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The Monday Morning Memo

“The great pleasure of a dog is that
you may make a fool of yourself with him,
and not only will he not scold you,
but he will make a fool of himself too.”
– Samuel Butler
Charley Number Four was Steinbeck’s dog,
a standard Poodle with an under-bite.
“As he sat in the seat beside me,
his head was almost as high as mine.
He put his nose close to my ear and said ‘Ftt.’
He is the only dog I ever knew that
could pronounce the consonant F.”
– John Steinbeck,
Travels with Charley, 1962
As I read Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley,
I learned how to be a true friend.
Charley was always there for Steinbeck,
perfectly accepting John’s flaws and
inconsistencies, unconditionally loyal
and always cheerful.

Quixote cannot exist without Sancho Panza.

That Steinbeck saw Charley as Sancho, I have no doubt.
He named the truck in which they traveled
after Quixote’s horse.
Upon returning home from his wanderings with Charley,
Steinbeck flew to Sweden to pick up his Nobel Prize.
Anders Österling,
Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy,
introduced Steinbeck thusly:

“Steinbeck’s latest book is an account of his experiences during a three-month tour of forty American states. He travelled in a small truck equipped with a cabin where he slept and kept his stores. He travelled incognito, his only companion being a black poodle…In a series of admirable explorations into local color, he rediscovers his country and its people. In its informal way this book is also a forceful criticism of society. The traveler in Rocinante – the name which he gave his truck – shows a slight tendency to praise the old at the expense of the new, even though it is quite obvious that he is on guard against the temptation. “I wonder why progress so often looks like destruction”, he says in one place when he sees the bulldozers flattening out the verdant forest of Seattle to make room for the feverishly expanding residential areas and the skyscrapers. It is, in any case, a most topical reflection, valid also outside America.”


And old man near the end of his life,
Quixote took no one but Sancho on his final journey.

Yes, a dog is a man’s best friend.

I learned how to be a friend from Charley.


 
 

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Random Quote:

“Small-minded people habitually reproach others for their own misfortunes. Average people reproach themselves. Those who are dedicated to a life of wisdom understand that the impulse to blame something or someone is foolishness, that there is nothing to be gained in blaming, whether it be others or oneself. One of the signs of the dawning of moral progress is the gradual extinguishing of blame. We see the futility of finger-pointing.”

- Epictetus, in The Art of Living

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