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Originally Posted by
Quark
That's funny. No, LitNet is a little too casual to get offended over. Really, there's only three things that offend me: criticizing my favorite sports teams, the low salaries of teachers, and pointless emoticons (oh, how I loathe that last one).
Well, if I had known that, I would have revealed that I think the Chicago Cubs stink, teachers are over paid, and :svengo::driving::auto:.
:p
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I was just surprised you were giving me such a hard time on this thread. Usually, you're pretty laid-back, but now you're telling me all about things that "there's no way anyone can" do. It's taking me a moment to adjust.
I wasn't intentionally giving you a hard time. I was just disagreeing with something you said.
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Well, you and I could have some academic discussion about the extent that art interacts with intellectual movements, but that seems beside the point. As I've said in a number of posts, I'm not arguing that the poem is making direct reference to the Enlightenment. What I'm saying is that there's some uncertainty about the coming Sunday in Leopardi's "Saturday in the Village," and that the uncertainty has something to do with secularization.
Ah, now that's a legitamate point. Forget any reference to an intellectual movement, let's focus on what the poem says. But still I have to disagree. The second to last stanza is fairly clear that Sunday is the best day of the week:
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This one [Saturday] get this warmest welcome,
Full of hope, as it is, and joy.
Tomorrow the hours will be leaden
With emptiness and melancholy,
Everybody going back in his mind
To the daily grind. (39-44)
I don't see anything in the poem that would suggest secularism. If Sunday is not heavenly bliss, that's just the toil of life.
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The poem raises the idea of a pleasant, enjoyable Sunday in the first half, but in the second half we find some disconcerting details. The carpenter has to "strain" and "sweat" when one would expect the day to be over. The poem looks forward to the Sunday, but when the poet considers the future Sunday is skipped over rather quickly and we move into Monday. What happened to Sunday? And, in the last lines, Leopardi tells us that our Sunday may be delayed. Why? This points to some uncertainty about Sunday. I suggested that the uncertainty may reflect secularization. The carpenter has to work overtime because life doesn't conform to the Bible's idea of a six-day work week. Sunday might be skipped over because ultimately it's empty. Our Sunday may be a long time coming because the promises made by religion may not be fulfilled. That was the interpretation I was offering. I brought up the Enlightenment as evidence for what I saying. I pointed out that the Enlightenment encouraged secularization, and that Leopardi held some rather atheistic positions. It would make sense that given what we know about the historical and biographical context of the poem that he could be talking about unbelief entering into our worldview. That's all I'm saying.
OK, I hear you.
My reading, thanks to Paul's insight of the poem's subtext of death and the carpenter (Christ) possibly building a coffin, is that Sunday is the rest that comes at the end of life, the cessation of toil. But the poem has a circular movement. One generation passeth and the next cometh, and the new week starts with the toil returning.