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BACK BREAKING BEAMS, RAW FISH AND SPENDING ETERNITY WITH AJAX THE SON OF TELAMON

Bill Lewis, Adam Kibbe

Mark, while you were recovering from your London trip, we worked on the Kibbe addition. From this perspective, you can see the beam that will support the sun room and its adjoining deck.The back-breaker had to be moved from the side of Adam's house (I built it on the solid surface of his asphalt path), and placed on those three supporting post. Five grunting guys carried it, and all went well until the leading carriers bent over to squeeze under the floor frame. You could just hear the cervical discs making pffttts sounds, like tiny frisbees, as they were launched into the air. After the beam was nailed in place, we stopped for lunch - a card table full of sumptuous sushi from FuGaKyu. At the end of the day - a jug of beer from John Harvard's.

Mark Queijo, Dan Downing

From Sunday's Globe:


Both of them remind me of me.

 

If you can't speak French, or have a wife who does, here's the translation.

 

After Socrates was condemned to death, he comments on his sentence.

Let us reflect in another way, and we shall see that there is great reason to hope that death is a good, for one of two things: - either death is a state of nothingness and utter unconsciousness, or, as men say, there is a change and migration of the soul from this world to another. Now if you suppose that there is no consciousness, but a sleep like the sleep of him who is undisturbed even by the sight of dreams, death will be an unspeakable gain. For if a person were to select the night in which his sleep was undisturbed even by dreams, and were to compare with this the other days and nights of his life, and then were to tell us how many days and nights he had passed in the course of his life better and more pleasantly than this one, I think that any man, I will not say a private man, but even the great king, will not find many such days or nights, when compared with the others. Now if death is like this, I say that to die is gain; for eternity is then only a single night. But if death is the journey to another place, and there, as men say, all the dead are, what good, O my friends and judges, can be greater than this? If indeed when the pilgrim arrives in the world below, he is delivered from the professors of justice in this world, and finds the true judges who are said to give judgment there, Minos and Rhadamanthus and Aeacus and Triptolemus, and other sons of God who were righteous in their own life, that pilgrimage will be worth making. What would not a man give if he might converse with Orpheus and Musaeus and Hesiod and Homer? Nay, if this be true, let me die again and again. I, too, shall have a wonderful interest in a place where I can converse with Palamedes, and Ajax the son of Telamon, and other heroes of old, who have suffered death through an unjust judgment; and there will be no small pleasure, as I think, in comparing my own sufferings with theirs. Above all, I shall be able to continue my search into true and false knowledge; as in this world, so also in that; I shall find out who is wise, and who pretends to be wise, and is not. What would not a man give, O judges, to be able to examine the leader of the great Trojan expedition; or Odysseus or Sisyphus, or numberless others, men and women too! What infinite delight would there be in conversing with them and asking them questions! For in that world they do not put a man to death for this; certainly not. For besides being happier in that world than in this, they will be immortal, if what is said is true.