#ASonnetADay – SONNET 6. pic.twitter.com/BhqzGOP6a7
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 13, 2020
#ASonnetADay – SONNET 5. pic.twitter.com/lvFQV1DXxw
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 12, 2020
While yesterday was the Feast of St. Lawrence, the Tears of St. Lawrence are to intensify today.
Your planet is moving through the debris field of a comet, Swift-Tuttle. Over the next few days there will be more and more meteors and fireballs. Spaceweather says that the best viewing will be before local sunrise when the constellation Perseus is high. That’s why this annual meteor shower is also called the “Perseids”.
What’s happening in more prosaic terms? Comet debris particles a few cm wide are hitting the atmosphere with an average speed of 59.6 km/s (133,350 mph). The average magnitude of the resulting fireballs is -3.7, about as bright as Venus. The Perseids produce more fireballs than any other meteor shower. Swift-Tuttle has a huge nucleus–about 26 km in diameter, much larger than most comets. Therefore, Swift-Tuttle produces more meteoroids, which produce fireballs.
I like the “Tears of St. Lawrence”.
Speaking of the Perseids, and speaking pf PANDEMICS, check out an engaging “apocalyptic” series by Steven Konkoly. The first two books are….
The Jakarta Pandemic – UK HERE.

“The unstoppable H16N1 virus rapidly spreads across the United States, stretching the fragile bonds of society to the breaking point. Schools close, grocery stores empty, fuel deliveries stop, hospitals start turning away the sick…riots engulf the cities. As hostility and mistrust engulfs his idyllic Maine neighborhood, Alex quickly realizes that the H16N1 virus will be the least of his problems.”
It goes on with The Perseid Collapse – UK HERE.

Just trying to cheer you up!
And, for the rest of your space weather reports, I am delighted to report to you hams that your yellow star might be waking up a little. Solar Cycle 25 is slowly coming on. At Spaceweather there is a good shot of a sunspot, AR2770.
Also, a big space rock, 2011ES4, is going to whiz by at .3 LD, that is, about 115000 miles away, about 1/3 of the distance to the Moon. Mark your calendar for 1 September.
Today is the Feast of St. Lawrence. In 400, or thereabouts, in St. Augustine’s see of Hippo, a miles, a soldiers, probably a kind of police officer, did something very bad. He probably killed someone. The town went nuts and rioted and they lynched him. The mob is still howling for more vengeance. It is, apparently, ongoing.
St. Augustine preaches in this occasion and let’s them have it. He also gives good advice.
One of the things that Augustine reaffirms is that mobs do not have authority and that every is going to render an account of their part in the riots. He gives concrete advise about how to shut down the violence, keep it from erupting again.
This was preached on the Feast of St. Lawrence, but there seems to be a textual problem. If feels like two sermons stitched together, perhaps both from a St. Lawrence feast day. However, I am only giving you the second part, which pertains to the rioting.
This is fit for our times. It goes to show that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
What can change is OUT reaction to events because we know history.
Back in the day, when I was living stably in Italy, I would often be invited to large gatherings of families and friends, sometimes in the countryside on the old family farm or vineyard. Inevitably there would be a division, the men over here yakking, the women over there cooking. At one point I would, inevitably, go over to see what the women were making and how they made it. My entrance – a priest in the kitchen! – usually created a bit of a stir. However, as I expressed my desire to learn how they made things and got my hands dirty my stock soared.
I was reminded of all this today, when a book arrived from a reader, CG, who also had sent something else that had, long ago, been on my wish list but had been long removed. I received a copy of
Pasta Grannies
“Well look at this,” quoth I, hefting the book. “It’s an old cookbook from the 60’s! And in really good shape, too!”
But… be not deceived as was I by the retro cover! This is not from the 1960’s, but was rather published in 2019. I think they laid an amusing trap to perpetuate for just a few more seconds the misjudgment of era by putting the publication information in the back instead of in the front of the book.
What this is, is a cookbook based on some 5 years of videos on a YouTube channel, unsurprisingly named “Pasta Grannies”. The editor, Vicky Bennison, wanted to documents recipes and techniques that aren’t being pass on very much anymore.
To whom, in Italy, does one turn for that? Old women!
All the women had to be over at least 65. One of them is 100.
I’ve watched a few videos. They are both charming and, for me, inspiring. With each one I’ve said to myself, “To heck with the Beef Wellington I’ supposed to make next weekend for a priest’s birthday. I wanna make that!” And with the next video, I revised again.
The book itself has the recipes which the old gals make in the videos. The descriptions of how to do things are good, but you are also referred to the video to see the cook in action. And of course that are comments about the region, etc.
I’m glad my Italian is really strong. It makes the videos more fun, though there are dialect things I can’t quite catch. That, too, is inevitable, especially when talking to people of a certain age. Another thing that will disappear, I think.
Not long ago, I dug my old, small, hand-cranked pasta maker out from storage and, for the first time in a long while, made fettuccine. Dried pasta is one thing, and large-scaled produced fresh pasta is another. Still another is your own fresh pasta. I think I might have to talk my mother out of the big Kitchen-Aide mixer she uses once a year and get the attachments. Hmmm.
Thanks to the reader, CG, who sent the book and other stuff.
Get your own copy of Pasta Grannies. You can’t have mine!
Happy Feast of St. Lawrence. Which has nothing much to do with… SONNET 3. #ASonnetADay pic.twitter.com/gfLfKDfiAA
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 10, 2020
Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass for your Sunday, either live or on the internet? Let us know what it was.
Also, are you churches opening up? What was attendance like?
For my part,
Happy Sunday! Sonnet 2. #ASonnetADay pic.twitter.com/HjRKH6UVNc
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 9, 2020