This is one of those quote-within-a-quote-within-a-quote things that happen in blogs.
Litlove, in a post for the
Sunday Salon is writing about reading Rilke's Duino Elegies.
This post on its own is worth reading, as she captures vividly the ecstacy of reading Rilke (and I have
lidocafe to thank that I am now in the company of those who share that ecstacy).
But I particularly loved this quote from the critic William Gass, writing about Rilke:
The poet, while composing, struggles to rule a nation of greedy self-serving malcontents; every idea, however tangential to the main theme it may have been initially, wants to submerge the central subject beneath its fructifying self as though each drizzle were scheming a forty-days rain; every jig and trot desires to be the whole dance; every la-di-da and line length, image, order, rhyme, variation and refrain, every well-mouthed vowel, dental click, silent design, represents a corporation, cartel, union, well-heeled lobby, a Pentagon or NRA, eager to turn the law towards its interests; every word wants to enjoy a potency so supreme it will emasculate the others.
That is why I read. That is why I teach.