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Thread: Swann Song

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    Swann Song

    Swann Song

    Why does that
    Just-invented melody
    Of yours
    Become now mine
    So suddenly,
    Repeating incessantly
    In mind
    From thin air
    Acting now
    Like it was always there,
    A moment grown momentous?

    Why does my
    Just-imagined question
    Become their question for eternity?
    (Nods toward posterity,
    Meekly waiting.)

    So few words and notes
    Compose these countless
    Songs and quotes;

    Infinity entrapped
    Within memento mori.
    Both seek arcadian escape
    From grave eternity:

    Tom's love in Texas,
    Ended yesterday,
    The unstruck bell of swans,
    A theme song from
    The Crown Affair,
    A song of Solomon,
    Time's moving image of eternity,
    Locked within my breast.
    Yet I shall never see
    The start or end.

    We say Amen
    But seek a way to mend
    That right which seems so wrong.

    Diapsalmata:
    A Proust humming
    Phalaris' Inventions.

    - Sitaram

    6-24-05


    http://toosmallforsupernova.org/swannsong.htm


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Explanation:

    Something like a melody or a philosophical question springs into being at some moment in time, but then becomes timeless, perennial, and also very familiar and commonplace, as if we could not imagine existence without it.

    There are such a small number of musical tones in the scales, and a finite number of words in the dictionary of any language, yet the potential for new compositions seems limitless.

    A “memento mori” is often a skull. Infinity is trapped in our skulls, in our consciousness. The mention of “arcadia” alludes to “Et in Arcadia ego” which is Death saying “I am even in this place”, a phrase used by Evelyn Waugh to name the first part of “Brideshead Revisited.”

    I make reference to the first page of Thomas Wolfe’s “Look Homeward, Angel” where he writes “Each of us is all the sums he has not counted: subtract us into nakedness and night again, and you shall see begin in Crete four thousand years ago the love that ended yesterday in Texas.”

    The “unstruck bell” is a term which denotes our internalized concept of the sound of a struck bell. The term is used in describing the result of years of mantra practice or prayer repetition, where the prayer becomes “prayer of the heart,” internalized, automatic, like some melody which we can no longer escape, now become a pattern in our metabolism.

    I mention “Tom’s love” and “The Crown Affair” which is really “The Thomas Crown Affair.”

    The theme song from “The Thomas Crown Affair”.

    (start of lyrics, with repeated stanzas omitted)

    Windmills of Your Mind Lyrics

    Round, like a circle in a spiral
    Like a wheel within a wheel.
    Never ending or beginning,
    On an ever spinning wheel
    Like a snowball down a mountain
    Or a carnival balloon
    Like a carousel that's turning
    Running rings around the moon

    Like a clock whose hands are sweeping
    Past the minutes on it's face
    And the world is like an apple
    Whirling silently in space
    Like the circles that you find
    In the windmills of your mind

    Like a tunnel that you follow
    To a tunnel of it's own
    Down a hollow to a cavern
    Where the sun has never shone
    Like a door that keeps revolving
    In a half forgotten dream
    Or the ripples from a pebble
    Someone tosses in a stream.

    Keys that jingle in your pocket
    Words that jangle your head
    Why did summer go so quickly
    Was it something that I said
    Lovers walking along the shore,
    Leave their footprints in the sand
    Was the sound of distant drumming
    Just the fingers of your hand

    Pictures hanging in a hallway
    And a fragment of this song
    Half remembered names and faces
    But to whom do they belong
    When you knew that it was over
    Were you suddenly aware
    That the autumn leaves were turning
    To the color of her hair

    (end of lyrics)

    Plato, in the dialogue “Timaeus”, describes time as “the moving image of eternity.”

    Many, of course, will be familiar with the “Song of Solomon.”

    We read, elsewhere in the writings attributed to Solomon, in Ecclesiastes 3:11:

    He [God] has also set eternity in their heart, yet so that man will not find out the work which God has done from the beginning even to the end.

    So, there is something infinite enclosed in something finite (the skull or heart) trying to get out, in fact, constantly getting out, escaping, in the form of artistic expression, mathematical discovery and scientific invention. Since we are “created” in this fashion, it is “right” (i.e. correct) and it is also our “right” or privilege to participate in this intellectual activity, yet, because we suffer in the process, it “seems wrong”, a wrong which we try to “mend”, since a part of us does not want to be the way we are, tormented if we do not succeed in creating something immortal, and also, tormented when we do succeed. Our task is sisyphean. We are, as Robert Frost once said, “immortally wounded.”

    Diapsalmatta is the word Kierkegaard uses just before he likens the “music” of an artist to the bull of Phalaris, mentioned in Dante’s Inferno.

    The Diapsalmata (meaning refrains or repetition) is a collection of short sayings or aphorisms

    What is a poet? An unhappy man who conceals profound anguish in his heart, but whose lips are so fashioned that when sighs and groans pass over them they sound like beautiful music. His fate resembles that of the unhappy men who were slowly roasted by a gentle fire in the tyrant Phalaris' bull—their shrieks could not reach his ear to terrify him, to him they sounded like sweet music. And people flock about the poet and say to him: do sing again; Which means, would that new sufferings tormented your soul, and: would that your lips stayed fashioned as before, for your cries would only terrify us, but your music is delightful. And the critics join them, saying: well done, thus must it be according to the laws of aesthetics. Why, to be sure, a critic resembles a poet as one pea another, the only difference being that he has no anguish in his heart and no music on his lips. Behold, therefore would I rather be a swineherd on Amager, and be understood by the swine than a poet, and misunderstood by men.

    The phrase “Phalaris Inventions” reminds us of “Bach’s Inventions”.
    Last edited by Sitaram; 06-26-2005 at 05:26 AM. Reason: Correct a typo

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