So Look Forward . . . to the 20th century?
by
mgerard
11/03/2009, 11:01 AM #
I look forward to your selections each month, Robert, as they take me back, out of my buzi-ness and cares, to when I could do important things like consider the meanings of poems . . .
Adam's Curse was first taught to me by an Estonian English professor who delightfully insisted that good and great poetry was, in some way, inexhaustible in the ways it would allow us to read and interpret; it opened windows of interpretation, handed us glasses we could peer at the world through . . . In any event, I remember us gong line by line and coming on with a thread, coming to a reading, by which we all agreed that Yeats was singing about the end of the Victorian error, that the resonances and hollowness and loss of the old high ways of love was nigh. The day was ending and the night of the 20th century about to being. . . In fact, isn't the poem from 1899? Did you mention the year? I like the consideration of the voices and the conversation, but it's hard for me not to read it as Yeats talking to Clio or some such, the muse of history, and watching twilight fall on his beloved days. . . It has the same kind of valedictory tone as Dover Beach, and the sea of faith receding, the press of darkness and melancholy. . . Do you hear it?
Or it is just a dinner party and Yeats wanted to reiterate his lineage with Adam -- and seduce his readers with -- that longing?