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May. 1st, 2024

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 How magical to live in a ruined castle in the 1930s even if you have no money and have sold all the furniture and are reduced to eating meals of cold rice and sprouts....

Dodie Smith's I Capture the Castle is one of my favourite books. I find that what I remember best is the narrator's voice and the castle itself. What I have forgotten is the story, which is all to the good because I have no more idea of how the plot is going to resolve itself than if this was a first reading. All the people are alive and thriving- even the two American lover-boys who I found disappointing first time round. Had there ever been a movie made the young Tilda Swinton would have been a shoo-in for the role of Topaz- the narrator's otherworldly step-mother...

(Ah, I've done my research since writing the last para- and see there was a movie made- by the BBC- in 2003 and Tara Fitzgerald played Topaz. I've no idea if it's any good. At least we were spared the projected Disney version starring Hayley Mills- which would have been horrible...)

Dodie Smith also wrote plays and 101 Dalmations- and a number of other adult novels which, according to the critics, fail to live up to this one....

....which was written in the 1940s in a fit of homesickness for England. Dodie had married a conscientious objector and they had chosen to sit out the Second World War in California. She was working as a scriptwriter on the Hollywood production line- and despising it- but finding some sort of mitigation of the awfulness in the friendship of Christopher Isherwood....

Dodie's love of England, humorous, mystical, pushing at the boundaries of what can be said in words- chimes with my own. Oh, what an excellent text this is to be reading at Beltane....
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 There was a stage of his career when John Lennon was talking- quite seriously I believe- of redoing all the Beatles material and this time getting it right- which is sort-of amusing if you believe as most people do that the Beatles got it right first time round....

But Lennon was a perfectionist- and perfectionists are aware of all the tiny flaws in their work and get so they can't see the triumph for the trivia. I know how this feels.

The greatest artists are those who don't care- and the reason they don't care is because they're so busy making new things they forget about the old. Shakespeare comes into this category and Mozart and Raphael and Picasso and all those other gurgling downspouts of beauty and wisdom.

Thomas Hardy maintained that the awkwardness of his verse was essential to the poetry- and Leonard Cohen said there was a crack in everything and that's how the light gets in....

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