... today's homepage@your writing
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- 8.4.95 15.30 Philip's cafe (Wie Katoen)
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abjuring of Battles for a sublime
I feel completely invigorated again,
I read earlier today Samuel Taylor Coleridge's view that
whereas Shakespeare 'darts himself forth, and passes into
all the forms of human character and passion' Milton
'attracts all forms and things to himself, into the unity
of his own ideal' and 'all things and modes of action shape
themselves anew in the being of Milton; while Shakespeare
becomes all things, yet forever remaining himself'.
And which of these ways of writing and being
do I really
prefer
in the abstract?
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5.12.95
And as I pause after typing this I still feel some of that excitement. The feeling that, for all its apparent Christianity, Milton's way of writing is for me, as for it has been for many, more true than is almost any writing, except perhaps Shakespeare's.
As a way to exist
(c) john chris jones 1995