Mrs Gaskell's observations seem to me still current: Time and Place are always changing, complicating rather than simplifying; and such advancement, whilst it allows us to connect with the wider world, causes us to neglect our local surroundings. Our horizons broadened we lose much (in my opinion) by failing to narrow them. And yet a woman's world is still not as broad as a man's, nor is her mind consistently preferred to her person.
Thursday, 29 December 2022
Scheherazade
Mrs Gaskell's observations seem to me still current: Time and Place are always changing, complicating rather than simplifying; and such advancement, whilst it allows us to connect with the wider world, causes us to neglect our local surroundings. Our horizons broadened we lose much (in my opinion) by failing to narrow them. And yet a woman's world is still not as broad as a man's, nor is her mind consistently preferred to her person.
Thursday, 22 December 2022
Telescope
But not a woman, in my opinion, in the true sense of the word. The term is more than a feeling. Woman is a biological experience: it's painful, it's messy, and fluctuates from one extreme to another; a bodily tide of mood and emotion. Woman has a different relationship with her anatomy; chemically, hormonally, there is a difference – a huge country of influence. Boys, men can explore or cross into this terrain, but their lived experience is not Woman, it is Other.
Thursday, 15 December 2022
Groups of Lines
Coleridge
#1
His
rolling eyes, a sea never becalmed, always in motion; his large,
fleshy gaping mouth, a fish struggling for breath; and his hair, a
black glossy mass.
Coleridge,
wild and strange. A Romantic Poet; a visionary Philosopher.
Charismatic and hypnotic. Wordsworth, in comparison, a drier
character.
Coleridge
#2
Coleridge,
a wolf, wrapped in a greatcoat: What Imagination! What Language! What
Fast Science! What Eyes! What Milk-white Forehead!
Coleridge,
from whom nothing escapes.
Coleridge
#3
Coleridge,
figuratively running wild and blind in the deserts of Arabia,
screaming 'Wordsworth!'
Coleridge,
an outburst of emotions.
Coleridge
#4
Coleridge,
a mind that had much to do; that gave its attention to the visible,
the invisible, and the evocative; hovered between images, like a
Kingfisher in short flight, thereby permitting its observant eye to
see and define everything it was surrounded by.
Coleridge
#5
Coleridge,
the German scholar, a mass of information; holding forth
enthusiastically on any topic. Him, the sun of a young and admiring
circle.
Coleridge
#6
Coleridge,
an alleged kleptomaniac. Jumping from foreign rock to foreign rock,
smuggling valuables across borders, in disguise. His large prominent
eye fixed upon his own image in glittering waters.
Coleridge
#7
Coleridge,
the fatal Genius; all things to all men, tho' uncertain about his
true direction. Dreamed more than planned; planned more than could be
executed. Coleridge, in a restless whirl, or ecstatic state, unable
to concentrate. Or absorbed, wholly absorbed, in his inner world of
thoughts and feeling.
Coleridge
#8
Coleridge,
a pure scribbler; a political, poetical reporter, displaying his
extensive knowledge and well-grounded foresight, defending Liberty
and the Rights of Nature.
Coleridge,
a translator, in a five-penny floral dressing-gown decorated with
hieroglyphics, alone in his study, losing himself in his work.
Coleridge
#9
Coleridge,
a drifter and dreamer, always looking to, and searching for, a
sublime and beautiful visual existence.
Picture credit: The Dreamer, Caspar David Friedrich (source: WikiArt).
Source material: Coleridge: Early Visions by Richard Holmes.
Written October 2021.