Today is Saint Andrewโs Sunday (which happens to fall this year on the actual Saint Andrewโs Day). This essay is in honor of the patron saint of Scotland, as well as my friend Marsue, who today will celebrate her last day of five years as priest at Trinity Episcopal Church before beginning a well-deserved retirement.
Although I am a philosophy professor by trade, I believe William Shakespeareโs body of work is more insightful about my favorite philosophical topicโhuman natureโthan anything the Western tradition in philosophy has to offer.
The Merchant of Venice is a case in point. Greed, money, love, friendship, ambition, honor, racism, forgivenessโall are on display in this masterpiece. In the dramatic Act Four court scene, Shylock insists that he be allowed to take a pound of flesh from the merchant Antonio, as the contract that Antonio freely agreed to guarantees if Antonio is unable to repay the loan he has taken from Shylock. Antonioโs friends have gathered sufficient money to pay Shylock three, four, even ten times the amount that Antonio borrowed, but Shylock insists on the pound of flesh. When the defense demands to know why Shylock (who everyone knows is a money-grubbing Jew, after all) insists on the peculiar letter of the contract rather than more money than he could have expected, S
hylockโs response is both cryptic and illuminating.
Some men there are love not a gaping pig; some that are mad if they behold a cat; and others, when the bagpipe singsโฆcannot contain their urine.
People have strange preferences and dislikes. In other words, Shylock says, I donโt need to explain why I want the pound of flesh rather than the money. I just want it, and the law says I can have it. People are like thatโwe like some things, dislike others, and no further explanation is necessary. End of story. Not reallyโa loophole discovered at the last moment leaves Antonio with his skin and Shylock in disgrace,
But Shylockโs point stands. Our personal likes and dislikes frequently are indefensibleโyet they define who we are. Iโve written in a previous post about my obsession with penguins
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/freelancechristianity/2013/09/25/well-dressed-birds/
and my inability to explain this obsession other than to say โI like penguins.โ
Jeanne has a similarly intense obsession with Holstein cows. Shakespeareโs choice of example in Shylockโs observation is inspiredโhe chooses a couple of things about which no one is neutral. Itโs possible that someone might not care one way or the other about penguins or cows, but no one is neutral about bagpipes or cats. You either love them or hate them.
Bagpipes: Over the past couple of years I have had the opportunity to scrape two decades worth of rust off my organ skills and play at services, weddings and funerals on occasion.
One afternoon while practicing for an upcoming service that included โAmazing Grace,โ I experimented with various settings on the pipe organ until I achieved a sound somewhat similar to bagpipes, without the grinding, scary elementsโcall it โBagpipes Lite.โ I used it at the service and received soย many positive comments that Iโve found a reason to use that setting just about every time Iโve played since.
I understand the inventor of the bagpipes was inspired when he saw a man carrying an indignant, asthmatic pig under his arm. Unfortunately, the man-made sound never equaled the purity of the sound achieved by the pig. Alfred Hitchcock
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In the calendar of saints, November 30 is St. Andrewโs Day. Marsue, the rector of my Episcopal church chooses to celebrate St. Andrewโs Day
every year on the First Sunday of Advent (the first Sunday after Thanksgiving), even if November 30 doesnโt fall on a Sunday. This is her prerogative, but St. Andrew is not a top drawer saint and Marsue doesnโt similarly celebrate St. Peter or St. John or St. Anybody Else yearly on Sunday. Marsue does this because St. Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland and she is a lover of bagpipes. St. Andrewโs Day gives Marsue the opportunity every year to import
a bagpipe player to start the service by scaring the shit out of everybody as she winds the best up in the back of the church and then processes. I heard once that when a new, very loud trumpet stop on the organ at St. John the Divine Episcopal Cathedral in Manhattan was used at a Sunday service for the first time many years ago, a woman in the congregation was so shocked by the unexpected noise that she had a heart attack and died. I hope this does not happen on some future St. Andrewโs Sunday at Trinity Episcopal in Pawtuxet.
Some are inspired by the otherworldly sound of the bagpipeโothers think something else is going on, as
Bugs Bunny does when he ends up unexpectedly in Scotland.
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xo1q1_my-bunny-lies-over-the-sea-scene_fun
โHow many of you like bagpipes?โ I asked my after-church Adult Christian Education seminar after the St. Andrewโs Day service? Half enthusiastically raised their hands.โ How many hate bagpipes?โ The other half expressed their opinion just as vigorously; one of them commented โI always vow that I will never again come to church on St. Andrewโs Sunday, but I always forget!โ
Bagpipesโyou love them or you hate them.
A regiment of Scottish soldiers became known as the โLadies from Hellโ or the โDevils in Skirtsโ during World War I, not just because of their enormous bravery and fighting spirit, nor just because they wore kilts into battle. They were led into battle by soldiers playing an instrument that both looked and sounded as if it had been dreamed up and constructed in some deep, dark circle of Hell that Dante forgot to tell us about. Iโm sure that many soldiers on the enemy side were unable to โcontain their urine.โ
The Irish gave bagpipes to the Scots as a joke. The Scots still havenโt gotten the joke.
Cats: I learned something very interesting the other day on NPRโs โWait, Wait, Donโt Tell Meโ
(a Saturday noon tradition and the source of much of my current events information). Recent research indicates that domestic cats believe that their owners (people, fellow inhabitants of the house) are large, mostly hairless cats who are useful primarily because they have somehow figured out how to use a can opener. For those who have or have had cats in their lives, this is not a surprise.
In any group of more than five people, ask โHow many of you like cats?โ Half will raise their hands. โHow many of you hate cats?โ The other half will raise their hands. And cats know the difference instinctively.
A cat will pick the most dedicated cat-hater out of any room, go directly to her, and immediately start rubbing against her legs. To the cat hater the cat says โYou donโt like me? Fuck youโI donโt give a shit. Let me leave a bunch of cat hairs on your pant leg to remember me by.โ To the cat fans the cat says โWhatever. Do you think Iโm here for your amusement?โ Cat haters want to know why the hell cats think that 4:00 AM is a great time to run back and forth in the house as loudly as possible for no apparent reason. Cat lovers find it amusing and cute when cats decide that 4:00 AM is a great time to run back and forth in the house as loudly as possible for no apparent reason
Cats are low maintenance. Whenever Jeanne and I leave for a day or two, extensive coverage for our three dogs has to be arranged. The safe window for leaving the dogs alone and unsupervised is about five hours. A
fter five hours, all three of them think โI guess nobodyโs ever returningโ and all hell breaks loose, beginning with tipping over wastebaskets and relieving themselves in inappropriate locations. Cats are different. With sufficient cat litter, food and water, a cat can be left for a month with no problem. Upon return, the cat will look at its people and say โOh, were you gone?โ
Thereโs something edgy about even the most domesticated of cats, as if it just crossed the line from its wild ancestors and might cross back at a momentโs notice. Their habits are random and individual.
My last cat, Spooky, was an introvert extraordinaire but would at least once per evening make a royal appearance in whatever room people were gathered to make a slow, always counter-clockwise stroll through the room, then leave without comment. Dogs are obsequiousโcats are not. Dogs need human affection and approval to assuage their natural canine insecurityโcats have no such insecurities. Whether a person loves or hates cats reveals a great deal about the person. I was pleased to find out on yet another Facebook personality quiz the other day that liberals prefer cats and conservatives prefer dogs.
I am a cat loving hater of bagpipes. So sue me.









