Tag Archives: George Bean

Thoreau and Anacreon

Note added, October 5, 2023. At the end of this post, from sunny days in the first spring of the Covid pandemic, I take up Anacreon’s poem “The Thracian Filly,” translated as “To a Colt” in A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. Anacreon was from Teos, whose ruins I have visited. Thoreau may not be sensitive to the sexual connotations of the poem. First I review Thoreau’s book, noting in particular:

  • The book is written, like my blog posts, to please the author, who would rather do without money than sell stuff to get it.
  • The author’s relative indifference to human affairs in the face of nature is becoming less tenable, when a Pacific island inhabited by 40 persons and visited once a month by a boat (and once for all, probably, by a travel writer) is losing its palms to an invasive beetle.

Other books discussed or mentioned (and in my physical library) are

  • Bean, Aegean Turkey;
  • Collingwood, The First Mate’s Log;
  • Lawson, The Drinkers’ Guide to the Middle East;
  • Schalansky, Pocket Atlas of Remote Islands;
  • Thoreau, Walden;
  • Trypanis (ed.), The Penguin Book of Greek Verse;
  • Walls, Henry David Thoreau: A Life.

Gray clouds over blue sky over white clouds over buildings

Continue reading

How to Learn about People

A chance encounter with a Medieval definition of God, used as the title of a sculpture, leads to an ancient plane tree and to more consideration of what can go wrong with public opinion polls.

Ancient plane tree of Bayır, Marmaris Peninsula, September 9, 2010
Ancient plane tree of Bayır, Marmaris Peninsula, September 9, 2010

Continue reading

Teos

This is about a visit to the ruins of the ancient Ionian city of Teos. These ruins are in what is now the district of Seferihisar, in the province of İzmir, on the Aegean coast of Turkey. On the web there is a lot of information about the site. There is a 28-page illustrated guidebook in Turkish and English (pdf file). However, Ayşe and I did not consult any of this information before visiting. What we had was George Bean, Aegean Turkey (London: Ernest Benn, 2d edition, 1979). Bean himself died in 1977. Once we were at the site of Teos, we learned something of its layout from the posted map.

I am going to describe our visit to the site; and yet one great pleasure of our visit was its unexpectedness. We had come to the area for a short beach holiday before Antalya Algebra Days XVII, which would be held not in Antalya, but at the Nesin Mathematics Village, further down the coast from Teos in the hills above Ephesus. In Istanbul, packing my things for our trip, I finally remembered to check Bean’s book to see what was in the area we would visit. Bean had a number of pages about Teos, along with some enthusiastic words; so I found room for the book in my backpack.

Continue reading