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wednes ([personal profile] wednes) wrote2006-10-07 03:37 am
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Quoth the Raven: Eat My Shorts!

As you must know, today is the anniversary of the death of Edgar Allan Poe. A depressed, lovelorn, unlucky, melancholy, murder-obsessed, writer and drug addict, Poe was never actually famous or beloved in his lifetime. He wrote some of the greatest horror and some of the most amazing, obsessive love poetry in the history of mankind. He also inspired people like Bouldelaire, Nabokov, Auden, and myself. Ray Bradbury's "The Box" is a blatant, if chilling, homage to The Oblong Box. So too is "The Lake" a rip-off (or homage, if you asked him) of Poe's wonderful poem of the same title.

My favorite Poe stories are Hop Frog, and Cask of Amontillado. Have been ever since I had to read them for school. But there are many, many more that I love. Now that I think on it, Poe is probably the best writer I ever had to read for school. I enjoyed One Flew Over the Cukoos Nest as well, but nothing thrilled me like Poe. So macabre...he was like an old tymey Stephen King as far as I was concerned.
I don't think he ever wrote a bad poem, but I certainly prefer the ones where the chick turns out to be dead at the end. I love the girls names he used; I should come across many more Annabelle's, Ligiea'a, and Morella's in real life. Too bad I don't plan to procreate...

Poe was also American. Not to get all America, Fuck Yeah! on you, but great American writers, poets, artists etc, are in the far minority. I suspect it's because we've always insisted on a rather high quality of life, which in turn lessens our need to express our inner rage and torment. Myself, I do my best writing when I'm the most miserable. I could probably write a Sadie sequel in 30 days if I went off my meds. Problem is, I might also kill someone unless I was chained to the radiator werewolf-style. My point being, Poe was miserable, and indeed, he was brilliant. Crazy types tend to have the best insight on the Human Condition, and no one expressed the depth of blackness in the human soul like Poe.

Edgar Allan Poe was also one of the first people to tout Art for Art's Sake. This means that he wrote for nothing but the love of doing so. Not for publication, not for fans, not even to prove that he could do it just to boost his own self esteeme. He just wanted to write. I suspect that it would have harmed him not to have an outlet for all that turmoil and torment. Then again, he also had an enormous drinking problem, poor chap.

And you know, even though I've had at least five copies of The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, I don't have one now. So if you've borrowed one from me over the years and never returned it, now may be a good time to do so. You know, now that I've reminded you how good it is.

[identity profile] wednes.livejournal.com 2006-10-07 09:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know why, but I've never been a fan of jazz.

[identity profile] cmdavi-70.livejournal.com 2006-10-07 10:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Nothing wrong with that. I've tried and tried to get interested in hip hop, for example, and it does little for me other than give me a headache and raise my blood pressure. I'm sure jazz has that effect on some people.

I must disinguish between more classic forms of jazz and the "smooth jazz" that's currenly popular and doesn't interest me.

[identity profile] wednes.livejournal.com 2006-10-07 10:40 pm (UTC)(link)
That makes sense. I find it interesting how when something gets really popular these kinds of watered down sub-rip-offs emerge. "Young Country" or "Hair Bands" leap to mind. Even good, wholesome grunge and goth culture is co opted by a bunch of slags who shop at the mall. You almost need to constantly invent new genre's just to find one that hasn't been bastardized by a pale imitator.

[identity profile] cmdavi-70.livejournal.com 2006-10-07 11:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Absolutely, and that's an ongoing form of tension throughout the arts in general. The more something becomes socially acceptable, often the more watered down it becomes. It's no surprise that after thirty years, punk rock has gone from being considered the scariest, most vile form of music among the majority to now being a genre that encompasses Christian punk bands and is played in TV ads. Or, that Arnold Scwartzenagger used Twisted Sister's "We're Not Gonna Take It" as his campaign theme in the primaries, and one assumes, the upcoming election.

[identity profile] wednes.livejournal.com 2006-10-07 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm sure Dee Snider was thrilled...
I think Tipper Gore kind of put him off Democrats!

[identity profile] cmdavi-70.livejournal.com 2006-10-08 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Ha!