THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
08/23/02 -- Vol. 21, No. 8

El Presidente: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
The Power Behind El Pres: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:
	Chesley Bonestell
	The Art of the Frolic (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

===================================================================

TOPIC: Chesley Bonestell

There is an article, with illustrations, about the space artist 
Chesley Bonestell in the online  "American Heritage of Invention & 
Technology" at 
http://www.americanheritage.com/it/2002/01/spaceart.shtml

===================================================================

TOPIC: The Art of the Frolic (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

One of the things I have been thinking about is that there are 
many activities that I have not yet participated in and I would 
hate to die without ever trying.   I don't mean something like 
drugs, but there are experiences in this world that you only think 
in terms of someone else doing. You never give much thought to 
just doing them yourself.  That is kind of a pity because some of 
them sound like they might be healthy exercise and enjoyable.

Anyway, let me get down to specifics.  I am curious as to how one 
goes about the activity known as "frolicking."  Now that is a verb 
I have just about never heard used in the first person.  It sounds 
like a lot of fun, but people nearly always use it in the third 
person (or the third animal).  Fishes frolic.  Puff the Magic 
Dragon frolicked.  Occasionally you hear of people having 
frolicked.  But it is a verb you almost never hear used in the 
first person.  And you almost never hear it in the present tense.  
Who is willing to even admit "I frolicked" much less "I frolic" or 
"I am frolicking."  I suppose if you are currently frolicking 
there is rarely someone close enough that you would want to admit 
it to, so even if it is true you just would never verbalize it.  
Also I suppose it would be fairly obvious to someone, so you would 
be unlikely to have to tell them you are frolicking.

Most people, if they have any desire at all seem more to want to 
have frolicked rather than necessarily to actually frolic.  They 
want it as an accomplishment on their own mental resume of their 
personal experience rather than actually to have the experience of 
being in the process of frolicking.  But because it sounds like 
fun and I have the time I am wondering if I would like to try it.

Now this is not as easy as it seems.  I do not think it comes 
naturally to just everybody.  There are no good books out there on 
how to frolic.  At least I find no helpful tutorial books on 
Amazon.  It would be nice to find a copy of FROLICKING FOR DUMMIES 
or THE COMPLETE IDIOT'S GUIDE TO FROLICKING.  But let me assure 
you these books do not currently exist.  I do not believe that 
there exists an Arthur Murray of frolicking.  Frolicking is 
generally a self-taught talent.

If one is to start frolicking on one's own one has to find a 
proper season and location for a frolic.  The time of year you 
choose to frolic is both unimportant and all-important.  You can 
frolic any time of the year, but it adds a distinctly different 
flavor to your frolic if you choose to frolic amid the buds of 
spring, in the richness of summer, on the fallen leaves of autumn, 
or in the bracing snows of winter.  In each case the frolic will 
have a distinctly different meaning, I am sure, though the exact 
meaning of any of them probably eludes me.

Frolicking indoors seems somehow unnatural.  Like skiing or 
parachuting you may study up indoors, but even the first time you 
try it, if it is indoors you are probably doomed to failure.  So 
you need to find someplace out of doors.  But you also have to get 
away from people.  You have to be free from prying eyes.  It is 
almost inevitable that the first five minutes or so you will be 
embarrassed just seeing yourself frolic.  But that embarrassment 
will be infinitely compounded if someone else sees you frolicking, 
and even more so if it is someone you know, more still if it is 
someone you work for or intend to marry.  Indeed, I think just 
looking down and seeing yourself frolic may be a serious mistake 
that could cause you to lose any desire to frolic.  I suppose your 
shape and your body image could be only too relevant.

In any case the moment will arise when you have to take your 
preliminary steps into the frolic and you will inevitably ask 
yourself what do you should do first.  There is no easy answer to 
this question.  In fact I am not entirely sure there is any 
answer, easy or not.  Perhaps you are the type to look in the 
dictionary to see what they consider a frolic.  This yields an 
answer, but it is one that is not particularly satisfying.  They 
will suggest that to frolic is to romp.  Now there are some out 
there who might question if I am not already too old to frolic.  
Others may say that one is never too old to frolic.  However, I 
seriously doubt if anyone could look at me and suggest that I am 
still in an age range when I could romp.  I am afraid that the 
days when romping was an option for me are long gone.  I would 
still like to believe that I retain some of the days when 
frolicking is an option.  There are heavy distinctions between 
romping and frolicking.  So to me that is not particularly 
helpful.  I do not think that old Webster fully appreciated the 
differences between a romp and a frolic or he would have never 
made that error.

But what to do?  Somehow I think that I have a mental image of 
what it might be like to frolic.  I think that Charles Schulz 
illustrated well with Snoopy in his Peanuts cartoons.  I think 
that if I could do an "It's Almost Dinnertime" sort of dance, I 
could modify it into being my own frolic.  But there is a big 
difference between knowing what it looks like to frolic well and 
to able to do it oneself with sufficient grace that it does not 
look like a spasm of some sort.

So it is the art of the graceful frolic that I am now seeking.  I 
do not expect the quest to be easy, but what serious and important 
artistic quest is?  [-mrl]

===================================================================

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net


            People are always ready to admit a man's ability 
            after he gets there.
                                          -- Bob Edwards

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