Saturday, February 14, 2026
Bobby Clerihew
Saturday, February 7, 2026
Franciscan Political Discourse
To all podestà s, and consuls, judges and governors, in whatever part of the world, and to all others to whom this letter may come, Brother Francis, your little and contemptible servant, wishes health and peace to you.
Consider and see that the day of death draws nigh. I ask you, therefore, with such reverence as I can, not to forget the Lord on account of the cares and solicitudes of this world and not to turn aside from His commandments, for all those who forget Him and decline from His commandments are cursed and they shall be forgotten by Him. And when the day of death comes, all that which they think they have shall be taken away from them. And the wiser and more powerful they may have been in this world, so much the greater torments shall they endure in hell.
Wherefore, I strongly advise you, my lords, to put aside all care and solicitude and to receive readily the most holy Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ in holy commemoration of Him. And cause so great honor to be rendered the Lord by the people committed to you, that every evening it may be announced by a crier or by another sign to the end that praises and thanks shall resound to the Lord God Almighty from all the people. And if you do not do this, know that you are beholden to render an account before your Lord God Jesus Christ on the day of Judgment. Let those who keep this writing with them and observe it know that they are blessed by the Lord God.
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Getting Back on the Folk Stage!
March 31 I will be performing at the local Folksinging Society’s Members’ Showcase Concert. The concert will consist of three acts or performers, each getting 25-30 minutes.
I have regularly played at church and for my Fraternity, but I have not performed for an audience in a folk-type setting in more than 25 years!
The coordinator of the concert asked for a picture and a bio. Here’s what I sent him:

I discovered folk music through Pete Seeger, Bob Dylan, Arlo Guthrie, and Simon and Garfunkel. I was especially inspired by Seeger’s joyful performing, social concern, and sense of humor.
I performed sporadically in coffee houses and at festivals in the 1970’s and 1980’s. In addition, two friends requested that I provide the music for their garden wedding: They wanted all Dylan tunes. And I was even part of the community choir for a Peter, Paul & Mary Holiday Concert at the Eastman Theatre in the late 1980’s. But by the 1990’s I had shifted my focus to being a children’s performer and acting with local community theater groups. I blended the two to become a professional Santa, something I continue to do. My only regular singing and playing since the 1990’s has been church-related.
But being involved with (this group), and seeing friends perform, has inspired me to return to the stage to play folk music again.
I’ve selected the following songs for my set:
I’m Gonna Live ‘til the Day I Die (original)
Bottle of Wine (Tom Paxton)
Tie Me Kangaroo Down Sport (Rolf Harris)
I Am Going Home (original)
Oh Sinner Man (traditional)
There’s a Great Big Monster Under My Bed (original)
Walking Down the Line (Bob Dylan)
Get Up and Go (Pete Seeger)
Of the original songs, “Gonna Live” was an upbeat tune I wrote 40 or more years ago. The message is that no matter what happens we should live fully up until the end. Of the named “people” in the Song, Hank Scudder, the farmer, was based on a garage in my home town; Seamus Ferlie, the bad singer, was my pet cat (the fiddle reference was a joke, as fiddles were supposedly strung with catgut); Mollie, the victim of a stroke, was my wife’s dog.
“I Am Going Home” was written two years ago in response after hearing a song about a guy deserting his woman, leaving her the house, and not caring if she’s grieving. I didn’t like that message, so I wrote a song about a man who looks forward to going home.
The “Monster” song was one I wrote during my days as a children’s performer back in the 1990’s. The monster turns out to be friendly, enjoying catch, tic-tac-toe, and telling jokes. It went with a story about overcoming childhood fear of monsters.
The Paxton song is one I always liked. “Tie Me Kangaroo Down Sport” was a novelty hit when I was 8; it was the first song on the radio that caught my attention. I had grown up in a family where my mother was hearing impaired and my father was tone deaf, so there was little music in our home. I date my interest in music to hearing that song.
“Oh Sinner Man” is my own arrangement of a traditional song I first heard Peter, Paul, and Mary perform. “Walking Down the Line” is an odd little Bob Dylan tune I discovered through Arlo Guthrie’s cover of it. And “Get Up and Go” is a Pete Seeger tune I always liked, and, given my gray hair and aching joints, is appropriate for me!
I used to play out back in the 1970’s and 1980’s. But I was always self conscious about my voice and my playing, and I didn’t like the idea of trying to tour. Then a woman I was with in those days told me I was not good enough. Her remark fed into my own doubts, and so I stopped playing out.
In the 1990’s I did become a children’s performer - stories and songs - in part because I felt more comfortable about children, who I felt were less demanding. I could be silly with them, and I didn’t have to be perfect. But as I became more involved with theater and playing/singing in church, and when I returned to teaching and so my schedule was less flexible, I stopped doing that.
Then I attended a members’ concert in December that featured three friends. One of them suggested I give it a try. I decided it was time to get back on stage.
I plan to suggest friends bring ear plugs, though!
Thursday, January 29, 2026
About Alex Pretti
Monday, January 26, 2026
Tom Bombadil
Tom Bombadil was one of my favorite characters in The Lord of the Rings. I was sorry when he got left out of the movies, though I understand why they chose to given the length of the movies.
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Okay In Small Doses
Years ago, I came across a selected collection of poetry by Stevie Smith. I enjoyed her quirky style, literary allusions, and dark humor. I felt as if I’d found a kindred spirit.
The dark humor, religious confusion, and obsession with death began to wear on me. I read a brief biography of her and found that she was indeed a troubled soul who dealt with illness and depression, and who even suffered a nervous breakdown. The shadows apparently continued to haunt her until the end of her life in 1971.
It’s not surprising that Sylvia Plath, who tragically committed suicide, apparently appreciated Smith’s poetry.
The darkness of some of her poetry began to cast a pall on my spirit. I too have struggled in the past with depression. I too have had struggles with faith. I learned that there are certain things and people I have to avoid, or with which I have to limit my contact. So I avoided reading more of her until recently.
I just finished another collection of hers, The Frog Prince and Other Poems. More of the same. Poems I enjoyed. Other poems that had me sadly shaking my head. One of the last poems was “Why do I …
Why do I think of Death as a friend?
It is because he is a scatterer
He scatters the human frame
The nerviness and the great pain
Throws it on the fresh fresh air
And now it is nowhere
Only sweet Death does this
Sweet Death, kind Death,
Of all the gods you are best.
Yes, I do have a dark and quirky sense of humor. I also think about death. But I also now have a much stronger faith that helps me to see and appreciate all the beauty in the world, and that views death as simply a step on the path to eternal life, not as an escape.
After finishing Smith’s book, I scribbled a clerihew - admittedly not a great one, but one that expresses my reactions.
Stevie Smith
left us with,
even long after her final breath,
poem after poem filled with dark humor and death.
I think I need to pray for her soul. I hope she is at peace.
I also think I need to read a writer who nourishes my soul. A little J.R. R. Tolkien perhaps!
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
The Man Who Saved the Union: Ulysses Grant In War And Peace by H. W. Brands
I just finished The Man Who Saved the Union: Ulysses Grant In War And Peace by H. W. Brands. It is the first book of the year, and it is also fulfills one of my reading goals - a secular biography.