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Re: I'm glad we agree on so much. Camilla Send a noteboard - 12/01/2011 08:09:46 PM
Inferno is very entertaining, especially if you have a good grasp of mythology and Italian history -- or get an annotated edition.

I believe I do have a good grasp of mythology and Italian history, but I'd need an annotated edition anyway. It shows on occasion in Milton too - that the Middle Ages and Renaissance had some epics that are now completely lost to the big public. Very few people nowadays, and I'm not among them, recognize names from or references to Orlando Furioso, or Amadis of Gaul, and then I'm even limiting myself to the most famous examples.


True. I only know of them through Don Quijote.

True. Although one of the things about the allusions to Heaven in the Hell scenes was that it reminded me precisely of the fantasy trope of alluding to the long lost Golden Age (Valinor in Tolkien, obviously, but you find it in all epic fantasy that I can think of, and quite a few others) -- it is always just slight drips, never an attempt to properly describe it; and that works much better.

I was thinking more of the preaching in or from Heaven than of the allusions to Heaven in the Hell scenes.


Ah. Yes. Tolkien manages to keep it from mind-numbing boredom, at least.

Even in Tolkien, the radiance of Valinor is not as effective in Silmarillion, I think, as it becomes when all that is lost, in the longing of those who have lost it. NĂ¼menor as well. Perhaps I am just in love with nostalgia.

No, that's true. The Ainulindale is quite readable, but hardly the best part of the Silmarillion.


Precisely.

Yes. I have now realized I really need to read Blake. Any suggestions on where to start?

Depends. Do you want short poetry or insane cosmology?

Short poetry might be safer.


Then the obvious candidate is Songs of Innocence and Experience. They gain more meaning if you see them in the context of his insane cosmology, however. Of course, you could always read up on that separately. Reading The Lamb in connection with The Tyger and seeing that against his ideas is quite interesting.

You could always read Auguries of Innocence. It has one of the best opening stanzas, but I was never a great fan of the later stuff.

Read "The Rape of the Lock". It is short and sweet and might count towards your parody text for the challenge

Hm. Now that you mention that, I'm wondering if I didn't actually read it... I've certainly read about it. I might go for that, alright.


Or there is always The Dunciad. I always keep meaning to read it. It is another mock epic.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
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