Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0024859, Tue, 3 Dec 2013 08:50:21 -0500

Subject
Re: Shelley on Mont Blanc...better images and the Shelley
connection
Date
Body
What was the Shelleyan effect upon VN of encountering the American sublime, in the form of the Rockies and other Western landscapes he cherished first for their butterflies?
On Dec 2, 2013, at 5:24 PM, Jansy Mello wrote:

>
> In the summer of 1816 Percy Bysshe Shelley hiked to Mont Blanc in the Swiss Alps and began jotting down notes. He was trying to understand what he was seeing--not just a mountain, but Mont Blanc, a craggy peak in the most famous mountain range in Europe. As Carol Rumens puts it, the poet was embarking on "a journey through philosophical and scientific concepts that had yet to find a modern vocabulary." Rumens sees the poem as a record of Shelley's confrontation with the possibility that the mountain may mean nothing at all, that the perceiving imagination may be helpless before the sublimity of the mountain--Kant's terrifying sublime without the pleasure of the entirely new idea that makes the sublime comprehensible.
>
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> Shelley was struggling with an aesthetic question: how do we see something as individual within a larger conceptual framework? For a surveyor Mont Blanc is just another point on a map. A resident of a nearby village would know every detail of the mountain, but he or she would be unlikely to grant the mountain any higher meaning.
>
> Shelley was trying to do two things at the same time: See it as a unique thing and as an exemplar of a larger idea. In other words, he was trying to see Mont Blanc aesthetically, as a balance between the concrete and the abstract, between object and idea. He recorded his close observations in his poem "Mont Blanc," but he never just lists the features of the mountain. He also tries to record his own poetic experience.
>
> Far, far above, piercing the infinite sky,
> Mont Blanc appears--still, snowy, and serene;
> Its subject mountains their unearthly forms
> Pile around it, ice and rock; broad vales between
> Of frozen floods, unfathomable deeps,
> Blue as the overhanging heaven, that spread
> And wind among the accumulated steeps;
> A desert peopled by the storms alone,
> Save when the eagle brings some hunter's bone,
> And the wolf tracks her there--how hideously
> Its shapes are heap'd around!
>
> In the poem's concluding lines, he oscillates between two opposing propositions. First that Mont Blanc is a work of art, an embodied idea.
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> The secret Strength of things
> Which governs thought, and to the infinite dome
> Of Heaven is as a law, inhabits thee!
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> The second is more terrifying than the initial glimpse of the peak: that the mountain may mean nothing at all.
>
> And what were thou, and earth, and stars, and sea,
> If to the human mind's imaginings
> Silence and solitude were vacancy?
>
> Posted by Richard Prouty in General Literature, Philosophy | Permalink | Comments (0)
> http://onewaystreet.typepad.com/one_way_street/general_literature/
>
>
> Monblanc fountain pen nib and white capped symbol:
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