Thursday, February 05, 2026

You Must Needs Be Straingers


This is a monologue from the play "Sir Thomas More" (c1591-93, Act 2Scene 455-123), set during the 'Ill May Day' of 1517, attributed to William Shakespeare, and performed by Sir Ian McKellen. A transcription of the handwritten text follows:
graunt them remoued and graunt that this yor noyce
hath Chidd downe all the matie of Ingland
ymagin that you see the wretched straingers
their babyes at their backs, and their poor lugage
plodding tooth ports and costs for transportacion
and that you sytt as kings in your desyres
aucthoryty quyte sylenct by yor braule
and you in ruff of yor opynions clothd
what had you gott, I'le tell you, you had taught
how insolenc and strong hand shoold prevayle
how ordere shoold be quelld, and by this patterne
not on of you shoold lyve an aged man
for other ruffians as their fancies wrought
with sealf same hand sealf reasons and sealf right
woold shark on you and men lyke ravenous fishes
woold feed on on another

youle put downe straingers
kill them cutt their throts possesse their howses

o desperat as you are.
wash your foule mynds wt teares and those same hands
that you lyke rebells lyft against the peace
lift vp for peace, and your vnreuerent knees
make them your feet to kneele to be forgyven

say nowe the king
as he is clement, yf thoffendor moorne
shoold so much com to short of your great trespas
as but to banysh you, whether woold you go.
what Country by the nature of yor error
shoold gyve you harber go you to ffraunc or flanders
to any Iarman province, spane or portigall
nay any where that not adheres to Ingland
why you must needs be straingers. woold you be pleasd
to find a nation of such barbarous temper
that breaking out in hiddious violence
woold not afoord you, an abode on earth
whett their detested knyves against yor throtes
spurne you lyke doggs, and lyke as yf that god
owed not nor made not you, nor that the elaments
wer not all appropriat to yor Comforts.
but Charterd vnto them, what woold you thinck
to be thus vsd, this is the straingers case
and this your momtanish inhumanyty

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Streets of Minneapolis


Through the winter’s ice and cold
Down Nicollet Avenue
A city aflame fought fire and ice
‘Neath an occupier’s boots
King Trump’s private army from the DHS
Guns belted to their coats
Came to Minneapolis to enforce the law
Or so their story goes
Against smoke and rubber bullets
By the dawn’s early light
Citizens stood for justice
Their voices ringing through the night
And there were bloody footprints
Where mercy should have stood
And two dead left to die on snow-filled streets
Alex Pretti and Renee Good

Monday, January 26, 2026

Nicollet Ave and 26th St


On January 24th, Alex Pretti was shot dead by a CBP officer in Minneapolis. As the video shows and as the CNN breakdown (YouTube, 0:00-3:51) and The Daily Podcast explain:

As with Renée GoodDHS officials have lied about and exaggerated the threat that Pretti posed. Witnesses, family, friends, and neighbors describe Pretti as the best kind of American. It's unbelievable that DHS's premature official statements could ever apply to him.

Two weeks ago, they killed a poet and mother, and now they've killed a VA ICU nurse who was dedicated to helping others – 'VA ICU nurse': all three parts of that job title are inspiring. Without a hint of accountability and acting as a secret police force, DHS has murdered and defamed two honorable citizens.

There's something happening here
What it is ain't exactly clear
There's a man with a gun over there
Telling me I got to beware

I think it's time we stop
Children, what's that sound?
Everybody look what's going down
(Stephen StillsThe Buffalo Springfield, "For What It's Worth", Springalo-Cotillion, 1966)

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Kent State to Portland Avenue


On January 7th, Renée Good was shot dead by an ICE agent in Minneapolis. This CNN composite is one the best reconstructions of the incident. Consider:
  • Good is not blocking the road, traffic is passing her; she motions for a car on her left to pass as she pulls slightly forward, and it drives in front of her before a silver truck approaches from the same side – Good also motions for that truck to "Go ahead,", but it stops.
  • The federal agent who eventually shoots Good pulls behind her and stops his vehicle on Good's right, so there was room on both sides of the street for traffic to pass.
  • Neither vehicle is marked; the masked officers are not wearing uniforms, only tactical gear with some identifying patches.
  • The two agents who approach from the left do not identify themselves, do not state a reason for their approach, are given no cause to open Good's door; the only instruction heard is, "Get out of the fucking car!" – not, for example, 'Please move your vehicle.'
  • White House and DHS officials have claimed that the shooter was struck by Good's vehicle, though there is no clear video evidence, and at no point does the officer react in pain (grab his knee or elbow, double-over, call out, limp, etc) – in fact, the officer walks towards Good's crashed vehicle muttering, "Fucking bitch," stops briefly beside the car, then briskly walks away with no sign of injury.
  • A bystander identifying himself as a physician and offering to provide medical care is denied access; local witnesses report that no medical aid was given to Good for approximately fifteen minutes.
  • The shooter, who was filming the incident with his phone, put his phone away and did not seem to call for help; he tells others to call 911 after he has already retreating down the street, offering no assistance, and soon left the site.
This is the ninth shooting incident since ICE was 'surged' by the Trump Administration. It's taken Trump less than a year to turn the US into a police state – five years and one day after the January 6th attack. If you disagree with the President, get ready to be harassed, bullied, denied your rights, imprisoned, renditioned, refused justice, or callously shot dead in the street. In my lifetime, we've learned nothing.
Gotta get down to it
Soldiers are cutting us down
Should have been done long ago
What if you knew her and found her dead on the ground
How can you run when you know?
(Neil Young – CSNY, "Ohio", Cotillion/Broken Arrow, 1970)

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Napoli – Cappella Sansevero

Our last hours in Napoli (pop 908,082 in 2025) and we wake to some decent weather, but the weather app says it won't last. Leaving our bags at the hotel, we return to the Piazza del Gesù Nuovo. The morning sun on the Guglia dell'Immacolata (above, Giuseppe Genoino, 17th-18th centuries) is spectacular.

We are taking the advice of the Director from our tour of Puglia – asked about sights to see, he mentioned just one place, the Cappella Sansevero (late 16th century) and its eighteenth-century sculptures. We have reserved tickets for 8:45 this morning; when we arrived, we tried to reserve tickets, but they were sold out on Monday, and the Museo is closed on Tuesdays. That leaves a window before today's flight home.

The Cappella is the mid-eighteenth century project of Raimondo di Sangro, the seventh Principe di Sansevero – a scientist, inventor, and writer. But the Cappella dates from 1590, when it was founded by Giovan Francesco di Sangro, the first Principe. Unfortunately, photography is prohibited, so all our images are from Museo Cappella Sansevero.


The Cappella is both grand and intimate, and there are dozens of live-sized statues. The space is dressed in veined, honey-colored stone and trimmed in white. There are four shallow, arched chapels on each side and an altar space at the far (north) end. The capitals resemble Corinthian and Tuscan, an unusual combination, but the architecture is secondary. The ceiling is ablaze with tromp-l'œil vaults, grisaille reliefs, and a flurry of angels. But the centerpiece is the "Cristo Velato" ('veiled Christ', 1753) by Giuseppe Sanmartino: the body of Christ under a 'transparent' sheet.

L'altare maggiore holds the "Deposizione" (Francesco Celebrano, 1762-68), a relief panel that fills the archway. Above, in an elliptical gold wreath, surrounded by angels and rays of holy light, is "La Pietatella" (unknown artist, 16th century), the 'miraculous' icon that sparked the creation of the chapel.

The other statues comprise an allegorical cycle, with dedications to various members of the Sansevero family and lineage. The first two closest to the entrance are "Amor Divino" (attr Michelangelo Naccherino, c1609-15; Francesco Queirolo, c1755) and "Decoro" (Antonio Corradini, 1751-52), a pair of male figures in shallow niches. "Amor Divino" extends a hand with the Sacred Heart, while "Decoro" is wrapped in the skin of a lion.
SIC FLORET DECORO DECUS
[thus beauty blooms with grace]
 

 

 

Many of our timed group is gathered around the "Cristo", so we hang back. We use the inital full bay to our left (west) as a 'sampler'. Under the arch is the "Monumento a Giovan Francesco di Sangro" (attr Giacomo Lazzari, early 17th century), the tomb of the first Principe di Sansevero; he wears his armor and a ruffled collar.

The Monumento is flanked by two allegorical firgures. "Liberalità" (Queirolo, 1753-54) stands on the left, with an eagle and a cornucopia of money and jewels; a portrait and dedication to Giulia Gaetani d'Aragona (wife of the 4th prince) is in the roundel above. "Zelo della Religione" (attr Fortunato Onelli & Celebrano et al, c1767) is on the right and shows a figure to the side hold a lamp while snakes slither between the pages of the books at his feet; the dedication is incorporated into the piece, with the portraits of the two wives of Giovan Francesco held by putti.


 

The next figure is "Soavità del Giogo Coniugale" ('sweetness of the marital yoke', Paolo Persico, 1768), a pregnant woman holding two hearts and a feathered 'yoke', with a putto holding a pelican chick on the base, thus symbolizing love, obedience, and sacrifice.

The last figure on the west side is "Pudicizia" ('modesty', Corradini, 1752), a thinly veiled female nude with a swag of roses. A tour de force in carving skill, the figure also holds a broken corner of a large tablet or tombstone. The work is dedicated to Cecilia Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona, Raimondo di Sangro's mother who died soon after giving birth:
Eternal peace to Cecilia Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona … celebrated for her social graces, manners, intellect, charity, devotion, and loyalty which were outstanding enough to make her know as one of the most kind and chosen women of all times. She lived to be 20 years old and died on December 26, 1710. Her son, Raimondo de Sangro Prince of Sansevero, raised this monument in honor of his unequalled mother so that she would always be remembered for her exception virtues. (Fazio Macci, "Chapel of Sansevero Museum", trans Kishori Koch, Alfa Grafica, 2016)
The text of the tablet makes room for more sculpture in the base: "Noli Me Tangere" depicts the scene of the resurrected Christ and Mary Magdalene, with a broken tree refering to the young mother's death. The work reminds us of the "Veritas" ('truth', Raffaelle Monti, 1853) at the Casa-Museu Medeiros e Almeida in Lisboa.

 


We turn from the side chapels to take a close look at the "Cristo Velato". The artistic magic lies not only in the rendering of the sheer fabric, but in the way the subject's expression comes through the cloth, and the anatomy and skeletal structure is tangible below the cloth and the skin. And it's not only the veil, but the softness of the pillows, the tensions of the bedding, the details in the darker carpet of the platform. The inclusion of the crown of thorns, pliers, and nails goes way beyond 'showing off'.

Contrasting the "Cristo Velato" with its neighbor, the "Pudicizia", connects life and death, with the subtext ("Noli Me Tangere") foretelling the Resurrection. This is Christ lying in state.

We remember the performance of "Trapassati" (Mauro Maurizio Palumbo) with the dancer creating expressions under fabric during yesterday's visit to the Chiesa del Purgatorio ad Arco (di Santa Maria delle Anime, 17th century). We are also convinced that the sculptors must have draped their models with wet sheets – in any case the results are stunning.


 

 

We complete the tour of allegorical sculptures on the eastern side. First, "Disinganno" ('disenchantment', Queirolo, 1753-54) counterpoints the "Pudicizia" on the other side of the altare, and is dedicated to Antonio di Sangro, Duca di Torremaggiore, Raimondo's father. Here, an angel works to free a man caught in a thick net, freeing his father from his grief. A relief of "Gesù che Dona la Vista al Cieco" ('Christ and the blind man') is in the base, again as a response to the "Noli Me Tangere", the miracle of healing. A book is open with to following verses:
  • VINCULA TUA DISRUMPAM / NAHUM CAP. I, VERS. XIII
  • VINCULA TENEBRARUM ET LONGÆ NOCTIS QUIBUS ES COMPEDITUS / SAPIENTIÆ CAP. XXII, VERS. II
  • UT NON CUM HOC MUNDO DAMNERIS. / PAUL'I. AD CORIN. CAP. XI, VERS. XXXII.
["I will burst thy bonds asunder / those bonds of darkness and long night with which you are fettered / so that you will not be condemned with this world."] (Wikipedia)
The sculptural virtuosity is in the intricate netting, woven from a single block of marble. This trio, Corradini's "Pudicizia", Sanmartino's "Cristo Velato", and Queirolo 's "Disinganno", gives each artist a moment to shine – they truly shine. But arranged as a group by Raimondo di Sangro, the relationships between the three tell a powerful, personal story and reflect a son's love for his parents and his faith.

Raimondo honors his wife in the next piece, "Sincerità" (Queirolo, 1754-55). This figures plays with the "Soavità del Giogo Coniugale" opposite' she holds a single heart and a caduceus, and the putto plays with two turtle doves (as opposed to the pelican chick).


 

The "Domino di Sé Stessi" ('self-domain', Celebrano, 1767) incorporates the portrait relief of Girolama Lofreddo (Raimondo's paternal grandmaother), again like the "Zelo della Religione" on the other side. Instead of serpents and texts, here we have a lion in chains.

Finally, "Educazione" (Queirolo, 1753) presents a woman teaching a young boy, with the inscription: "EDUCATIO ET DISCIPLINA MORES FACIUNT" ('education and discipline form good morals'); the boy holds "De Officiis" by Cicerone, a text explaining moral duties.

 


The ceiling 'volta' is covered with the "Gloria del Paradiso" (Francesco Maria Russo, 1749). Rather than tying the chapel together, the colors and dynamism are so 'over the top', it borders on distraction. Angels break through an opening in the roof, as the Holy Spirit shines towards l'altare maggiore and the "Cristo Velato", with the Latin text: "MATER PIETATIS" ('mother of piety').

We exit from the 'cavea sotterranea' and stop to wonder at the "Macchine Anatomiche" (Giuseppe Salerno, 1756-64), another of Raimondo's projects. The couple may be more macabre than the sights in the Chiesa del Purgatorio, skeletons covered with silk and wax to model the circulatory system.


 

The visit takes less time than we anticipated, undoubtedly because our iPhones are in our pockets. Out of the gift shop door, we hear and see the steady rain is back. We hurriedly make our way to the Monastero di Santa Chiara (14th-17th centuries). One thing we don't want to do is board a plane soaking wet, but we also don't want to miss opportunities to see new things.

We pay for entry and head for the bathrooms near the gift shop to 'towel-off'. And the Monastero doesn't disappoint, especially the 'Chiostro Maiolicato' (Domenico Antonio Vacaro, 1739-42). Strangely, the sun is out while the rain pours down. The damp and verdant garden sparkles through the refracted haze; the tiled curbs and columns pick up and multiply those colors. Thus, the Chiostro feels less contemplative, and more celebratory.

A wide stair leads from the Chiostro to the 'Coro delle Monache' (nun's choir). At the landing we can see into the 'Sala con Affreschi Cinquecenteschi' (1500's fresco room). Though the Sala is not open to the public, we can readily see the "Giudizio Universale" on the wall to the left. The history of the Monastero includes a visit from Giotto, who painted "Storie del Vecchio Testamento" and "L'Apocalisse" (1328-33) in the Coro, but they were destroyed during the bombings of WWII – perhaps these frescos are an attempt to 'fill that Giotto-shaped hole', at least in spirit.

On the facing wall, there is the lovely "Annunciazione" scene in the Gothic tympanum, as well as the "Adorazione dei Pastori" (Nativity) just below. The smaller panels include the "Vite di Santi", portraits of saints (Sant'Andrea by the 'X' cross, for example).

 

 

 


We step down to the peristyle and continue towards the Museo dell'Opera and the bathrooms. The "Storie Francescane" frescos on and walls carry messages of Franciscan devotion, followed by the 'Monache Clarisse'. The affreschi maintain a horizon line and clear sky down the length of the Chiostro.

After a closer look at the tiles on the curbs, we recognize the story of Napoli and Vesuvio, tying the nuns' devotional practice and the nervous reality of this city.

 

 

 


Museo dell'Opera showcases more remnants and remains from the WWII bombing of the church. Because of this, the exhibits are all in pieces, rather than full artworks. Still, they are fascinating, and the presentations attempt to connect the pieces, with their layout and with photos.

For example, the Sala dei Marmi structures these fragments on panels or in frames that show this fragmentation. The photos below diagram the relationships between the elements in the frieze of "Le Storie di Santa Caterina d'Alessandria" (14th century), with gruesome images of martyrdom (so glad they found the little bit with her head).

 

 

 

 

 

 

The pieces in the Sala dei Reliquiari survive intact but have lost their context. But the objects are varied and beautiful: the silver bust of "San Bartolomeo Apostolo" (Francesco Leone, 1470), the processional drape of "Santa Chiara" (17th century), and a lineup of polychrome busts (including "Ecce Homo" sculpted by Giovanni da Nola in 1520 and "San Giovanni Dolente" attributed to Giovanni Bertini from the first half of the 14th century).

 


 

We finish a circuit of the Chiostro as the weather calms. The taller windows along the southern arcade create spaces for individualized saints, which are conveniently labeled. These panels also share a continuous landscape of trees and doorways, accompanied by angels with symbolic objects in the upper register.

A few visitors venture out among the tiled posts, but the western viale, the longest of the four, is closed for renovation.

 

 


The 'Chiostro Maiolicato' fortunately escaped damage from WWII and consists of long benches with 'arched' backs between octagonal columns. The columns are wrapped with spiraling garlands of grapes, lemons, and sunflowers.

The scenes depicted in the seatbacks include seascapes, vignettes of village life, and allegorical illustrations – in blue and golds, and touched with greens and browns.

 

 

 

 

 

Tucked in to the northeastern corner is a room with the Monastero's "Presepe" (18th century), much larger than anything from yesterday's walk along 'La Via dei Presepi'. The Bambino Gesù is under a stone arch next to the Vergine Maria and San Giuseppe at the top of a sharp hill. Angels sit on the columns and ruined walls, with the Stella di Betlemme centered in the archway.

The Magi are on the hill to the left in crimson robes. Villagers and livestock, including a camel (?) fill the lower portion of the Presepe. An 'urban' area is to the left of the scene, with townsfolk watching the miraculous birth from their balconies.

 

 

Because the Gothic Basilica di Santa Chiara (1313-40) was rebuilt in 1953, the interior is simple and plain. But there are moments of color and and expression, like the Museo, a church reassembled from parts. The church has its own "Presepe" under glass near the entrance.

The 'rebuilt' nature of the chapels is exemplified by the Altare Maggiore. Behind the "Crocifisso Ligneo", the altarpiece appears to be pile of Gothic architectural elements and carvings: a pointed arch with damaged and broken columns, the figure of Roberto d'Angiò ("ROBERTUM REGEM"), a mourning scene of the "Pietà", an arcade with saints, large tombs on either side, and a lacey Gothic altar table.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We make one last stop at the Chiesa del Gesù Nuovo (15th-18th centuries). Yesterday's visit with such bad light demands a quick revisit. We are struck by the visual contrast between the structural components and the warm tones of the decorative vaulting – everything is more vibrant.

We return to the eastern lateral Cappella del Sacro Cuore di Gesù, now unoccupied, to get a better look at the dome and the "Sacrificio di Aronne" (Gaetano D'Apuzzo, 1790). We're disappointed to see how much water damage has affected the fresco. Exiting, we also get another look a the heroic "Cacciata di Eliodoro dal Tempio" (Francesco Solimena, 1725), and that looks like a whole other painting.

We owe Napoli another visit; the weather fenced us into a tiny area in the historic center. We simply don't have a fair or complete impression of the city – though what we saw was fun and amazing. We look forward to it (plus there's pizza).