And it came to pass that Mary was enrolled with Joseph the old man in Bethlehem, since she was of the seed of David, and was great with the Lamb without seed. And when the time for delivery drew near, and they had no place in the village, the cave did appear to the Queen as a delightful palace. Verily, Christ shall be born, raising the likeness that fell of old.(Troparion from the Royal Hours of the Nativity, Byzantine rite)
A child is born to us, and a son is given to us, whose government is upon his shoulder; and his name will be called, the Angel of great counsel.
(Introit of the third Mass of Christmas Day, Roman rite)
Expect the media to bring up the usual historical “problems” with the Nativity account, according to Fr. Stephen Freeman, and don’t fret about it:
Literalism is a false means of interpretation (hermenuetic) and is a vain attempt to democratize the Holy writings. If they can be read on a literal level, then everyone has equal access to them and everybody has equal authority to interpret them. […] the seasons come and go and the media cannot resist speaking of what they do not know. And so they ask those who do not know to speak on their behalf. But if we would know Christ and the wonder of His incarnation, then we would do well to listen to those who have been appointed to speak and to hear them in the context given to us for listening – the liturgical life of the Church.
In other news, blogging has been light the last couple of days because we’ve been madly scanning and shelving books. The Delicious Library and LibraryThing system has been fantastic, but most definitely less than perfect. One annoying thing is that even if Library of Congress data exists for a book, LibraryThing won’t always find it, requiring you to find it yourself on the Library of Congress website and enter it manually. For books that don’t have LC numbers, I’m not sure what I’m supposed to do; is there a way that one can divine what the number will eventually be?
What’s also frustrating is that LibraryThing is in theory able to identify new ISBNs when a list is uploaded and add only those, and it does this successfully in most cases, but there are somewhere around ten books that are always duplicated when I add a new list. This afternoon I eliminated somewhere around fifty dupes, in some cases there being seven entries for one book.
Another issue: I’ve entered 718 books into Delicious (representing probably roughly half of what we have), and I’ve exported the catalog to LibraryThing on a fairly regular basis. This afternoon, LibraryThing showed 756 books; after eliminating the duplicates, I’m down to 702 in LibraryThing with 8 ISBNs it can’t find (European books, I think). That means there are eight books Delicious is listing in its catalog that for some reason LibraryThing isn’t picking up.
Nonetheless, we’ve been able to accomplish in a weekend what would have surely taken us a month on our own, and that’s most certainly worth it.
Finally–any other Leopard users out there finding that with the latest update, searching for files within the File Upload dialog appears to be broken?
Merry Christmas to all!
“is there a way that one can divine what the number will eventually be?”
Why, yes… what kind of LC number do you need? 😉
The first part of the call number (e.g. BX254 or something) is more set. You might check WorldCat to see if there are class numbers identified there. The cutter numbers that follow (R54 N5, etc.) depend on the topic in question but often correspond to a subject, a person (e.g. author), a place, or the title of a work.
The other thing you probably should realize is that cataloging numbers are library-centric. In other words, particularly with cutter numbers, the call number in one library could be quite different from that in another library. That’s because libraries have different collections and the numbers should make sense given the kind of collection you have.
Merry Christmas!
Merry Christmas, to both you and Megan!
(yes, it’s a day late. I just found your new blog site a few days ago.)
I hope to make a trip down to B-ton in the next few weeks or so. I’ll try and let you know when that might be going down.