on that first occasion, he was too busy to object too strenuously to me stroking his back. As soon as he finished his milk, and some of our other cat’s cat-food which I used to bribe him to stay a few minutes longer, he was off out the back door, which Mum wisely insisted on keeping open. (Our other cat had another very original name; it was a black kitten we called, of all things, ‘Blackie’, who’d arrived in a similar manner to Tom, though with less blood!)
After that first time he’d come round of his own accord quite regularly, at first every week or so and this gradually shortened to every few days, and then gradually it became every day as visiting us to bludge food had became a habit with him… but he would never ever stay long; as soon as he’d eaten his food, drunk his milk and had his petting session, he was off out again; no way would he ever stay in overnight, though he roamed around the house like he owned the place…
The thought occurred to me even at that time, that Tom must have been ‘on the road’ for a very, very long time… since he was a kitten most probably, I thought; yet he’d not only survived, but thrived (actually the correct word is ‘throve’ as the past participle to the verb ‘to thrive’, but the spellchecker won’t let me use that!) and now here he was, big and strong and incredibly tough… But very canny, very smart and extremely non-trusting too… Not only ‘feral’ but ‘streetwise’ too… At one and the same time I admired him for his incredible strength and independence, yet pitied him for his inability to either express his own more tender emotions, nor allow such emotions to be expressed at or upon him…
Now, something close to half a century later, after having been homeless myself for several years and having discovered the virtual impossibility of ever being able to properly re-integrate oneself within ‘society’ again, I’m beginning to know just how he feels…
***** ******* *****

Iv’e got the urge to write Doolin-Dalton!
There, I feel better now.
That bloody Don henry—-He’s everywhere.
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Shit. Henly. How did the R, get down by the L ?
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Probably a Freudian slip; thinking of tax reform 😉
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More like a Sraudian Flip. Or a spoonerism.
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Or maybe a Fleudian Srip, Ato?
😉
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Asty, I never knew that Dalton Trumbo was behind the lovely movie Roman Holiday, more precisely, I have never known about Dalton Trumbo at all…
I’ll never forget about the adorable Audrey Hepburn 🙂
As for cats, I never been a cat lover…my pets have always been dogs…
When Daughter married and moved, we ended having her cat, she quickly became a farm cat, a mouse killer…and sadly also a bird killer. The new owners were happy to keep this elusive outdoor feline, and I was happy to let go of her.
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PS, I alsO like the title Of this stOry, all thOse Os, DaltOn ,TrumbO, TOm… Oh, sO nice and rOund…
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I was, Of cOurse, thinking Of yOu when I wrOte it, Helvi…
😉
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lOl, asty
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Well, I posted something and it disappeared.
Never mind, ‘better late than never’ as they say T2. Didn’t know much about Trumbo; so edified now.
Cats are insular and selfish. You doon’t seem that way. You’re using ellipses more now. It adds a certain …je ne sais quoi. I sometimes through in a double or even a ¾ 🙂
Good luck with everything. maybe you need to marry a rich Bahia gal 😉
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Throw, you Wally Jules!!!
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‘Bahia girl’, Vectis Lad? If you meant ‘Bahai’ girl… I must say I’m somewhat disillusioned with the Bahais too… They suffer from the same absolutism as any other monotheistic religion…
But thanks for the good wishes…
🙂
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Nah, not the Lad! He don’t mean no religious nutter. He means a gal from Bahia, Brazil! Dynamic little bod and hot under the collar when it comes to mattes of lust.
North East, I believe, and since the name is a corruption of the Portuguese “baia” (bay), it’s a place of sun, sand and silly frivolity!
And aren’t all religions absolutist? After all, what’s the point of being a follower if you’re not absolutely sure that your God(s), or your way of revering him/her/them, is/are the only God(s) and is the only way of revering him/her/them?
What’s the point of trying to sell these gods if you can’t claim you have exclusive rights to them?
Religiously inspired smiles remind me of the serpent in the garden. Religiously inspired festivals remind me of corporate dinners, inspired by new, immensely profitable acquisitions.
Baaaaah hai!
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Hmmm, if that’s what the Lad meant, Ato, then I wouldn’t mind marrying a rich one o’ those!
Now, as for all religions being absolutist, I would tend to agree… but somehow I think that the existence of multiple, other gods, each with their own respective areas of authority, gives polytheistic religions a degree of relativism which monotheisms lack entirely… though I refuse to be dogmatic on this point, ’cause as you already know, I feel much the same way as you about religions generally!
🙂
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Just having Googled (researching) him, he was a prolific artist coming from humble beginnings. His writings were adapted in so many films it would fill this whole page. His son finished many of his unpublished and unfinished works which were made into even more films.
He was a very fast writer and thought nothing of writing a manuscript of over 150 pages in one week while sitting in ‘his bath’! His parrot would be pecking his ears, while he was pecking at his type-writer.
An unstoppable man. Amazing life.
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Glad you think so too, Gerard; he’s been one of my few ‘heroes’ ever since I first read ‘Johnny Got His Gun’… though to my mind, his real ‘chef-d’oevre’ is ‘Spartacus’!
Many thanks!
🙂
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Spartacus was one of my favourites too. I always thought the cinamascope version that I watched in my teens was the one with Victor Mature as Spartacus.
Perhaps there have been a few Spartacuses because you are 15 years younger than I, so….I would have seen the movie before you were born and unless we backpedalled in time with a speed faster than ‘C’ and the effect became before the cause, I can’t see how we we watched the same version. Then again, perhaps you are talking about a book rather than a movie!
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Gerard, it’s called Hollywood. They can manufacture all sorts of time warps, black holes, worms and shrinking universes so it’s absolutely possible that you’ve both seen the same version, if not at the same time.
While we’re at this sort of movie, I also loved Quo Vadis. Both, the book and the film.
It was strange about the book. (Stop me if I’ve said this before and I think I have) but I remember reading some three translations of it and I was beginning to wonder if I was reading the same book!
Anyhooooo!
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Aren’t you confusing the movie ‘Spartacus’ (starring Kirk Douglas) with another movie called ‘The Robe’, starring Victor Mature, Gerard? Although I’d love to do so, I have never read a book called ‘Spartacus’… I’m not even sure there was one…
🙂
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Asty,
You might be right. It could have been the robe. Cinemascope was big then, so was the magic of the Hammond organ rising up from the bowels of the cinema. The girl with the tray of sweets, chips, the train-trip back home. Burwood had three cinemas, so did Parramatta. If the movie was good or impressive, it would take me a week to get over it. Now I see people coming from video stores with bag fulls of videos. How boring lives they might live or do I have it wrong and watching movie after movie is totally fulfilling?
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Now I think you’re confusing the ‘one-celled Hammond organism’ (ie. the ‘Hammond organ’; Hung will recognise the reference!) with the Wurlitzers they used to use in the cinemas, Gerard… maybe now you’re getting so old all your memories are leaking into each other!
Mind you, I too have fond memories of the girl who used to come ’round during the breaks in between movies… Easington Colliery (County Durham, UK) used to have two cinemas, the Rialto and the Hippodrome, until they sacriligiously turned one of ’em, the Hippodrome into a bingo hall! But there was also another just a couple of miles down the road at Horden… so for a small mining town, Easington wasn’t too badly off when it came to entertainment… Even so, they were still showing all the older movies too… Usually they’d show new(ish) movies during the week and the older movies on Sundays… The bill would change midweek, though, so Monday, Tuesdays and Wednesdays would have one pair of movies (plus, of course the obligatory cartoon!) and Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays would have a different menu… Saturdays, of course, there was the usual ‘Saturday Matinee’ which consisted of the original ‘Superman’ or ‘Rocket Man’ or something, followed by a couple of ancient westerns…
Going to the movies was also one of the best ways for me to get exercise too, as I would often have to run all the way home to get away from the school bullies who used to also go to the cinemas and who would lie in wait for me and my brother just outside the exit… Though I was never much interested in sport, I could run like the wind and developed an encyclopaedic knowledge of the back-streets of the Colliery!
You’re quite right, of course, it’s not the same experience just watching dvds…
🙂
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I must have seen “Singing In The Rain” about a bzillion times, when I was around 17 or so! In one of the city cinemas -I don’t remember which- because I was in love -no, lust- with the usherette! I hated musicals and nagged her to change cinemas. It was doing my head in. But there I was, every Saturday evening, waiting inside the theatre for her to finish her shift so we could go to… another cinema!
That bloody film!
Completely drove me bonkers and forever hating anything in cinema or theatre that has people bursting out in song!
When Cats came out I wanted to become a refugee in some downtrodden country. Rather starvation than the torture of a musical. Bollywood makes me puke something gross!
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I remember this little bit with great fondness:
Mature asks Curtis: What kind of work did you do?
Curtis: I’m a singer of songs.
Mature: Singer of songs? But what work did you do?
Curtis: That’s my work. I also juggle.
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Yes I always loved that bit too, although Tony Curtis is the ‘weakest link’ in that movie, I think… he couldn’t act to save his life! For some reason this bit reminds me of the bit in Ben Hur when the rich Roman who owned him as a slave asked him whether he liked snails or oysters or thought eating either of them was ‘immoral’…
🙂
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You mean I shouldn’t have told my CIA friend about this article? 🙂
Should I be taking up a collection for a Get Well card for your stump?
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You have friends in the CIA, Voice? Can anyone really call such people ‘friends’? As to a collection for my ‘stump’, all donations will be gratefully accepted, but please don’t waste them on trivia such as ‘get well’ cards…
😉
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If I tell you they’ll have to shoot you. Or worse, shoot me.
But if you’ve been reduced to a stump it sounds as if they’ve already read the article and paid you a visit.
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‘Stumpy’ says: “Mmmph! Mmmmmmmmmph-mmph Mmmmmph! Mmmmm”
😉
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The only good cat is a dead cat. Just ask Voice
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The only cat that can bounce is a dead cat.
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Hmmm, never tried that Ato… must do so at once!
Dammit! Why is it you can never find a dead cat when you want one?!
😉
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You won’t get any argument from me, Hung. My own cat is bad to the bone. 🙂
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Nowadays I tend to agree, Hung… especially given the amount of damage they do to Oz’s wildlife…
🙂
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A great double banger, Asty!
Enjoyed it very much, particularly the comparison you draw of you and Tom. It’s been often said that animals reflect the temperament of their owner but I think the reverse is also true, though, both are much more in the grips of Fate than of each other.
I love your use of Oedipus and Odysseus, as examples of people who refuse to see or who deny others to see or hear. Whether Oedipus gouged his eyes out because the sight of his dear wife/mother, dangling from a rope was too gruesome for him or whether he wanted to reject the truth or whether he thought this was the worst sort of punishment he could inflict on himself for having sinned so grossly, is an interesting topic for discussion.
And I won’t lose the opportunity to dispute your grammatical view that “throve” is a participle. Nope, it’s just a normal, indicative, past tense. Aorist (ie, Momentary, not Continuous). Third person, sing.
Participles are normally used as adjectives or gerunds. Participles are all too often seen -even by dogmatic grammarians!- as normal verbs but then, what’s the point of calling them “participles” if they are simply used in the Indicative mood of any tense?
Silly, I reckon.
Anyhow, what I call a participle is a verb used this way:
As an adjective:
(Active)
That DRINKING man, leaning against the pole is my uncle
(Passive)
The KICKED cat came home with its tail between its ears.
As a gerund:
(only active voice)
He just loves his SWIMMING but DANCING is out of his social radar.
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Ato, I shall always bow to your superior grammatical knowledge… even though it sometimes seems to me that we must have learned grammar from very different sources which had very different ways and means of categorising it…
I shall also always bow to your superior knowledge of the (Ancient Greek) Classics when it is merely a point of detail, though I shall also always retain the right to form my own ‘reading’ or hermeneutic interpretation of the stories.
However, I am glad that you enjoyed my ‘double-header’… Many thanks!
🙂
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