In a message dated 28/12/2006 04:25:36 GMT Standard Time,
chaiselongue@EARTHLINK.NET writes:
I've
always pictured a glass roof with the little bird flying against the slope and
the poet looking up. Doesn't make any sense of course now that I think about
it, unless Shade actually lived in a glass house.
Well, I've certainly experienced --- not often, but more than once ---
seeing, or hearing, a bird fly straight into an upright glass windowpane,
and then falling either dead or stunned to the ground outside. There would have
to be a clear reflection of the sky in the pane for the bird to be so
deluded.
Looking at the first 12 lines even more closely (yet again!) I really do
find it difficult to make sense, head or tail, of them. "I was the
shadow" Query ? "Shadow"? "I was the smudge of ashen fluff"
Query ? "I'd duplicate myself, my lamp, an apple on a plate" Query ? "Hang all
the furniture above the grass" Query ? Frankly, I'm confused. The lines
are definitely striking and memorable, but I'm beginning to think they
are virtually nonsensical.
The contrast with Herbert's poem could hardly be greater, though I think
Shade must also have had Herbert in mind:
The
Elixir.
A man
that looks on glass
On it may stay his eye,
Or if he pleaseth, through
it pass,
And then the heaven espy.
Clear enough! Crystal clear in fact. Zembla
is Heaven.
Jury out.
Charles