Education may be a mess. Standard tests and ordinary conversation forces you to realize that students and teachers alike fail to possess vocabulary, grammatical skills and technical information and a horrid lack of historical and geographical understanding of what has been and is going on.
Whether on paper or on the screen of a Kindle or iPad, reading is an art that must be developed. However, let us resolve to do it well.
A very well done mini-series [Spartacus: Blood and Sand] came to an end last Sunday evening on Starz. In this finale, Spartacus begins the slave uprising by slaying the man that had bought him and had his wife murdered.
A dramatic encounter between a champion gladiator and the wife of the owner of the spectacular men found them alone. She had used him as property and for her pleasure. Without giving away all that happened, the gladiator addressed the woman and said, “There is still something between you and I.”
What writer, committee of editors and general cast and crew did not stop this aggression against language?
“Between I?”
“In which eye?” My elementary teachers would quickly have corrected that sentence with a whack from a ruler or yardstick, whichever was closer.
Blood and guts – Oh, well … bloody bad grammar, NO!
Despite the continuing growth of the width and depth of the universal knowledgebase available through the Internet, people are choosing to know less and less.
Apps and tools are replacing dictionaries and thesauri.
A few books that I would deem essential might make things better for everyone. Any person ought to have at hand these resources and the knowledge of how to use them:
Pocket Reference Guide by Thomas J. Glover
A solid Grammar and a college-level dictionary
A World History
A Bible that you actually read, not just dust
An Art History that covers global art developments
After you have gathered these and settled into using them and want to talk about them, let me know.
After all, it is something just between you and me. (c) tim www.timjohnsonphoto.com

