Monday, May 02, 2022

Zen Is Now Anthology Part 2 Preface

 Okay, folks! This is Zen is Now Part 2, which is the follow-up of my previous video. Here I will be reading from the preface of my poetry anthology, "Zen is Now," and elucidating upon some of it's contents. So, tune and enjoy the ride!

-Danei Canada aka Obsidian



Saturday, April 30, 2022

Zen is Now Anthology YouTube Reading

I am the NYC poet Obsidian and this is the introduction video to a series of videos featuring the spoken word poetry from my anthology, "Zen is Now." You can also follow me or send messages to me through my social medias: https://www.facebook.com/daniel.canada3/ https://twitter.com/lordlumiel or by email: lordlumiel@yahoo.com Thanks for tuning in and enjoy the ride!




Sunday, March 27, 2022

Of King Author's Legend



Graves of dozens of kings from the time of King Arthur uncovered in Britain

By Tom Metcalfe published 1 day ago

Up to 65 burials of kings and queens have been discovered.

 

The new study identifies British Royal graves from the era of the mythical King Arthur. Several places in Britain are claimed to be the location of his burial; but according to some legends Arthur was taken by a magical boat to the mystical Isle of Avalon after being mortally wounded in battle. (Image credit: The Death of Arthur, John Garrick 1862)

The graves of dozens of what may have been early British kings, queens, princes and princesses from the era of the mythical King Arthur have been revealed by a new study. 

It suggests that British royal graves dating from between the fifth and the seventh centuries A.D. have been overlooked until now, possibly because they weren’t elaborate and contained no valuable grave goods. 

The research reconsiders archaeological evidence from a little-understood period of British history, between the end of Roman rule and the late Anglo-Saxon kingdoms — a time traditionally described by the legends of King Arthur.

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The new study by Ken Dark, an emeritus professor of archaeology and history at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom, identifies what may be up to 65 graves of post-Roman British kings and their families at about 20 burial sites across the west of England and Wales, including the modern English counties of Somerset and Cornwall.

The British continued to rule in what are now the west of England, Wales, and parts of Scotland in the centuries after the end of Roman rule in Britain in the early fifth century, while the invading Anglo-Saxons settled in the east. 

But while Anglo-Saxon rulers of the time were given elaborate burials with valuable and ornate grave gifts, the Christian British may have viewed this as a pagan practice, Dark said. 

Instead, the British seemed to have buried their royalty without grave goods in simple graves without stone inscriptions alongside the graves of common Chistians – although many of the royal graves were enclosed by a rectangular ditch and probably surrounded by a fence that has since rotted away, he said.

Dark, who is now at the University of Navarra in Spain, is the author of the study published this month in the Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland.

"The royal graves are very standardized," he told Live Science. "They have some variation, just like the ordinary graves do — some are bigger, some are smaller, some have only one grave in the center while others have two or three."

Post-Roman Britain

Roman rule in Britain lasted from A.D. 43, following a Roman invasion under the emperor Claudius, until about A.D. 410, when the last Roman troops were recalled to Gaul (modern France) amid internal rebellions in the Roman Empire and invasions by Germanic tribes. (The Roman general Julius Caesar invaded southern Britain in 55 B.C. and 54 B.C., but he didn’t establish permanent Roman rule.)

Between the fifth and seventh centuries, the Christian British ruled what are now western England and Wales as a patchwork of small kingdoms that tried to continue Christian Roman traditions. In the same period, pagan Germanic tribes — the Angles, Saxons and Jutes, who originated in the north of Europe — invaded and settled in the eastern parts of the country.

The legends of King Arthur, who was supposedly British and Christian, are set in this period, although most historians think Arthur didn't actually exist. (Dark, however, suggests that a real person or a fictional hero of that name was famous as early as the sixth century, because Dark's previous studies have suggested there was a sudden spike in the use of the name "Arthur" among British and Irish royal families at the time.)

Dark began his investigation to address a long-standing archaeological mystery: while many British kings were known to have lived during this time period, almost none of their graves had ever been found.

Until this study, the burial of only one British king from this era was known after being discovered in the northwest of Wales; an inscription on a gravestone names the person buried there as Catamanus (Cadfan in Welsh) and declares that he was a king (rex in Latin.) 

But Cadfan may have retired from the kingship to become a monk before his death, and the phrasing of the inscription implies his grave was being commemorated because of his status as a monk, Dark said. 

Meanwhile, the graves of at least nine Anglo-Saxon rulers from the period have been found, including one at the famous ship-burial at Sutton Hoo near the east coast of England.

 

 



Sunday, October 04, 2020

Thanks To All My Readers

 

I just want to take this time out to say thanks to all you poets and readers out there, that purchased a copy of my poetry anthology, “Zen is Now,” online @ the Smashword site. I am sincerely honored to see so many readers.  I hope you all enjoy the browsing experience.

I also would like to invite those of you who haven’t already, to purchase a copy. Lastly, I would like to say that I always look forward to hearing honest feedback from you, if you care to shoot me an email or social media message.

As always, I’m wishing everyone to stay well during these trying covid times. So, keep in touch. All the Best!

-Daniel Canada aka Obsidian

Here is the site: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1035093

My email address: lordlumiel@yahoo.com



Saturday, September 26, 2020

History is Cyclical

 Egyptian Dendara Temple 1995 BC. What does that tell us?

-Daniel Canada aka Obsidian



Tuesday, September 15, 2020

About Zen is Now Book Release

 

I just want to take this time out to express my gratitude to all you poets and readers out there, that purchased an advance, “Pre-release” copy of my poetry anthology, “Zen is Now,” online @ the Smashword site. I am sincerely honored to see so many orders.  I would like to take this opportunity to invite those of you who haven’t already, to place your orders in before the release date of September 26th. Thank you all kindly and I look forward to hearing feedback from you as well!

Here's the Smashword site: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1035093

-Obsidian




Saturday, September 05, 2020

Farewell Mine Captain Jay Chollick Poet Laureate of the World

 

 

No Bio b-s, not for me, just blow-hard pride, dull facts that mask thin poetry -Jay Chollick Madman Speaking New storms up there—thunder in the head—bravado-brained, it bursts! and with such force, that I, with terrifying hands, now coddle meteors! Will myself cruciferous. And briny dazzled, turn sudden clam! owning, as if born into it, its Morbid juice. I will—I must! toward foreign ecstasy, creep newly born—or eel-like, twist; work heavy human into it, find glass and there somehow, re-silver Youth and touch in mirrored memory the acned boy; slim blush and fumbled sexuality—to be ingenious! To throw off cells, leap leaping from oneself, pop-eyed and singing madrigals!—to be another’s bloodline, flowing Smooth. But pity—all these flame-lit possibilities, seem repugnant now, they bring me, tugging madness, to the sharpest edge I feel Unhinged. This brain has rust corroded lobes, they make me thrash; or glued to stodgy platforms, make me sit; watch fireflies; the deep bending of a continent, the twilit haze—but not, full-flood organic, to partake of them, to simply Sit; grow thin, dry husked, and papery—to lose the wing; the latitude; the infinity of lines. And who denied their liquid fingers, touches light? This sanity is Too sad for me. I’d rather say—come here magnificence! you be gardenia; and I, turning leather—oxford or anklestrap, I’m someone’s Shoe