Saturday, August 16, 2025

Let's write about Adolf Hitler

“Führer”: An archived echo report published in The New Yorker magazine:

Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)
Janet Flanner’s job was never easy, exactly, but for the first decade it wasn’t all that morally freighted. Beginning in October of 1925, using the pseudonym Genêt, she mailed her editors at this magazine a fizzy bimonthly column under the rubric Letter from Paris. Instead of telling readers what they needed to know—that was what newspapers were for—she focussed on what they might want to know: the new fad of backless dresses in the cabarets, the rising cost of champagne. “She thought of herself as a high-class gossip columnist,” Brenda Wineapple writes in her biography “Genêt.” Striving for an “unflappable, ever-ironic” style, “she did not predict outcomes, take sides, or search for causes. Obviously, this itself was a side, but Janet was not yet willing to admit that.”

The New Yorker was inventing its voice, and Flanner was in the clique of tinkerers. “Lunched with D. Parker,” she wrote to Harold Ross, the founding editor, from her rented fourth-floor room on Rue Bonaparte. “How dare you say Thurber uses more parenthesis than I? . . . I’ll stop, (if I can.)” When Flanner first arrived in Europe, as an expat from Indianapolis, she was still married, technically, to a man; but they soon divorced and she lived openly (in both senses) with her female partner, the poet Solita Solano. They were chummy with everyone who was anyone: Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Djuna Barnes. Flanner roamed the Continent, filing occasional reports from London and Berlin. “I think a Brussels Letter a good idea,” she wrote to Ross. “I’m passing by there anyhow.” She filed pieces on Edith Wharton and Igor Stravinsky, and a subtly undermining story about her frenemy Gertrude Stein, and a write-around Profile of the Queen of England. In time, she became more than a gossip columnist; she became one of the great journalists of her generation.

In early 1936, she published her weightiest piece yet—a three-part Profile of Adolf Hitler. This one, too, was a write-around: unlike Dorothy Thompson, an American journalist who had interviewed Hitler for Cosmopolitan (and whose unflattering portrayal got her kicked out of Germany), Flanner never secured an interview with the Führer, and it’s not clear how hard she pushed for one. She was neither an antifascist, like her friend Dorothy Parker, nor a Fascist, like her friend Ezra Pound; she was against crude bigotry, but she was not the world’s greatest philo-Semite. (In a letter to her mother, she once denigrated the writer Rebecca West as “a little Jewish.”) “Dictator of a nation devoted to splendid sausages, cigars, beer, and babies, Adolf Hitler is a vegetarian, teetotaller, nonsmoker, and celibate,” the first sentence of the Profile read. She had him pegged as a strange little man, teeming with contradictions—true, but hardly the most salient of his known flaws, even then.

In the first installment of the Profile, we learn about the Führer’s taste in movies, his “second-rate tailor,” and his preferred recipe for South German porridge. Readers would have to wait until the following week for a mention of the Nazi Party’s increasingly visible repression of German Jews, which Flanner dispatched in a single paragraph (“The Jewish problem Hitler has raised is a vast one in emotional importance . . . numerically, from the German point of view, it is a small one”). A few lines later, she was on to a night-club comedian who told sly Hitler jokes. (“No one knows why he isn’t in a concentration camp.”) There were a few intimations of violence, but in the mode of pointing out Hitler’s personal inconsistencies: “He becomes sick if he sees blood, yet he is unafraid of being killed or killing.”

The piece was ambiguous, and it had a mixed reception. “I was in Hollywood yesterday and the Jewish film gentlemen candidly said they thought my Hitler article was not unfriendly enough!” Flanner wrote in a letter. “No pleasing everybody.” Still, for the rest of her life she never included the Hitler Profile among her collected pieces. For a writer who wants to seem sophisticated and all-knowing, it may feel intolerably risky to pick sides in a grubby political fight, or to make falsifiable predictions about the future. But refusing to take sides can also be a way to miss the story. 


As Flanner wrote in a Letter from Budapest in 1938, “History looks queer when you’re standing close to it.” ♦


Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Let's Write about the silent film hit "Evangeline" starring Dolores Del Rio

Somehow or other, I honestly cannot recall how, but I have a copy of a press release daated January 3, 1929, published in the Santa Cruz, California County Sentinel, about "Evangeline Scenes to be Filmed Here: Dolores Del Rio in Lead". 

Evangeline, the fictional heroine created by Henry Wadsworth Longfellos, played by the Mexican born actress Dolores Del Rio (1904-1983), in the silent film produced and directed by Edwin Carewe in 1929. 

Evangeline the poem: At 178 years old, published in 1847, a legacy continues to resonate today.

Although she is a fictional heroine, Evangeline’s epic story symbolizes the agony caused by forced mass deportations and family separations.

"Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow tells the sad  story about Evangeline Bellefontaine, a young Acadian woman, and her beloved Gabriel Lajeunesse, whose lives are tragically disrupted in 1755, by the British expulsion of the Acadians from Nova Scotia (Acadie).

Evangeline’s character is a myth who created a lasting legend to bring international attention to the cruel Acadian expulsion. Longfellow’s epic poem may fit the cliché about how history can repeat itself, while Americans are witnessing immigrant deportations and family separations in real time on nearly all main stream media.

In 1929, the poem was produced into a popular silent film starring the Mexican born actress Dolores Del Rio (1904-1983). Somehow, found among my collection of Evangeline memorabilia, I happen to have a press release about the film, in a news article published in the Santa Cruz Evening News, on January 3, 1929.

Here is the content in the press release:

SANTA CRUZ, CA-  Twoenty-four members of the Edwin Carewe unit of United Artists Pictures arrived in Santa Cruz this morning (January 3), at 6:45 o'clock on a special rain from Los Angeles. They were stopping t the Hotel St. Gerge and intend to stay in this city today and tomorrow to work in the Big Basin and at the Minnehaha Falls in Blackburn gulch.  This evening, six more of the film company, including Miss Dolores Del Rio, will arrive.

The play to be produced with be Longfellow's "Evangeline".  Exterior scenes, the forest primeval in the Big Basin and love scenes at Minnehaha Falls will be shot.  The company plans to leave for Carmel on Saturday where an Arcadian villae has been erected on Point Lobos.  (Maine Writer's note- I suspec the reporter did not understand the set was to be an "Acadian Village" as in Grand Pre, the village where the epic poem begins, as in the nararative, "forest primeval".)

Miss Del Rio will have the feminine lead as Evangeline. She will be supported by an all star cast including Roland Drew as Gabriel, one of the masculine leads; Donald Reed as Batiste, as the other masculine lead; Alec Francis as Father Felician; James Marcus, Paul McAllister, George Marion and Bobby Mack.

The (silent) picture (movie) is being personally directed by Edwin Carewe.  Santa Cruz area is the firts port of call for the filming of the picture.

The film company plans to spend three weeks in Caramel in filming the Arcadian (aka "Acadian") atmosphere before taking up the story of the travel to Louisiana which will be made elsewhere. During the filming of the Acadian deportation scenes, the company plans to employ several hundred people for many days.

"Evangeline" will take four months to film and is planned for one of the United Artiss big hits for the 1929, season.  






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Sunday, August 10, 2025

Let's Write about our human spiritual minds improving mental health

 Connections Between Spirituality and Mental Health

Echo essay by Arianna Huffington published in TIME
Today, there are between 10,000 and 20,000 mental health apps.

In the U.S. alone, there are 1.2 million mental health providers. 

And Mental Health Awareness Month began 75 years ago. 

It’s safe to say, we’ve never been more aware of mental health. And yet, some fear that as awareness of mental health has gone up, the state of our mental health has gone down.

A 2023, study found that one out of every two people in the world will develop a mental health disorder in their lifetime. The situation with young people is even worse. “The youth mental health crisis is very real,” Dr. Harold Koplewicz, founding President and Medical Director of the Child Mind Institute, tells me. “The most common disorders of childhood and adolescence are not infectious diseases but mental health disorders. Every 30 seconds a child or adolescent with suicidal ideation or an attempt comes to an ER.”

These are particularly challenging times: Natural disasters are intensifying, chronic diseases continue to climb, and AI (artificial intelligence) is driving fear and anxiety about all aspects of life. 

People are afraid they will lose their jobs to AI, that their kids will be negatively impacted by AI, and that AI’s constantly accelerating development will evolve beyond human control.

But beyond the circumstances of the times we’re living in lies a more complicated existential crisis.

As the French priest and philosopher Teilhard de Chardin once said, “we are spiritual beings having a human experience.” When we give up on the spiritual part of human nature, we also give up on a supportive framework which can help us handle the anxieties of this historic moment of disruption.

Many answer this need for spirituality through organized religion, but as Columbia psychology professor Lisa Miller explains, there are many ways for people to embrace their spirituality. “The moments of intense spiritual awareness were biologically identical whether or not they were explicitly religious, physiologically the same whether the experience occurred in a house of worship or on a forest hike in the ‘cathedral of nature,’” she writes. “Every single one of us has a spiritual part of the brain that we can engage anywhere, at any time.”

The exact practices we engage in that lead to spiritual states of mystery, awe, grace, and wonder doesn’t matter. What does matter is that we don’t amputate them from our lives.

The famed psychologist Abraham Maslow placed self-actualization at the top of his hierarchy of needs—above physiological needs, safety, and belonging. 

But, in the last years of his life, he realized that self-actualization did not fully encompass what it means to be human and added “transcendence” to the top of the pyramid.

As Maslow put it, “The spiritual life is part of the human essence. It is a defining characteristic of human nature, without which human nature is not fully human.” It’s this drive for spirituality that takes us beyond self-centeredness and allows us to resist despair and meaninglessness. This ability to find meaning in our struggles has helped humans navigate times of stress, turmoil, and crisis throughout history—and it is now validated by the latest science.

“When it comes to finding ways to help people deal with issues surrounding birth and death, morality and meaning, grief and loss, it would be strange if thousands of years of religious thought didn’t have something to offer,” writes David DeSteno, author of How God Works: The Science Behind the Benefits of Religion.

Spirituality can help us not just weather times of crisis but even emerge stronger than before. A 2024, study on frontline healthcare workers in Poland during the pandemic found that higher levels of spirituality were connected to positive psychological change as the result of struggling with life challenges, known as post-traumatic growth.


According to Andrew Newberg, a neuroscientist at Thomas Jefferson University, the focused attention which occurs during spiritual practices like meditation and prayer can increase frontal lobe function, which governs executive control, and down-regulates the limbic system, which is linked to fear and the fight-or-flight response. “When it comes to broader aspects of health, the improvements in brain function associated with spiritual practices that lead to reduced stress and anxiety ultimately can lead to benefits in physical health as well,” Newberg says.

“The practice of religion, as opposed to its theological underpinnings, offers an impressive, time-tested array of psychological technologies that augment our biology,” writes DeSteno. “To ignore that body of knowledge is to slow the progress of science itself and limit its potential benefit to humanity.”

He describes religion first as working similar to how a vaccine works, “boosting the body’s and the mind’s resilience so that they can better confront whatever health challenges come their way.” And second, he uses the metaphor of medicine, healing the body and mind when sickness does hit. He cites a Mayo Clinic review of hundreds of studies in which a clear pattern emerged: “people who regularly took part in religious activities were objectively healthier.”

Even more evidence has been provided by Miller through her work on MRI scans. “The high-spiritual brain was healthier and more robust than the low-spiritual brain,” she writes

“For spiritually aware people across faith traditions, the brain appeared able to protect itself from the long-standing neurological structures of depression.”

In what Miller calls our “achieving awareness,” we’re focused on organizing our lives, thinking about what we want and how to get it. This is how we build careers and get things done. But a life solely defined by achieving is an unbalanced life. In our spiritual or “awakened awareness,” our perception expands. We see ourselves not just as individual achievers but as connected to others. We seek and experience meaning and purpose. This is really the distinction between Maslow’s self-actualization and self-transcendence.

In today’s culture, many see therapy as the only answer to the mental and emotional struggles of modern life.

As psychiatrist Dr. Samantha Boardman writes: “I am not anti-therapy. I am anti-therapy culture. I believe therapy works best when it is targeted and purposeful.” She is echoed by Dr. Richard Friedman, a psychiatrist at Weill Cornell Medicine, who wrote that “excessive self-focus… can increase your anxiety, especially when it substitutes for tangible actions.” Excessive self-focus is exactly the sort of thing that can be mitigated in spiritual experiences connecting to something larger than ourselves.
The everyday behaviors Boardman cites that improve our mental well-being include practicing spirituality, spending time in nature, volunteering, and helping others.

A spiritual element, and an emphasis on helping others, have proven essential to the success of Alcoholics Anonymous. In co-founder Bill Wilson’s book, Alcoholics Anonymous, published in 1939, he wrote that “deep down in every man, woman, and child, is the fundamental idea of God. It may be obscured by calamity, by pomp, by worship of other things, but in some form or other it is there.”

Today, many people are hungry for a sense of spirituality. While religious affiliation has been dropping for decades, the spiritual impulse hasn’t. A recent U.S. Gallup poll found that 82% consider themselves religious, spiritual, or both.

People have had valid reasons for leaving organized religion, but when we reject our innate predisposition for spirituality along with that, we deny ourselves the full, expansive possibilities of our humanity—as well as the tools to navigate the labyrinths of our lives.

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Saturday, August 02, 2025

Donald Trump and maga Republicans big ugly tax cuts for the rich are causing at least a dozen hospital closures

Echo report by Alan Condon, published in Becker's Hospital Review:
(Maine Writer opinion:  Although some of the hospitals in this report were operating on the edge of bankruptcy for a long time, the budget projections caused by cuts to Medicaid accelerated the inevitable.  The big problem is, some of these hospitals could have endured for a while, but the fiscal projections, given the reality of the reimbursement cuts, hastened their closure decisions.)
A growing number of health systems across the U.S. are making the difficult decision to close hospitals, driven by unsustainable financial pressures, declining patient volumes and widespread reimbursement challenges.

Below are 12 health systems that have closed or announced plans to close hospitals this year, with some pivoting to outpatient care, others consolidating services and many citing the economic realities that make traditional acute care models increasingly unviable:

1. St. Luke’s Des Peres Hospital in St. Louis closed Aug. 1. The hospital cited low patient volumes and mounting financial challenges that make it unsustainable to continue operating St. Luke’s as an acute care facility. St. Luke’s Medical Group practices in the Des Peres medical office buildings will remain open.

2. Rockford, Ill.-based Javon Bea Hospital-Rockton closed after Mercyhealth filed a “temporary suspension of services” with the state, a spokesperson for the health system confirmed to Becker’s. The hospital building closed at 6 a.m. on July 1, according to NBC affiliate WREX.com. The physician clinic adjacent to the hospital campus will remain open.

3. Heritage Valley Health System closed Heritage Valley Kennedy Hospital in Kennedy Township, Pa., on June 30, citing declining patient volumes and reduced reimbursement rates. The health system acquired the hospital in 2019. Following the closure, emergency care, outpatient surgery, and diagnostic services were redirected to the health system’s two other hospital locations in Sewickley and Beaver, Pa.

4. Waterville, Maine-based Northern Light Inland Hospital closed on May 27, marking the end of operations for the facility that has been gradually winding down since the closure was announced earlier this year. Northern Light Health’s decision to close the hospital was made due to “immense pressure of higher operational costs, unsustainably low reimbursement rates and a tight labor market,” the health system said in a news release shared with Becker’s.

5. Moulton, Ala.-based Lawrence Medical Center, an affiliate of Huntsville Hospital Health System, permanently closed its emergency department on May 23. The 98-bed hospital stopped providing inpatient services earlier this year and had been operating as a freestanding emergency department. The closure is part of a strategic shift to convert the hospital into an outpatient-only facility. The move comes ahead of a 40-year lease agreement that will give Huntsville Hospital Health full operational and financial control of Lawrence Medical Center. The longtime affiliates have operated financially independently until now.

6. Upland, Pa.-based Crozer Health wound down operations and closed its two remaining hospitals and other care facilities. The health system, which was owned and operated by Los Angeles-based Prospect Medical Systems, closed Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland on May 2. Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park, Pa., closed April 26. Nearly 2,700 employees were laid off as a result of the closures.

7. Mid Coast Medical Center Trinity (Texas) closed April 25. El Campo, Texas-based Mid Coast Health System, which operated the hospital, pointed to “significant financial challenges experienced by hundreds of rural hospitals” that have been made worse by “delays in establishing Medicare and Medicaid billing with commercial health insurance” for the closure,

8. Flint, Mich.-based Insight Health System closed Insight Hospital and Medical Center Trumbull and Hillside Rehabilitation Hospital — both in Warren, Ohio — in late March. The health system cited ongoing bankruptcy and financial disruptions from former owner Dallas-based Steward Health Care. Insight has stated its intention to reopen the hospitals, though no specific timeline has been announced.

9. Ascension St. Elizabeth in Chicago closed Feb. 17 before Ontario, Calif.-based Prime Healthcare’s acquisition of the facility and eight other Ascension hospitals in Illinois. St. Louis-based Ascension’s application to close the 40-bed hospital and transfer services to St. Mary of Nazareth Hospital in Chicago was approved in January by the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board. Prime is working with the community and other stakeholders to explore future uses for the hospital, a spokesperson for the health system told Becker’s.

10. New York City-based Mount Sinai’s Beth Israel closed on April 9. Beth Israel had already closed inpatient services and closed its emergency department as the last step in the hospital’s comprehensive closure plan, which began in February. Mount Sinai said it was spending between about $500,000 a day to maintain operations at the hospital and has lost over $1 billion over the last 10 years. Mount Sinai opened an expanded urgent care center two blocks away from Beth Israel following the closure.

11. Irving, Texas-based Christus Health shuttered Christus Santa Rosa Hospital-Medical Center in San Antonio on April 25. Christus Santa Rosa Hospital-Westover Hills opened a tower in the spring and replaced all inpatient beds occupied at Christus Santa Rosa Hospital.

12. Orlando (Fla.) Health shuttered Rockledge Hospital on April 22. Orlando Health acquired the 298-bed facility from Dallas-based Steward Health Care in October 2024 for $439 million. In late February, the health system shared plans to close the hospital due to “years of neglect” 
❓❗😞😠that left the facility unable to meet its patient care standards.

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Friday, August 01, 2025

Let's write about how we can help to change the world!

As a proud member of the Rotary club of Portland Maine, I am often asked to lead the weekly meeting' opening "thought for the day". This shared meditation moment is presented after the members stand to recite the Pledge of Alliegience. 

A recent message I delivered in my meditation was to compare the wonderful inspirational message in motivaional speaker Admiral William McRaven's "Ten wasy to change the world", with the Rotary Internaational's tenets about how the Rotarians apply his principles in the Rotarian "Four Way Test".

Admiral William McRaven who over saw the 2011 Navy Seal Ossama Bin Laden operation, is a military leader and a popular motivational speaker. Thankfully, he share the content in some of his speeches, especially when he provides us with a summary of th e ten principles to help change the world.

If any of us have heard his speech on line, you know it is worth listening too again.

I thought how his 10 principles match up with our Rotary four way test and reflect on why we are proud to be Rotarians.
First, his good advice is to begin the day with an accomplishment, even a small one and suggests “Set a positive tone for the day, begin by making your bed!”.

2. Find someone to help you….do not try to do everything alone, teamwork is essential. This principle is reflective in Rotarian five avenues of service.

3. Respect everyone- treat all individuals with dignity and consideration …as in "The four way test 'build better friendships'”.

4. Know that life isn’t fair, be prepared for unfairness and adversity.

5. Don’t be afraid to fail, learn from mistakes and keep moving forward

6. Tale calculated risks, don’t be afraid to pus boundaries and try new things.

7. Face down bullies= confront challenges and those who try to hod you back.

8 Step up when times are toughest, be resilient and preserver through difficult situations – reminds us of our humanitarian relief projects and international service, like in the Dominican Republic with our hearing, clean water and prosthetic hands aid.

9. Give people hope, inspire others and offer support especially when they are struggling, to use a quote from Pope Leo XIV, “hope is a motivator, it does not disappoint”.

10 Never, ever give up, maintain unwavering determination and commitment to your goals.

These ten principles are a great way to help us jump start our new Rotary year! We can apply Admiral McCraven’s principles to our Rotary mission of giving Service Above Self.😇

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Friday, July 11, 2025

Let's Write about the origins of folklore and fairy tales: The Brothers Gimm

From Riches to Rags to Renown by Regina Marler
Book review published in The New York Review of Books

The Brothers Grimm
Biography by Ann Schmiesing
Yale University Press

Like so many of the adventures recounted in their anthologies of fairy tales, the Grimm brothers’ journey to lasting fame might never have begun had they not suffered a striking reversal of fortune in childhood.
Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, German medievalists and linguists, had been assiduously collecting fairy tales for about three years—hunting down variants, tracking patterns of imagery and motif, shaping and to some extent taming stories for print—when the tales took their revenge on Wilhelm. On the night of July 17, 1813, he dreamed that a sorceress transformed him into a series of animals, including a horse and a white bird. “While in his own eyes he retained his human form,” Ann Schmiesing recounts in her biography, The Brothers Grimm, he could tell from the conversations of people around him whenever she had turned him into another animal. He felt fearful throughout this experience and begged the sorceress to lift the curse, protesting that he had done nothing to deserve it.

Most of us have experienced the mocking return by night of whatever preoccupies our waking hours. But although Wilhelm surely recognized overt fairy-tale elements within his dream, neither brother could have realized how closely the dream would conform to later scholarly classifications of folk narratives—classifications inspired in part by their work. Wilhelm’s sleeping mind had churned up a “Tale of Magic,” one of seven broad categories within the Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index of international folklore, a system developed over the course of the twentieth century.
(Other categories include “Religious Tales” and “Tales of the Stupid Ogre.”)

Within the broader category of magic, Wilhelm’s dream falls under a popular type designated “Supernatural or Enchanted Wife (Husband) or Other Relative,” and can be further slotted into one of two subtypes, either “Animal as Bridegroom” or “Little Brother and Little Sister.” Relevant motifs include “transformation: man to animal” and, more narrowly, “transformation by witch (sorceress).” Helpless under his tormentor’s spells, Wilhelm would probably long for “disenchantment by destroying enchanter” or, should a maiden appear, “disenchantment by kiss.” Either resolution seems better than that other common solution to unwanted metamorphosis: “disenchantment by removing skin (or covering).”

The ATU Index is an offshoot of the nineteenth-century fascination with folklore and fairy tales, and an indirect salute to the long, detailed appendixes that Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm provided in the first two editions of their Children’s and Household Tales, the books containing “Little Red Riding Hood,” “Rumpelstiltskin,” “Rapunzel,” and other stories that forever associate the Brothers Grimm with the fairy tale. These appendixes—rarely reprinted since the Grimms’ deaths—traced literary sources for previously published stories, made note of regional and international variants, discussed emerging patterns, and were “original for [the] time in approaching fairy tales from an interdisciplinary and comparative perspective,” Schmiesing writes. Readers of the first edition questioned not only the gruesomeness of some tales but the balance between the scholarly apparatus and the stories themselves: Was this book really written for children?

It is easy to imagine the Grimms lavishing attention on their preface and notes, sometimes including several tale variants—especially for “Little Snow White,” for which they found eleven versions—while their stoves went cold for lack of fuel and their candles guttered. With each revised edition (now with frontispiece!) the brothers assured themselves that this time, the print run would sell quickly and relieve their precarious finances.

Like so many of the adventures recounted in their anthologies, the brothers’ journey to lasting fame might never have begun if they had not suffered a striking reversal of fortune in childhood. Schmiesing, a professor of German and Scandinavian studies at the University of Colorado Boulder, adeptly sets this riches-to-rags-to-renown story against an evocative background of regional history and the tumultuous contemporary political scene.

Jacob, born in 1785 in Hanau in Hesse-Kassel, was the eldest child of Philipp Wilhelm Grimm, a lawyer and administrator, and his wife, Dorothea Zimmer, the daughter of a councilman in Kassel, the capital city. Wilhelm was born only a year later, followed by Carl, Ferdinand, Ludwig, and Charlotte (“Lotte”). (Of the Grimms’ nine children, three died in infancy.) In 1791 Philipp Grimm was appointed district magistrate in nearby Steinau an der Strasse and moved his growing family into the lovely half-timbered house and lands reserved for the magistrate.
For Philipp, this was a move home; he had been born in Steinau, and his father had been a Reformed (Calvinist) pastor in the church next to the palace for almost fifty years.

Although their paternal grandfather died before their births, the children were surrounded by devoted adults. Philipp’s intelligent, somewhat severe widowed sister, Charlotte Schlemmer, moved with them to help manage the farm staff and day laborers. Jacob, Charlotte’s favorite, remembered how she taught him to read by pointing out words with a needle, leaving tiny holes in the paper. Later, a private schoolmaster was hired, although his lessons bored the children. On summer walks, the young Grimms picked up insects and other natural specimens for study and display: handheld wonders in an age of collecting. Schmiesing suggests that “the lifelong appreciation of rural environs and local traditions that Jacob and Wilhelm gained in Steinau accounts in part for their idealized depictions of folk culture in their writings.” (When regiments marched through Steinau during these early years of the French Revolutionary Wars, stealing whatever they could grab, Dorothea led her children inside to watch from safety.)


Philipp Grimm’s sudden death from pneumonia when Jacob was eleven meant an expulsion from Eden: the family had to leave the magistrate’s house, with its pet ducks and chickens, its stables, fields, and household staff. Status and abundance vanished almost overnight. Jacob willingly assumed his responsibilities as eldest son—or, we can see now, his fated motif, “orphan hero”—and stayed in harness for six decades. Apart from a small annual pension arranged for Dorothea, which helped her buy the upper floor of a house, the Grimms were now dependent on gifts and whatever they could grow for themselves in a small garden north of town.

In September 1798 the children’s maternal aunt Henriette, first lady-in-waiting to the landgravine Wilhelmine Karoline, paid for Jacob and Wilhelm to move to Kassel and attend the Lyceum Fridericianum. Writing to Wilhelm, Dorothea spelled out their situation in stark terms: the family counted on the two of them for future support. The adults would not live forever. There might be no money for their younger siblings to attend high school without future contributions from their beloved eldest brothers.

Jacob and Wilhelm had always formed a pair within the family. At Steinau, they had shared a bed in their parents’ bedroom (their parents slept behind a curtain), and they shared a room at the lyceum; apart from brief separations due to Jacob’s work, they lived together their whole lives and considered their books and possessions as jointly held. Though they found the teaching at the lyceum uninspiring, the boys supplemented their six hours of daily instruction there with four or five hours of more enjoyable private tutoring, increasing their fluency in Latin and French.

In this way, they finished school in half the usual time and entered the University of Marburg to study law—Jacob first, in April 1802. Wilhelm arrived six months later and established himself as the more fun-loving, gregarious brother; Jacob was the more learned. Social rank was so restrictive in Hesse-Kassel that the Grimms did not qualify to attend university; Dorothea had to receive a special dispensation for them. Similarly, financial support was mostly awarded as a political favor, often to sons of the nobility. The Grimms received none. But true to their Calvinist roots, they regarded these hardships as character-building: “Indigence spurs diligence and work,” as Jacob put it.

Like any love story, the romance of scholarship typically relies on a quickening, whether a sudden insight, an archival discovery, or an encounter that can feel like a recognition. Goethe explored this phenomenon through the motif of the Augenblick (“eye-glance”): a transformative instant, often erotic, a kind of interruption or dilation of our subjective experience of time. Jacob Grimm’s Augenblick took place at the top of a library ladder. Having been invited to the home of his mentor, the jurist and historian Friedrich Carl von Savigny, Jacob was encouraged to climb up, the better to inspect Savigny’s impressive book collection. “My eyes then were afforded a view that they had never before beheld,” Jacob wrote. Schmiesing explains:

Far back on a shelf, Jacob spied Johann Jakob Bodmer’s collection of Minnelieder, medieval German songs whose exploration of courtly love, or minne, reflect the rise of the knightly class in secularized twelfth-century culture.

Translated and published in the late 1750s by Bodmer, a Swiss poet and critic, and his collaborator, Johann Jakob Breitinger, the Minnelieder included nearly six thousand verses by 140 poets from the Codex Manesse, which was itself a rare survival: a beautifully illustrated fourteenth-century collection of songs compiled by the Manesse family of Zurich. Bodmer’s volume, Schmiesing writes, “supplied a blueprint of sorts for Jacob and Wilhelm’s later scholarly work on literature and language.” They, too, would “preserve literature that otherwise might have been lost” and “draw attention to the beauty and richness of older forms of language.” Jacob could then understand only about half of the Middle High German text, but he was captivated.

In Bodmer’s time, as Schmiesing recounts, few German literary scholars were interested in anything but the ancients, in line with the aesthetic precepts of French neoclassicism. But the tide soon began to turn. German readers were discovering Shakespeare’s work: thrillingly lawless and sensational compared with the plays of Racine and Corneille. Thomas Percy’s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765) charmed both English and German Romantics and became an urtext of the movement. A strain of medievalism was surfacing that suggested the German past might not be all rye bread and muddy farmyards—or rather that humble places and people might also generate stories, heroes, culture. That Counter-Enlightenment notions arose after a century of French domination and eventual occupation now seems inevitable. The philosopher Isaiah Berlin captured this emotional shift in his essay “The Apotheosis of the Romantic Will”:





This sense of relative backwardness, of being an object of patronage or scorn to the French with their overweening sense of national and cultural superiority, created a sense of collective humiliation, later to turn into indignation and hostility, that sprang from wounded pride. The German reaction at first is to imitate French models, then to turn against them.

In December 1804 Savigny wrote from Paris, where he was researching medieval legal traditions for his monumental History of the Roman Law During the Middle Ages (1815–1831), and asked his young protégé to come work for him. Jacob left Marburg at age twenty, without formally completing his studies, and joined his mentor in what was then the capital of European culture. Napoleon had just been crowned emperor. Stealing a moment from his archival and textual work for Savigny, Jacob pored over the Codex Manesse in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris.

Bereft without Jacob, Wilhelm sent longing letters from Marburg. The brothers vowed never again to be parted: “If someone should want one of us to go somewhere else, the other would need to resign at once,” Jacob wrote. “We are now so accustomed to each other’s companionship that separation could distress me to death.”

Despite their intellectual curiosity and initiative—they both launched into freelance scholarly projects as soon as they left university—the Grimms’ best-known endeavor arose through serendipity.
In Marburg, Savigny had introduced the brothers to the Romantic writer Clemens Brentano, who was collaborating with the poet Achim von Arnim on a folk song collection, The Boy’s Magic Horn, published in three volumes from 1805 to 1808. (The Grimms helped with volumes two and three.) Their aims were fiercely patriotic, especially in the first volume; by the time the subsequent volumes were compiled, many German territories were under French occupation. In 1809 Brentano and Arnim asked Jacob and Wilhelm to collect folk stories for them for a new anthology. When Brentano and Arnim’s interest faltered, the brothers decided to keep collecting and publish the tales themselves—crafting, over the next two years, the first volume of the anthology that would become Children’s and Household Tales.

The brothers already had an unusually rich collection of antiquarian books that might yield tales traceable to the oral tradition.
(The term “folklore” was not coined until 1846.) They also solicited source material from friends, including Dortchen Wild, who later married Wilhelm. The brothers preferred “natural poetry” (spontaneous eruptions from the Volk) over more refined “artistic poetry,” even the many fairy tales and poems by Romantic writers. But in fact most of the Grimms’ tales came from educated young women, undermining the brothers’ “dream of the uncontaminated peasant legacy,” as Marina Warner wrote in these pages.
These tales—whether heard or read by their young contributors—often derived from French writers like Charles Perrault and Madame d’Aulnoy, who had artfully rewritten tales from the oral tradition a century earlier. Nevertheless, the brothers kept mining for the earliest, most “original” versions of tales possible, intent on uncovering and disseminating German cultural heritage at its roots.

Early copies of Children’s and Household Tales: Collected by the Brothers Grimm appeared in time for Christmas 1812, and contained eighty-five tales, including most of those familiar to later readers, such as “Hansel and Gretel” and “Aschenputtel” (“Cinderella”). As many have noted, these are not the versions popularized by Disney, which tend to favor Perrault’s elegant, playful treatments. In the Grimms’ “Cinderella,” for example, the stepsisters mutilate their feet to fit into the glass slipper, and at the end their eyes are pecked out by doves—two details not to be found in the 1950 Disney film. The darker and more punitive Grimm versions spread steadily throughout Europe and America but were often bowdlerized for children; their influence eventually diffused through Victorian writers, including Ruskin and Dickens, both of whom could have echoed the reverence of Friedrich Schiller: “Deeper meaning resides in the fairy tales told to me in my childhood than in the truth that is taught by life.”

The Grimms aimed for untouched transmission from the oral storyteller to readers young and old. “No circumstance has been poeticized, beautified, or altered,” they claimed in their preface. “In this respect, no such collection has previously existed in Germany, for one has almost always used fairy tales as material from which to form larger stories.” In this way, authors of literary fairy tales had “grabbed what belonged to children out of their hands, giving them nothing in return.”

The impulse to capture traces of “authentic” culture before it was diluted or corrupted by industrialization and foreign influence can be seen across Northern Europe and Britain in this period, from Johann Gottfried von Herder’s collections of folk songs in the 1770s to the young Walter Scott’s tramps through the border country in search of ballads for Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802). When, in their research for the second volume (published in 1815), the Grimms located an actual “peasant” storyteller, Dorothea Viehmann, an impoverished older woman whose father had been a tavern owner, their joy was palpable. Here, finally, was a source they were delighted to disclose.

The Grimms published almost half of the forty oral tales Viehmann provided, including “The Goose Girl” and “Hans My Hedgehog,” and commissioned their brother Ludwig to make an engraving of her for the book. Characteristically, they exaggerated Viehmann’s simplicity, not disclosing that she wrote and spoke French, for example. But she was a vital part of the Grimms’ mythos. “With her sharp gaze and seemingly magical ability to recount tales with unfailing precision and fidelity,” Schmiesing remarks, “Viehmann thus emerges almost as a fairy godmother who enabled the Grimms to succeed in their quest to enhance their collection.”
Cinderella by the Brothers Grimm: It is believed that the first time the story was told, it involved a Greek slave girl who married an Egyptian king. The story evolved with time and its first European version was published in 1634.

What set the Grimms apart was not only their seeming authenticity but their vibrant storytelling, which often involved the kind of editorial interference they deplored in others. Children’s and Household Tales was issued in seven complete and ten abridged editions over the course of their lifetimes and grew to include over two hundred tales. The brothers—Wilhelm especially—were avid revisers, always looking for ways to increase sales appeal (the books sold slowly) and improve the stories. Schmiesing adroitly summarizes the ways the tales evolved through subsequent editions, growing more visually descriptive but also more moralistic and Christian, and increasingly reflecting conventional bourgeois values. Evildoers suffer more severely for their crimes. Gender norms grow more rigid. Even in the first edition, “female characters are typically rewarded for piety, obedience, and self-sacrifice, whereas male characters are rewarded for their cheekiness, subterfuge, and risk-taking”—but by the second edition of 1819, female characters are markedly less vocal and independent.

For over four decades, their work on the fairy-tale collection continued alongside the Grimms’ day jobs (mostly in libraries) and their many other projects. The brothers’ first books—Jacob’s On the Old German Meistergesang and Wilhelm’s Old Danish Heroic Songs, Ballads, and Tales—were both published in 1811, while they were collecting and editing fairy tales. Their joint prose translation of the Lay of Hildebrand and the Wessobrunn Prayer, early poems in Old High German, appeared in 1812, the same year as Children’s and Household Tales.

They maintained this grueling pace throughout their writing lives, culminating in Jacob’s greatest philological accomplishment, his German Grammar (1819–1837)—in which he formulated Grimm’s law on Germanic consonant shifts—and the brothers’ other major collaboration, their German Dictionary, begun in 1838 and completed by others over a century later. Even the most prolific scholars today may feel like slugs by comparison. The brothers crowned their scholarly achievements with a sacrificial act of conscience: protesting the new king of Hanover’s annulment of the constitution in 1837. They lost their jobs at the University of Göttingen, and Jacob was exiled.

Although aspects of the brothers’ legend have become familiar—especially through the lively, persuasive writings of Jack Zipes—Schmiesing’s book is the first full-length English-language biography of the Grimms in fifty years.
She grapples skillfully with the big bad wolves of recent Grimm scholarship: the gender stereotypes in the tales, the Grimms’ antisemitism, and their romantic nationalism, which so easily shades into German chauvinism. The Nazis used German folktales and fairy tales as propaganda, stressing racial interpretations; they stipulated their use in the public school curriculum and in the Reich Bride Schools.

But as Zipes and others have argued, fairy tales are a dynamic genre that can also be used to undermine oppressive forces. The unabridged Grimm versions came into vogue later in the twentieth century, inspiring Angela Carter’s macabre fairy tales that lay bare the patriarchy, among thousands of other adaptations and echoes.

Rudolf Steiner, who was deeply moved by Goethe’s fairy tale “The Green Snake and the Beautiful Lily” (1795), made the oral recital of fairy tales and fables foundational to Waldorf teaching. An Internet search turns up many Waldorf-related blogs offering advice on how to tell fairy tales to young children without terrifying them. The Grimms’ influence is pervasive; fairy-tale metaphors inescapable. Whether our parents told us the fairy tales from infancy or not, we are all grown to some extent in the black soil of the German forest.


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Wednesday, July 02, 2025

Lets Write about the beautiful trees on the campus of Bowdoin College in Brunswick Maine

Leaf It to Bowdoin: Explore Campus Trees with a New Guide 

Beautiful walking paths are adorned with an arboretum exhibit on the campus of Bowdoin College.

Published in Bowdoin News by Rebecca Goldfine

Kentucky Coffee Tree leaves
 Campus arborist's favorites (spoiler: the Kentucky coffee tree and the paperbark maple, plus others.)


(Check out the Bowdoin Tree Tour link😊❗)

Bowdoin has 1,559 trees on its main campus, made up of more than 115 species, including 65 native ones. The tallest is a white pine, at 114 feet. The widest is a 156-inch northern red oak.

These statistics are a sample of the information offered in the Sustainability Office's new online Bowdoin Tree Tour, which aims to acquaint people with the campus's most statuesque denizens.

The Bowdoin Tree Tour is an outgrowth of a 2023 survey, first worked on by Dylan Petrillo ’26 for a unique summer job. He mapped out more than 1,000 trees between Bath Road, Park Row, Sills Drive, College Street, and South Street, recording their species, diameter, height, and health.

Though originally conducted as a means to monitor the conditions of trees, Director of Sustainability Keisha Payson and her student team decided campus visitors might also appreciate the information in the study.
Bowdoin College Campus
To turn the findings into a usable product, Petrillo and Julia Kate “JK” Bradley ’25 crafted an ArcGis Storymap from Petrillo's data. They also did additional research, anticipating what people might want to know, such as which trees are among the campus arborist's favorites (spoiler: the Kentucky coffee tree and the paperbark maple, plus others.)

The Tree Tour also introduces Bowdoin's tree crew, lays out the College's tree care and pest management plan, and explains Bowdoin's status as a Tree Campus USA. It names a few classes that study trees, offers details about the historic Bowdoin Pines, and includes photos and information about Bowdoin's maple syrup production.

The project supports one of Payson's communications objectives. “We want people to know there’s intentionality around the trees on campus and the care that goes into them,” she said. “And we want people to know how much we appreciate them.”

“They are part of what makes our campus beautiful,” she added. ”And for the curious who might have questions, there is now a resource for people to learn about them.”


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