Thursday, June 08, 2006

A Golden Hue Upon The Past

Oh for someone who still has a way with words!
Oh for wit. For humour that involves more than profanities and crude imagery.
For lyricism. For style. For class. For grace.
He is rare. That man of wit. Almost no more to be found in my generation.
The last of them are dying out. On whom should we cast the blame for this tragedy?
On the media? On "liberation". Sexual liberation has brought with it a somewhat ironic liberation of language. For, although if you so choose you now may curse and blast and flirt in a manner no way coy in its meaning, and therefore be "free" of the restrictions social protocol had placed upon your use of language in the past, a curious restriction seems to have placed itself upon the lips of most of the young today. You see, although there now exists no facet of the spoken language that is out of bounds in today's public domain, strangely enough, most insist on using but a small handful of the vocabulary available to them. This handful being mostly comprised of that which until a few decades ago was considered blasphemous and shameful.
Like the child finally allowed to have chocolate cake for breakfast, who forevermore will have nothing else because he fears losing this long-awaited right.
Perhaps similarly, many feel the need to litter their speech with as many four letter words as possible, in a way cementing their right to do so if they wish.
"Liberation" has led to "Restriction".

Of course we can blame it on lack of education. Blame it on the 'changing times'. Whatever reason you should choose to excuse this loosening on the grasp of language, it does not change the fact that we are losing something precious. Losing our ability to adequetely express ourselves. Adequetely describe today's world for future generations. Perhaps 'adequete' is not a very good word to use in this case, as for many in today's Ireland, it would be adequete to tell your grandchildren that the world when you were young was "alright, like." That the woman you fell in love with was "savage, like." Not much of a ring to it.

Oh for someone like John Donne, asking her to "send home my long strayed eyes to me, which too long have dwelt on thee."
Or even asking another to "licence my roving hands, and let them go, before, behind, between, above, below."

Or describing to his love the mingling of their two bloods in the one flea that bites them both, which cannot be described as a sin, or a loss of virginity. I'd like to hear men today coming up with such an elaborate story to seduce a woman. Elaborate stories are still around, yet none so poetic or indeed so refreshingly individual.

Or Henry King, who in "The Surrender", a particular favourite of mine, described the parting of him and his love as the parting of the severed soul from its body. Who began the poem with the words "My once dear love, hapless that I no more must call thee so", who continued throughout with a flair and a feeling almost unmatched today:
"We that did nothing study but the way
to love each other, with which thoughts the day
rose with delight to us and with them set
must learn the hatefull art, how to forget

We that did nothing wish that heaven would give
beyond ourselves, nor did desire to live
beyond that wish, all these now cancell must
as if not writ in faith, but words and dust"

Who ended the poem with words as hauntingly beautiful:
"In this last kiss I here surrender thee
back to theyself, so thou again art free
thou in another, sad as that, resend
the truest heart that lover e'er did lend.

Now turn from each. So fare our severed hearts
as the divorced soul from her body parts."

Do you think there is any connection between the increase in secularism and the decrease in romanticism?? Do you become less romantic as your belief in a higher being fades away? Religion requires faith. So too does love. I believe there is some connection. How much of a connection, I do not know.

I could go on..and on. My love for poetry, in particular the certain 17th century poetry termed "Metaphysical", knows no bounds. My admiration for those who write with passion, with style, with ease, is huge.
But I won't go on. Perhaps today's thought is one of my many that seem to place upon the past a golden hue which it never had possessed. There still are those whose words, both spoken and written, strike a chord within me. Some are writers I shall never meet. But others. Others are people who, although perhaps not published, possess that certain 'je ne sais quoi'. I know, because at various points in my life I've met some of them.

1 comment:

3li said...

Thanks for passing by my blog.

The truth and depth in your words surely burns the darkest devil, for the connection between love and faith, though often overlooked, was given its due within your words.

Once again, thanks.