Wednesday, September 16, 2015

the how and what, the this and that



– in order to know "whether John Clare was less influenced by Charlotte Smith as he aged" I think I would have to read everything Clare had written. Then re-read Smith's Elegiac Sonnets. Next, get myself a yardstick. Easiest would be to count the number of times they both (independently of one another) use the word 'the' and compare his number to her number and see if they grow farther apart but other writers have used 'the' as well so no go. Find some other pinpoint to free myself from the appearance of futility or farce, two characteristics that infested other writers I have been reading, Regina Ullman and Robert Walser, so that one of the questions that hangs around them both might be what is futility? "All stories bear resemblance to an elegant skirt that wants to cling tightly and becomingly to to a shape, that is, to something concrete: in other words they have to be told in such a way that the sum total of words forms a skirt that fits the body loosely but with a certain conciseness – fits, that is, the how and what, the this and that, to be reported." (Walser: All those who like to laugh while crying …, tr Susan Bernofsky) A hero named Westermann enters his Goddess of Poetry, and the composure of those sentences, the ones that describe this hero, irritates the author. "This intruder Westermann is getting on my nerves. How does he plan on reimbursing me for the attention I'm paying him, for seeing he comes out of it favourably?" God what are those characters doing? Finishing lunch and leaving. "I wish they'd stick fast to the table; then I'd be rid of them." Coleridge: "A nation, to be great, ought to be compressed in its increment by nations more civilized than itself—as Greece by Persia; and Rome by Etruria, the Italian states, and Carthage." (Table Talk.) Walser asks: who compresses a story into its increment? He keeps returning to the river that runs through the town even when it is far away from the action; his mind will wonder ah dear. One Ullman story becomes solemn around the presence of a cake. "But then, like a small, curled dragon, the lie came crawling out of the cake. It had been purchased at the last minute from the baker, and from the outside it looked just like every other bundt cake in the world. As for the astonishment it produced you would simply accept it in silence, just as she had done, but you could not simply accept the candid truth that was its real core." (Retold, tr Kurt Beals.) And Theo. Dreyer in Joan of Arc spends so much time looking at the contours of Joan's head next to the wet humps of her gleaming eyes, and it is one of the great films of world cinema say the critics: what do I make of that? Now springing out of context into my implied mouth come the eyes like "gaping well-heads" from Peake.


8 comments:

  1. quite an eclectic post! i got the reference to mervyn peake but the others threw me a bit. impressive performance, though... very high class thinking indeed...

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    1. I should add "high class thinker" to my next business card. (Walser and Ullman are both worth reading, if you ever get the chance. Walser is a lot easier to find.)

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  2. just looked up both on W. both were swiss and wrote in german of course, with limited translations available. i'll order a copy by each if i can research some reasonable options. interestingly, both had mothers with problems. her's was a suicide, his was in and out of a mental institution, which may have meant in both cases that they had difficulty with the cruel and inhuman human race. walser was a walker as am i, so that's sort of a connection, but both writers were well regarded by their literary contemporaries. reputations and works do disappear in the mists of time. sadly. thanks for the informative post. have you read them in german?

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    1. I have a little bit of German but not that much.

      Ullman's reputation in English is almost nil; there's only that Country Road collection, which isn't well known. Walser's reputation is much better: he has a cult following at least; he's regarded as a respectable Modernist; he's had books written in his honour, even his asylum microscripts have been published, and the Brothers Quay made a feature film out of his Jakob von Gunten. I like both Walser and the Quays this is not my favourite book or favourite film from either of them.

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  3. so i ordered the country road/ullman and the walk/walser. it'll be a few before they get here. i'm into musil, posthumous essays. he was a mathematician. he excises a splinter of human reality and stretches and warps it around, examining it from every angle and out to every extreme until he's developed a theorem for explaining it. there's a philosophical attitude from which explanations of phenomena are looked at backwards: libraries are there to keep people away from books; fire departments burn things down; police promote criminality, etc. musil is of this camp. he's quite humorous in his thoroughness in wringing the sense out of ideas or events or thoughts. but only to come to conclusions 180 degrees backwards from the usual speculation. i'm chortling to myself while reading...

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    1. Coincidence: I'm reading his Man Without Qualities. There's a good website here with a lot of information about him -- http://www.robertmusil.net -- and translations from his diaries: "In the very first days of the war, when at evening everyone rushes through the streets in search of newspapers, the crowd grows madly fond of reading, forms a solid mass through which a tram attempts to move very slowly."

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    2. i'll be glad to hear what you think re mwq; i'm mulling ordering it. i quite like his writing style and ways of thought. masses stultifying progress in a literal sense?

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    3. I'll try to think of something to say when I reach the end. I've read it once before, but the reading was so superficial that I might as well say that I know nothing about it.

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