• Re: Megalophues (2/2)

    From Dennis@21:1/5 to Dennis on Thu Oct 19 09:33:33 2023
    [continued from previous message]

    dramas, since in such lines the poet but embodies in verse those
    exaltations of sentiment that a nature like Nelson, the opportunity
    being given, vitalizes into acts.

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    Billy Budd - Melville

    Chapter 19

    It was Captain Vere himself who of his own motion communicated the finding of the court to the prisoner; for that purpose going to the compartment where he was in custody and bidding the marine there to withdraw for the time.

    Beyond the communication of the sentence what took place at this interview was never known. But in view of the character of the twain briefly closeted in that state-room, *each radically sharing in the rarer qualities of our nature*--so rare indeed as to
    be all but incredible to average minds however much cultivated--some conjectures may be ventured.

    It would have been in consonance with the spirit of Captain Vere should he on this occasion have concealed nothing from the condemned one--should he indeed have frankly disclosed to him the part he himself had played in bringing about the decision, at
    the same time revealing his actuating motives. On Billy's side it is not improbable that such a confession would have been received in much the same spirit that prompted it. Not without a sort of joy indeed he might have appreciated the brave opinion of
    him implied in his Captain's making such a confidant of him. Nor, as to the sentence itself could he have been insensible that it was imparted to him as to one not afraid to die. Even more may have been. Captain Vere in the end may have developed the
    passion sometimes latent under an exterior stoical or indifferent. He was old enough to have been Billy's father. The austere devotee of military duty, letting himself melt back into what remains primeval in our formalized humanity, may in the end have
    caught Billy to his heart even as Abraham may have caught young Isaac on the brink of resolutely offering him up in obedience to the exacting behest.

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    Attack on Oxford’s Sublime Style was also an attack on elaborate and extravagant courtly forms. Oxford sacrificed book at time of Essex rebellion as court negotiated with city.

    Incoherent, unruly and ambisinister Droeshout Figure stands as a warning (monstrare) that Shakespeare is not a fit subject for imitation. Encomium mirrors the bombast and confusion of Shakespearean style as Jonson assimilates and reproduces Shakespeare’
    s Forma/Idea. Jonson imitates/emulates Shakespearean deformities/vices in the First Folio matter but chooses better ways for himself.
    ——————————-
    Ben Jonson, Timber {Topic 67}} {{Subject: AFFECTED language}}

    DE VERE argutis. - I do hear them say often some men are not witty, because they are not everywhere witty; than which nothing is more foolish. If an eye or a nose be an excellent part in the face, therefore be all eye or nose! I think the eyebrow, the
    forehead, the cheek, chin, lip, or any part else are as necessary and natural in the place. But now nothing is good that is natural; RIGHT and NATURAL LANGUAGE seems to have least of the wit in it; that which is writhed and tortured is counted the more
    exquisite. Cloth of bodkin or tissue must be embroidered; as if no face were fair that were not powdered or painted! no beauty to be had but in wresting and writhing our own tongue! Nothing is fashionable till it be DEFORMED; and this is to write like a
    gentleman. All must be affected and preposterous as our gallants' clothes, sweet-bags, and night-dressings, in which you would think our men lay in, like LADIES, it is so curious.

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    Chapman, Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois:

    When Homer made Achilles passionate,
    Wrathfull, revengefull, and insatiate15
    In his affections, what man will denie
    He did compose it all of industrie
    To let men see that men of most renowne,
    Strong'st, noblest, fairest, if they set not downe
    Decrees within them, for disposing these,20
    Of judgement, resolution, uprightnesse,
    And certaine knowledge of their use and ends,
    Mishap and miserie no lesse extends
    To their destruction, with all that they pris'd,
    Then to the poorest and the most despis'd?25

    ——————————————
    Edward de Vere to Robert Cecil, April 27, 1603)-

    ...I cannot but find a great grief in myself to remember the mistress which we have lost, under whom both you and myself from our greenest years have been in a manner brought up and, although it hath pleased God after an earthly kingdom to take her up
    into a more permanent and heavenly state wherein I do not doubt but she is crowned with glory, and to give us a prince wise, learned and enriched with all virtues, yet the long time which we spent in her service we cannot look for so much left of our
    days as to bestow upon another, neither the long acquaintance and kind familiarities wherewith she did use us we are not ever to expect from another prince, as denied by the infirmity of age and common course of reason. In this common shipwreck, mine is
    above all the rest who, least regarded though often comforted of all her followers, she hath left to try my fortune among the alterations of time and chance, either without sail whereby to take the advantage of any prosperous gale or with anchor to ride
    till the storm be overpast. There is nothing therefore left to my comfort but the excellent virtues and deep wisdom wherewith God hath endued our new master and sovereign Lord, who doth not come amongst us as a stranger but as a natural prince,
    succeeding by right of blood and inheritance, not as a conqueror but as the true shepherd of Christ's flock to cherish and comfort them.

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