“Camoufleur” — May Swenson

camofleur

Some Really Lovely Books Acquired, 1.21.2014 (Thanks Ryan!)

20140124-140145.jpg

I was pleasantly surprised to get a box of great stuff in the mail from Ryan Mihaly, a frequent contributor to this blog (check out the second part of his interview with translator Ilan Stavans). Inside the handsome Penguin Classics Goethe was this little card:

20140124-140153.jpg

20140124-140201.jpg

I had never even heard of The Thoughtbook, Fitzgerald’s boyhood diary. Sample:

20140124-140208.jpg

20140124-140218.jpg

Tom Clark is The Best.

20140124-140225.jpg

20140124-140235.jpg

And always Hell.

20140124-140241.jpg

Thanks again, Ryan!

Lo! The Gods! — Sidney H. Sime

sidney sime time and gods Lo! The Gods!

Metaphors and similes (Schopenhauer)

Metaphors and similes are of great value, in so far as they explain an unknown relation by a known one. Even the more detailed simile which grows into a parable or an allegory, is nothing more than the exhibition of some relation in its simplest, most visible and palpable form. The growth of ideas rests, at bottom, upon similes; because ideas arise by a process of combining the similarities and neglecting the differences between things. Further, intelligence, in the strict sense of the word, ultimately consists in a seizing of relations; and a clear and pure grasp of relations is all the more often attained when the comparison is made between cases that lie wide apart from one another, and between things of quite different nature. As long as a relation is known to me as existing only in a single case, I have but an individual idea of it—in other words, only an intuitive knowledge of it; but as soon as I see the same relation in two different cases, I have a general idea of its whole nature, and this is a deeper and more perfect knowledge.

Since, then, similes and metaphors are such a powerful engine of knowledge, it is a sign of great intelligence in a writer if his similes are unusual and, at the same time, to the point. Aristotle also observes that by far the most important thing to a writer is to have this power of metaphor; for it is a gift which cannot be acquired, and it is a mark of genius.

From The Art of Literature by Arthur Schopenhauer.

The Convalescent — Gwen John

“One Bird” — Tom Clark

tom clark

The Nocturnal Travelers — Honore Daumier

Quentin Tarantino and Steve Buscemi Rehearsing Scenes for Reservoir Dogs (NSFW)

William Gaddis and David Markson, New York, 1964

wgdm

(From The Letters of William Gaddis, Dalkey Archive).

Macrocercus Aracanga — Edward Lear

Equivocal, tortured, fleeting, dream-like existence (Schopenhauer)

When one considers how vast and how close to us is the problem of existence—this equivocal, tortured, fleeting, dream-like existence of ours—so vast and so close that a man no sooner discovers it than it overshadows and obscures all other problems and aims; and when one sees how all men, with few and rare exceptions, have no clear consciousness of the problem, nay, seem to be quite unaware of its presence, but busy themselves with everything rather than with this, and live on, taking no thought but for the passing day and the hardly longer span of their own personal future, either expressly discarding the problem or else over-ready to come to terms with it by adopting some system of popular metaphysics and letting it satisfy them; when, I say, one takes all this to heart, one may come to the opinion that man may be said to be a thinking being only in a very remote sense, and henceforth feel no special surprise at any trait of human thoughtlessness or folly; but know, rather, that the normal man’s intellectual range of vision does indeed extend beyond that of the brute, whose whole existence is, as it were, a continual present, with no consciousness of the past or the future, but not such an immeasurable distance as is generally supposed.

From The Art of Literature by Arthur Schopenhauer.

Portrait of Wladyslaw Reymont — Jacek Malczewski

Abduction — Max Klinger

Solitary Life, A Richard Thompson Documentary

All We Ever Wanted Was Everything — Christopher Orr

Manuscript Page of Eliot’s The Waste Land with Notes by Ezra Pound

ezra