Four Star Heroes
Four Star Heroes
You've Arrived!
The Winner's Triangle . . .
Top Three in the Pantheon of Irv
Thomas
Yes, you've made it through
the Gnome's Gauntlet. And I have to offer my apologies, here, for
trying your patience, when you simply sought an index to a
particularly personal side of this site. Well, Chomsky has been my
main gate-keeper since the site first opened in 1996, and when I told
him there was no place for him on this new and less flamboyant site,
he pleaded, to the point of tears. So . . . I relented and found a
spot for him, at this more personal gateway. But here's a tip: if
you ever get stopped by him again, and don't want to be bothered,
just poke that big nose of his, and you'll get right through!
For now, though, let me just tell you about these heroes who have
truly shaped the latter half of my life.
- Henry David Thoreau...
- is the one that most likely brought you here. If America is
great, it's not because of any influence that Thoreau had; but if
America has a conscience, his was a monumental voice in making it
so. A curious proof of this is that it took a century before we
began to realize his true stature - and even now, his is a shadow
influence, dodged and side-stepped as the rush for 'greatness'
continues. Well, I have identified with Thoreau for most of my
life, and regard his wisdom as an urgent antidote for all that is
wrong with American society today.
- Francesco Bernardone...
- who became St. Francis of Assisi, and is remembered for
having re-instilled Christianity with a sense of its common
origins. I am not a Christian, but I honor this man for having
'made a lady' of Poverty, and I try to live his vision in a
secular way. His vision, simply put, was that the Universe
provides...making struggle or contention for our daily needs quite
unnecessary...and for very much gain beyond that, rather
deplorable. Thoreau was obviously a Franciscan, as am I.
- Charles E. Bolton...
- - whose name no one will have chosen from my list - was an
outlaw! He may be known to you by the fanciful pen name on a piece
of impulsive, scornful poetry that marked this singular desperado
for all time as . . . Black Bart. There are special reasons
why Black Bart is up in this top sanctum of personal heroes, and I
shall save them for explication elsewhere. For now, here's the bit
of doggerel that changed the course of his life . . . and mine as
well.
- (It was found along with the emptied Wells Fargo strongbox
at the site of one of his early stage robberies in 1875)
- I've labored long and hard for bread,
for honor and for riches,
but on my toes too long you've tred,
you fine-haired sons o' bitches.
But enough delay . . . You're done
with this Gnome-man's land, and welcome to enter Index
#9 at once.
(Unless, of course, the Gnome has caught your
fancy, and you wish to go back for a look at the
rest of my heroes.