Sandy Drescher
wrote:
Interestingly, birds,
like many humans, do not inhibit this instinctive behavior in response to life
experience - reflection being
absent from their learning strategies.
Nice point.
For what it’s worth, in turn, I’ve just been watching the Howard
Hughes flick, Hell’s Angels, 1930,
and I wondered if VN ever saw it. The aerial combat scenes of WWI biplanes
reminded me of hordes of butterflies filling the sky; and I can’t forget the
jaw-dropping sight of two of them crashing straight into each other in mid-air,
and dropping to the ground. This must have been when two of the three pilots who
died during the filming came to their ends. Not wholly unreminiscent of the
wax-winged Icarus, Yeats, Auden, Carlos Williams and the Breughel
painting.
As has already been remarked, part
of the power of Pale Fire is its
amazing ability continually to remind one of something else in one’s own reading
or experience. I feel I must now re-locate the instances of air crashes
recounted in its pages.
Charles