Just the green wave going by
"Does anyone still celebrate International Talk Like a Pirate Day?" I wondered, before it occurred to me that I could just ask the internet and discover the answer was yes. In keeping with my haphazard observance of the holiday, have an admiring gifset of Robert Newton heroically impersonating a wrecker in Jamaica Inn (1939) and Gordon Bok, Ann Mayo Muir, and Ed Trickett on "Soon May the Wellerman Come," which is neither a pirate song nor even a chantey, it's a tall tale of a shore-whalers' song from New Zealand, but I was immensely entertained when it took the quarantine internet by storm. I was listening to it along with the rest of its album last week.
I dreamed of a polite conversation with a stranger who was surprised in a slightly skeptical way to hear that I had been writing and publishing short fiction and poetry for more than twenty years, which I suppose suggests my state of mind regarding what no longer feels like it passes for my writing career. I am reminding myself that I have some sort of (multiply tested as such) miserable cold and may be concomitantly low in spirits and should take a walk or something while it's this autumnally bright. I bet it isn't helping that my college reunion for which I did not RSVP because I was too sick to know whether I had any chance of attending is coming up.
I dreamed of a polite conversation with a stranger who was surprised in a slightly skeptical way to hear that I had been writing and publishing short fiction and poetry for more than twenty years, which I suppose suggests my state of mind regarding what no longer feels like it passes for my writing career. I am reminding myself that I have some sort of (multiply tested as such) miserable cold and may be concomitantly low in spirits and should take a walk or something while it's this autumnally bright. I bet it isn't helping that my college reunion for which I did not RSVP because I was too sick to know whether I had any chance of attending is coming up.

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Thank you for reminding me of "Soon May the Wellerman Come." MY HEART, we do find joy in the darkest times.
When I first joined the internet, one of the earliest things I felt was awe for this person named Sonya Taaffe. That feeling is alive and strong. (You can borrow it if your own strength is flagging.)
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Oh, I'm glad to hear it. Well done, that library.
Thank you for reminding me of "Soon May the Wellerman Come." MY HEART, we do find joy in the darkest times.
You're welcome. I loved that people were singing old songs together.
When I first joined the internet, one of the earliest things I felt was awe for this person named Sonya Taaffe. That feeling is alive and strong. (You can borrow it if your own strength is flagging.)
I may need to. Thank you.
*hugs*
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*sends healthiness-energy against your miserable cold*
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I'm delighted to hear it!
*hugs*
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I am sorry you have a cold!
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I really appreciate this image.
I am sorry you have a cold!
Thank you! I'm working on losing it as fast as possible!
Bok Muir Trickett
Be careful with your cold. Arthur had what seemed to be a cold and has turned out to be "walking" pneumonia.
Re: Bok Muir Trickett
I am afraid they are no longer all alive; Ed Trickett died last year. Ann Mayo Muir and Gordon Bok are still around, which I am glad of. I grew up on his records. My parents used to put on Peter Kagan and the Wind (1971) for me to fall asleep to, but I would always stay awake to hear the end of the story.
Be careful with your cold. Arthur had what seemed to be a cold and has turned out to be "walking" pneumonia.
Thanks for the warning; also, blech. How is he doing?
Arthur
Re: Arthur
Tell him I wish him well.
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I'm pleased and fascinated that Talk Like a Pirate Day is still going on. It feels like a relic of a different internet era.
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Thank you!
I'm pleased and fascinated that Talk Like a Pirate Day is still going on. It feels like a relic of a different internet era.
It really does. I would have been saddened, but not surprised, to find it had died out over the last few years, but I'm delighted it hasn't.
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As well you should be!
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I cannot let mention of Robert Newton and Talk Like a Pirate Day go by without mentioning my very favorite screen adaptation of Treasure Island, from 1990. It has, of all people, Charlton Heston as Long John Silver, and he is *brilliant*.
"Talking like a pirate" is almost entirely talking like Stevenson's Long John Silver. Like Hamlet, the character suffers from having his dialogue so imitated that the original is now effectively "made of cliches". This particular adaptation is very faithful, so Heston has to overcome that problem. Astonishingly, he *does*, and his delivery is perfectly naturalistic.
The film has many other fine virtues (Oliver Reed! Christopher Lee! The Chieftains!), and I recommend it wholeheartedly.
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You have mentioned it to me before, but I am glad it still holds up! I am willing to believe Heston as Long John Silver; the two most interesting performances I've seen from him were amoral. (He is in fact so much fun as an unprincipled charmer of a proto-Indiana Jones in Secret of the Incas (1954) that I can't believe no one else ever capitalized on his talent for rogues rather than pillars of rectitude, except I guess this production.)
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It's a good insight. I would enjoy that.
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That's adorable!
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I also found this non-piratical Robert Newton fancam somebody made: https://www.tumblr.com/thekingofhell/704398549195128832/this-forever-lives-rent-free-in-my-head?source=share
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That is delightful. He even has the eyebrows for it. Should I bother asking about context?
I also found this non-piratical Robert Newton fancam somebody made
I couldn't follow the link without being signed up to Tumblr, but fortunately it played just fine on yours, which I am now extremely caught up on, and look, I get it.
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Oh, my God, I didn't know he was in Sextette, but what a moment to salvage.
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I was going to say "Everybody who already paid their dues with Skidoo," but George Raft was in that, too, wasn't he.
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OK I may actually have to watch that.