Pages

Thursday 25 May 2017

The Write Advice 094: HARRY HANSEN


There is only one definition for a novel –– it is the way the man who writes it looks at the world.  And there are as many ways of writing a novel as there are ways of looking at the world.

Source unspecified


 

Use the link below to read more about North American journalist, editor, historian and literary critic HARRY HANSEN:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Hansen_(author)

 

 

You might also enjoy:

 
The Write Advice 004: KURT VONNEGUT

 
The Write Advice 014: DAVID IRELAND

 
The Write Advice 064: JOY WILLIAMS

Thursday 18 May 2017

Poet of the Month 039: GEORGE ORWELL



GEORGE ORWELL 
(aka ERIC BLAIR), 1943





 
SOMETIMES IN THE 
MIDDLE AUTUMN DAYS


 

Sometimes in the middle autumn days,
The windless days when the swallows have flown,
And the sere elms brood in the mist,
Each tree a being, rapt, alone,

 

I know, not as in barren thought,
But wordlessly, as the bones know,
What quenching of my brain, what numbness,
Wait in the dark grave where I go.

 

And I see the people thronging the street,
The death-marked people, they and I
Goalless, rootless, like leaves drifting,
Blind to the earth and to the sky;

Nothing believing, nothing loving,
Not in joy nor in pain, not heeding the stream
Of precious life that flows within us,
But fighting, toiling as in a dream.

 

O you who pass, halt and remember
What tyrant holds your life in bond,
Remember the fixed, reprieveless hour,
The crushing stroke, the dark beyond.

 

And let us now, as men condemned,
In peace and thrift of time stand still
To learn our world while yet we may,
And shape our souls, however ill;

 

And we will live, hand, eye and brain,
Piously, outwardly, ever-aware,
Till all our hours burn clear and brave
Like candle flames in windless air;

 

So shall we in the rout of life
Some thought, some faith, some meaning save,
And speak it once before we go
In silence to the silent grave.

 

 




Published in The Adelphi, March 1933
 
[as ERIC BLAIR]





 
 
 
 
It can be easy to forget that 'George Orwell' was, in fact, two different writers –– the creator of the dystopian masterpieces Animal Farm (1945) and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) and, under his real name Eric Blair, a composer of verse which, in the early to mid 1930s, appeared occasionally in The Adelphi, one of London's most widely circulated and respected literary journals.  The committed Socialist was also something of a closet Romantic whose adolescent years had been spent, as he once explained, 'writing bad and usually unfinished "nature poems" in the Georgian style.'

 
Many of Blair's poems contain themes –– the beauty and purity of nature, nostalgia for what was largely a romanticized vision of the Edwardian England of his childhood, the need to exhibit some overriding form of personal responsibility in our dealings with others –– that he would later go on to explore at greater length in his journalism, essays and novels.  Each of his nine published books contains at least one passage in which the idea of contentment is directly equated with experiencing the joys of the 'unspoiled' English countryside.  One of the best examples of this appears in Nineteen Eighty-Four when its protagonist, the downtrodden and secretly rebellious Winston Smith, remembers what he calls 'the Golden Country' of his pre-Big Brother childhood ' an old, rabbit bitten pasture, with a foot track wandering across it and a mole hill here and there.  In the ragged hedge on the opposite side of the field the boughs of the elm trees were swaying very faintly in the breeze, their leaves just stirring in dense masses like women's hair.  Somewhere near at hand, though out of sight, there was a clear, slow-moving stream where dace were swimming in the pools under the willow trees.'  

 
This is a remarkably poetic passage (note the use of the arresting simile in the line 'stirring in dense masses like women's hair') for what is a brilliant but generally prosaic work of fiction intended to expose totalitarianism and its ruthless crushing of the human spirit.  Although Eric Blair abandoned poetry altogether after 1936, its influence lived on in the work of his alter-ego George Orwell, whose poetic sensibilities were, it could be argued, of a subtler but no less affecting variety.   
   


 
 
 
 
Use the link below to read more poems by British novelist, journalist, critic and poet GEORGE ORWELL: 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
You might also enjoy:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Last updated 19 March 2021  
  

Thursday 11 May 2017

Think About It 025: CHRISTINE ROSEN


If, in the twentieth century, 'character' gave way to 'personality'… then in the twenty-first century 'personality' exists only if it is broadcast, rated, praised and consumed by as many people as possible — put on display for strangers as well as intimates.  In addition, the overpraised American personality expects regularly to assess the worth of others, regardless of his qualifications for doing so:  instant polling, telephone surveys that follow even the most mundane business transaction, voting on television shows such as American Idol, ratings on websites such as Amazon.com and eBay that rank buyers, sellers, and even rate the raters all give the overpraised American a perpetual reminder of his own supposed control over the success of others.

'The Overpraised American: Christopher Lasch's "The Culture of Narcissism" Revisited'  [Policy Review #133, 1 October 2005.]


 

Use the link below to read the full 2005 article by North American scholar CHRISTINE ROSEN:

 

https://web.archive.org/web/20100719145235/http://www.hoover.org/publications/policy-review/article/8093 


 

You might also enjoy:

 
Think About It 022: CHRISTOPHER LASCH

 
Think About It 065: CHRISTOPHER LASCH

 
Think About It 014: DOROTHY ROWE