Ressurecting an old posting [( Nabokov-L, 5/1/2009 ) "The cradle rocks above an abyss, and common sense tells us that
our existence is but a brief crack of light between two eternities of
darkness." (SM) ... and a variant from Shade's Pale Fire:
"Outstare the stars. Infinite foretime and/ Infinite
aftertime: above your head/ They close like giant wings, and you are
dead." (John Shade, in V.Nabokov´s Pale Fire, lines 122/124)], and
a more recent one with Thomas Mann's and Goethe's
sentences concerning a Venetian gondolla/berth/coffin -- to
add another item to the collection:
In "The Shipping News," a 2001 drama film directed by
Lasse Hallström (based on the 1994 Pulitzer Prize winning novel by E. Annie
Proulx) the theme of afterlife is brought up once again.
Nevertheless, the context in which conjectures about our brief passage
through life ("like a boat which crosses the ocean before it sinks")
becomes slightly ridiculous and rather enjoyable to follow. A fisherman
was drowned in the cold Neufoundland waters. During his wake one of
his companions philosophize about these grave issues when, all of
a sudden, the dead man spurts out his mouthful of the ocean, and rises
from the candle-lit table ( it reminded me of a scene in Jorge
Amado's 1959 short-novel, The Two Deaths of Quincas
Wateryell ). The improvised solemn speech is cut short - to
the speaker's enormous discomfiture. Life goes on as usual for the
ressurrected guy, his community, our nuclear planet... like a
bigger boat before it sinks, while infinite foretime and
aftertime close their giant
wings.