I am returned from New York City, where I ran last night after class and where I spent about two hours waiting in Penn Station this afternoon. (People who live in New York City, do not hunt me down and kill me for not calling you: I didn't even see the one NYC resident that I automatically call whenever I'm even in the state.) My mother couldn't get away, but my father and brother took the train down from Boston yesterday and we all met up for dinner and a day of extensive museum-going. To wit, a good six hours at the Museum of Natural History, where I photographed all of the dioramas I love best and we saw the traveling exhibit on Charles Darwin. That was worth the whole trip, if for no other reason than that I'd never thought about Darwin's personal life—all the photographs I'd ever seen of the man were late in life, where he has the stately white beard and looks like an odd patriarch; a holy father of science. But there was a marvelous picture of him with his oldest child, where he looks every bit the Dickensian clerk, Bob Cratchit with one of the children (and Darwin had ten). It doesn't reproduce very well online, but still—

As the exhibit caption helpfully reads, "Above is the only known daguerreotype of Darwin with a family member. Done in 1842, it shows Darwin with his first son, William."
There's a man I can picture wandering around obsessing over orchids and pigeons. Someone also really needs to write a book or a screenplay about Darwin and his wife, because that fascinated me: not only all the romantic misadventure of their courtship, but what could it have been like to live with someone whose basic modes of thinking are so alien, no matter how much you love them, to yours? When you believe that the resurrection and the life to come are as real and unarguable as the earth underfoot, and your husband looks at that earth and sees geologic time, not the fingerprints of God; when your life runs on faith and his on scientific scrutiny? It's not an issue that's disappeared with the nineteenth century, either. I am not built for biography, but I'd love to read someone else's take on their lives.
I'd have liked some time at the Metropolitan Museum of Art as well, for my classical art fix, but we had to catch trains back: and there our luck deserted us, because the regional back to New Haven was fifty minutes late and the Acela to Boston broke down somewhere around Route 128 (although we did all make it back to our respective homes in the end). But I did arrive home to discovered that my ordered DVD of The Cuckoo had come in, so I plan to celebrate this weekend with crazy film in languages I don't speak.
I won't be able to afford another spur-of-the-moment trip like this for months, in terms of time and academia. But this was lovely. And my brother had better send me all those photographs.

As the exhibit caption helpfully reads, "Above is the only known daguerreotype of Darwin with a family member. Done in 1842, it shows Darwin with his first son, William."
There's a man I can picture wandering around obsessing over orchids and pigeons. Someone also really needs to write a book or a screenplay about Darwin and his wife, because that fascinated me: not only all the romantic misadventure of their courtship, but what could it have been like to live with someone whose basic modes of thinking are so alien, no matter how much you love them, to yours? When you believe that the resurrection and the life to come are as real and unarguable as the earth underfoot, and your husband looks at that earth and sees geologic time, not the fingerprints of God; when your life runs on faith and his on scientific scrutiny? It's not an issue that's disappeared with the nineteenth century, either. I am not built for biography, but I'd love to read someone else's take on their lives.
I'd have liked some time at the Metropolitan Museum of Art as well, for my classical art fix, but we had to catch trains back: and there our luck deserted us, because the regional back to New Haven was fifty minutes late and the Acela to Boston broke down somewhere around Route 128 (although we did all make it back to our respective homes in the end). But I did arrive home to discovered that my ordered DVD of The Cuckoo had come in, so I plan to celebrate this weekend with crazy film in languages I don't speak.
I won't be able to afford another spur-of-the-moment trip like this for months, in terms of time and academia. But this was lovely. And my brother had better send me all those photographs.