Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Is Chivalry Outdated?

A quickly thrown together post on chivalry:
I came across this interesting (and somewhat maybe, disturbing) article in our Costco Connection Magazine :) Is chivalry outdated? The 'yes' proponents seem to be thinking of chivalry as men treating women like 'fragile flowers' -and that we need to kill it. (Go ahead and give it a quick read. And vote for chivalry while you're at it!)

Chivalrous: having the high qualities characteristic of chivalry, such as courage, courtesy, generosity, loyalty, etc. (American College Encyclopedic Dictionary)

(See this article: 
Chivalry Is Out Of Style)

C.S. Lewis:
The word chivalry has meant at different times a good many different things-from heavy cavalry to giving a woman a seat in a train. But if we want to understand chivalry as an ideal distinct from other ideals – if we want to isolate that particular conception of the man comme il faut which was the special contribution of the Middle Ages to our culture- we cannot do better than turn to the words addressed to the greatest of all imaginary knights in Malory’s Morte Daurthur. “Thou wert the meekest man”, says Sir Ector to the dead Launcelot. “Thou wert the meekest man that ever ate in hall among ladies; and thou wert the sternest knight to thy mortal foe that ever put spear in the rest.”
The important thing about this ideal is, of course, the double demand it makes on human nature. The knight is a man of blood and iron, a man familiar with the sight of smashed faces and ragged stumps of lopped-off limbs; he is also a demure, almost a maidenlike, guest in hall, a gentle, modest, unobtrusive man. He is not a compromise or happy mean between ferocity and meekness; he is fierce to the nth and meek to the nth. When Launcelot heard himself pronounced the best knight in the world, “he wept as he had been a child that had been beaten.”  The Necessity of Chivalry, in Present Concerns: Essays by C.S. Lewis, edited by Walter Hooper, page 13.

I, for one am for chivalry-(the right kind!)  what do you think?

xxx madison


Monday, January 13, 2014

amateur poetry on a windy day


Jesus my love and my glory, my hope-
My Unblemished Lamb and my Scarlett Rope
My Companion unseen, to my Captain I'm sworn
His scepter to receive, His crown will adorn 

Forever He's loved me, though I be untrue 
I vowed Him my service; my heart resists to do
Forever the faithful, loyal, and steadfast 
Teach my wicked heart to cleave to You at last!



love to you this windy january day!
xxx madison 

Saturday, January 4, 2014

what I read in 2013

so here's my 2014 post- what I read in 2013
* required for school
(audiobook)

1. Narnia (can't remember which!) - C. S. Lewis 
2. The Thunder (a novel on John Knox!) - Douglas Bond 
3. The Faith and Freedom Trilogy - "
     (4,5)
6. When a Nation Forgets God- Erwin Lutzer
*7. Stop Loving The World- William Greenhill
8. Eight Cousins- Loisa May Alcott
9. Letters to Children - C. S. Lewis
10. Hand of Vengeance- Douglas Bond
11. The Betrayal- "
12. Hostage Lands- " 
13. Ishmael- EDEN Southworth
14. Self-Raised- "
15. North and South- Elizabeth Gaskell
16. One Thing I Desire- Sarah Bryant
17. So Much More- A & E Botkin
*18. Passionate Housewives Desperate for God- Chancey & McDonald
*19. Eats, Shoots and Leaves- Lynn Truss
20. Talk to the Hand- "
21. A Cup of Cold Water- Farenhost
22. Wings Like a Dove- "
23. (Reflections on the Psalms- C.S. Lewis)
24. (Sherlock Holmes- A. Conan-Doyle)
25. A Study in Scarlett- "
26. Escape from Slave Traders (?) 
27. The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe- Lewis 
28. The Hobbit- J.R.R. Tolkien
*29. The Bible and the Future- Hoekema
30. The Impossible Journey- Gloria Whelan
31. The Toothpaste Millionaire
32. The Minstrel in the Tower 
33. The Last Little Cat (31-33 are kids books :)
*34. On Writing Well- William Zinsser
35. My Sergei- Ekaterina Gordeeva
36. Bell Mountain- Lee Duigon
37. Beyond the Summerland- L.B. Graham (if you like LoTR you will love this! Read!)
*38. Seven Men Who Rule the World from the Grave- Dave Reese
39. The Hidden Hand- EDEN Southworth 


so, that's not too bad- I wanted to get at least 40 though- maybe I can get to 50 this year? we'll see! what have you read this year? have you read any of those books? 
happy new year dear friends! thanks for taking the time to read my humble (and quite infrequent) little posts!
much love to all of you!
xxx madi