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The Monday Morning Memo

Feeding Stray Puppies and Kittens

July 21, 2008

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https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/8c16563a-9ef1-461b-bb4a-4a750ba22d6a/MMM080721-FeedingStrays.mp3

Mom’s off-white Formica table with wobbly metal legs had a charred circle on top where I once set a pan that was way too hot. Mom couldn’t afford a tablecloth to cover it, but whenever she suspected a person might have nowhere to go for Thanksgiving dinner, she’d always invite them to our house and have another hungry mouth to feed.

Thanksgiving, for me, meant a house jammed with people I’d never seen before and would never see again. But each year I saw a whole other America through the eyes of the misfits who gathered around my charred little circle. And the stories I heard were amazing. It was magical.

I miss those days.

I watched Mom deny herself necessities during the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving. Her emaciated paycheck couldn’t possibly feed a houseful of strangers, but she always did it anyway. And no guest ever had to worry they were taking more than their share. Mom’s opulence made us believe, at least for an hour, that we were royal.

What I’ve written is the sort of thing a person usually writes when someone they love has died, but I’m delighted to report that Mom is alive and healthy and recently returned from a trip to China.

I’m telling you about Sue Williams today because she taught me something else when I was young. She said we should give our roses to the living and not save them for the dead.

“When a person dies, everyone who loved them will cancel their other obligations, send a big bouquet of flowers, jump on an airplane and fly across the country to look at their dead friend in a box.” Mom waited a moment for this to soak in. “If I’m going to cancel my plans, buy roses and travel because of friendship, I’m going to do it while my friend is alive to smell the flowers and enjoy the adventure with me. And if my friend passes before I do, I'll sit quietly at home and remember the trip we took together.”

Once a year, Mom would treat a friend to a small adventure, a 3 or 4-day trip together to someplace interesting. Taos with Theresa. Santa Fe with Dee. A trip to Alaska to see Janice. West Virgina to see Velma. A trip to the Bahamas with Vicki. Spain with Cindy. These are the people my Mom cares about too much to attend their funerals.

Stephen Levine poses a very interesting question: “If you were going to die soon and had only one phone call you could make, who would you call and what would you say? And why are you waiting?”

I’ve borrowed Stephen’s question for our weekly e-Poll.  Your answer, when approved, will appear at the bottom of today’s Memo in the archives at MondayMorningMemo.com. (Approval usually happens within a few hours.)

So tell us, who would you call?

Roy H. Williams

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“You say I have deeds but you have love. Show me your love without deeds and I’ll show you my love by my deeds.” – transliteration from the book of James, chapter 2

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Random Quote:

“Jeffrey Eisenberg and I were looking though a pair of antique doors at Austin Auction Gallery when I saw a remarkable oil painting on the wall behind them and whispered in wonder, “Ozymandias.”

The auction catalog described the painting as, “Arabian horse and handler with Egyptian sphinx, signed lower right Maksymilian Novak-Zemplinski (Polish, b.1974), dated 2000.”

But I knew the painting for what it was. I’ve loved “Ozymandias” since the 9th grade. You remember it, don’t you?

I met a traveller from an antique land,
Who said—“Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed;
And on the pedestal, these words appear:
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings;
Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!”
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

When I returned home, I spent a delightful 90 minutes hunting down all the bits and peices of how that poem came to exist.

It was in 1817 that Percy Bysshe Shelley and his poet friend, Horace Smith read the news that the carved head of Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses II had been removed from his tomb at Thebes by an Italian adventurer and that it would be travelling to Britain.

Shelly suggested to Smith that each of them should write a poem about it and title each of their poems “Ozymandias,” the Greek name for that particular Egyptian pharaoh.

Look at the poem as it appeared in newspaper on that of 1818, and you will see that Percy Bysshe Shelley signed it, “Glirastes.” He did it as an inside joke intended only for his wife, Mary Shelley, who, incidentally, published her most famous novel “Frankenstein” that year.

Mary often signed her letters to Percy as “your affectionate dormouse.” So Percy combined “Gliridae” (Latin for dormouse) with “Erastes” (Greek for lover) to create “Glirastes,” (meaning “lover of dormice.”)

So now you know how Google’s second-most-often-searched poem came to be published without anyone in London suspecting that it had been written on a bet with a friend by one of the most famous poets on earth who chose to sign it with a pseudonym as an inside joke to his wife.

Did you know that I became an ad writer only because it was impossible to support myself as a poet?

Now that you know that, you will not be surprised that Indy Beagle has collected Google’s Top 20 Poems for you to read in the rabbit hole. Indy also found the Horace Smith version of Ozymandias and added it at the end of the Google’s Top 20 list.

To enter the rabbit hole, all you have to do is click the image that appears at the top of today’s Monday Morning Memo. You’ll find this memo archived as “Looking Though Antique Doors,” the Monday Morning Memo for October 20th, 2025.

This is the Google Top 20 List:

  • “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost
  • “Ozymandias” by Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • “Sonnet 18” by William Shakespeare
  • “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe
  • “Do not go gentle into that good night” by Dylan Thomas
  • “She Walks in Beauty” by Lord Byron
  • “Because I could not stop for Death” by Emily Dickinson
  • “O Captain! My Captain!” by Walt Whitman
  • “Still I Rise” by Maya Angelou
  • “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” by T.S. Eliot
  • “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost
  • “Annabel Lee” by Edgar Allan Poe
  • “If –” by Rudyard Kipling
  • “Invictus” by William Ernest Henley
  • “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” by William Wordsworth, “
  • “Ode on a Grecian Urn” by John Keats.
  • “The Charge of the Light Brigade” by Alfred, Lord Tennyson,
  • “Jabberwocky” by Lewis Carroll.
  • “The New Colossus” by Emma Lazarus
  • “The Song of Hiawatha” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Ciao for Niao,

Roy H. Williams”

- Looking Through a Pair of Antique Doors

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