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[personal profile] poliphilo
I know Byron didn't like to think of himself as a romantic but this is the acme of romanticism- a great man with a horrific secret, more spooks than the average funhouse and mountains, mountains, mountains.

 It comes out of the same summer workshop (on the shores of Lake Leman) that produced Frankenstein.

(If only Frankenstein was this good!)

The occult revival starts here. With Byron and his gang so crazy for magic (though he knew nothing about it) it's no wonder his grandchildren (his spiritual descendants) all wanted to be magicians. 

But that's a side excursion- one we might have spared ourselves. If we'd read Byron more attentively we'd have learned  that the drugs don't work. We're on the main line here. The one from nowhere to nowhere. E.A. Poe and Samuel Beckett are waiting just ahead.
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
"They give birth above an open grave"- I'm quoting from memory- but I think that's the line.
I find the same philosophy in Byron.

So no, I don't think Beckett leads nowhere, rather that Beckett (and Byron and Poe) believed or were afraid that life leads nowhere.
From: [identity profile] saare-snowqueen.livejournal.com
The lines, from Waiting for Godot, one of my favourite plays, reads,
"We give birth astride a grave,
the light glimmers an instant, and then is seen no more."

But that's from Lucky's speech; the tramps continue to wait, they don't know for how long or for whom, but they wait. Many believe that this represents Beckett's beliefs - not the desperate ravings of the mad Lucky or the ringmaster. Yes, Beckett saw life as confusing struggle but he clearly believed it was worth the effort.
From: [identity profile] poliphilo.livejournal.com
"Beckett saw life as confusing struggle but he clearly believed it was worth the effort."

I think he was rather more blackly pessimistic than that, but of course he was an artist, not a philosopher or theologian, and his work is open to interpretation.
From: [identity profile] saare-snowqueen.livejournal.com
He lived to be 96 and was still drinking with his Irish friends - to the great dismay of his wife.
Of course the work of any artist is open to interpretation, I agree, but I have chosen to regard it as life affirming - He was Irish after all.

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