Yes, novels are essentially stories. But Ulysses is of course the limit case. "History is the nightmare from which I am trying to awake," says Stephen. Of course, escaping from your culture, and awakening from a nightmare are not quite the same thing. Perhaps poems are more realistic. Fictions need history (as lives need nightmares sometimes?) Poems are free from sorrow.
I think sometimes "getting out" is a way of coping. Who doesn't enjoy a "long Sunday"?
ReplyDeleteBut, yes, I agree with you that poetry and what we call (and what Pound might define as) history are not as connected as, say, fiction is to history.
This is assuming that you mean that narrative is the pulse beneath fiction, that most fiction deals with storytelling in a traditional sense.
Yes, novels are essentially stories. But Ulysses is of course the limit case. "History is the nightmare from which I am trying to awake," says Stephen. Of course, escaping from your culture, and awakening from a nightmare are not quite the same thing. Perhaps poems are more realistic. Fictions need history (as lives need nightmares sometimes?) Poems are free from sorrow.
ReplyDeleteSundays, not always.