<div dir="ltr"><div>Noting some things in <i>Life Against Death </i>and <i>GR</i> that seem related (at least, they made me think of one another in rereading)., especially as we start looking at Pirate and his gift more. <br></div><div><br></div><div><div>Brown (I mean you could pull ten relevant sentences out of any page in this book, so this is sort of arbitrary) says, pp 162-3 of my paperback of <i>Life Against Death:</i></div><div><i><br></i></div><div>"The regressive orientation keeps not only our moral personality (character, conscience) in bondage to the past, but also our cognitive faculty--in Freudian terminology, the ego's function of testing reality. The human ego, in its cognitive function, is no transparent mirror transmitting the reality-principle to the id; it has a more active, and distorting, role consequent to upon its incapacity to bear the reality of life in the present. <b>The starting point for the human form of cognitive activity is loss of a loved reality.</b>" </div><div><br></div><div>163: "the ego does not abolish the pleasure-principle, but derives from it the energy sustaining its exploration of reality." </div><div><br></div><div>"Hence also human consciousness is inseparable from an active attempt to alter reality, so as to 'regain the lost objects.'" </div><div><br></div><div>"<b>The more specific and concrete mechanism whereby the body-ego becomes a soul is fantasy.</b> Fantasy may be defined as a hallucination which cathects the memory of gratification.; it is of the same structure as the dream, and has the same relation to the id and to instinctual reality as the dream."</div><div><br></div><div>164 "Identifications as modes of installing the Other inside the Self are fantasies."</div><div><br></div><div>"Fantasy, according to <i>The Interpretation of Dreams, </i>is the product of the primary process, the human organism's first solution to the problem of frustration."</div><div><br></div><div>Quoting Isaacs: "reality-thinking cannot operate without concurrent and supporting unconscious phantasies."</div><div><br></div><div>171: "Projections, with their fetishistic displacement of inner fantasies, must distort the external world."</div><div><br></div></div><div><br></div><div>GR p. 12: "You can't run a war on gusts of emotion."</div><div><br></div><div>GR p. 31: "All these things arise from one difficulty: control[...] The control is put inside. No more need to suffer passively under 'outside forces'--to veer into any wind."</div><div><br></div><div>p. 36: "Incredible black-and-white Scorpia confirmed not a few Piratical fantasies about the glamorous silken-calved English realworld he'd felt so shut away from."</div><div><br></div><div>p. 36 "[...]Scorpia figured as his Last Fling--though herself too young to know <i>that</i>, to know, like Pirate, what the lyrics to "Dancing in the Dark" are <i>really </i>about...</div><div><br></div><div>"He will be scrupulous about never telling her. But there are times when it's agony not to go to her feet, knowing she won't leave Clive, crying <i>you're my last chance...if it can't be you then there's no more time....</i>Doesn't he wish, against all hope, that he <i>could </i>let the poor, Western-man's timetable go...but how does a man...where does he even begin, at age 33...."</div><div><br></div><div>p. 37 "Yes he is waiting, to see if it will end for Roger the same way, part of him, never so cheery as at the spectacle of another's misfortune, rooting for Beaver and all that he, like Clive, stands for, to win out. But another part--an alternate self?--one that he mustn't be quick to call 'decent'--does <i>seem </i>to want for Roger what Pirate himself lost...."</div><div><br></div><div>p. 37 "'You <i>are </i>a pirate,' she'd whispered the last day--neither of them knew it was the last day--'you've come and taken me off on your pirate ship. A girl of good family and the usual repressions. You've raped me. And I'm the Red Bitch of the High Seas....' A lovely game. Pirate wished she'd thought it up sooner. Fucking the last (already the last) day's light away down afternoon to dusk, hours of fucking, too in love with it to uncouple, they noticed how the borrowed room rocked gently, the ceiling obligingly came down a foot, lamps swayed from their fittings, some fraction of the Thameside traffic provided salty cries over the water, and nautical bells....</div><div><br></div><div>"But back over their lowering sky-sea behind, Government hounds were on the track--drawing closer, the cutters are coming, the cutters and the sleek hermaphrodites of the law, agents who, being old hands, will settle for her safe return, won't insist on his execution or capture. Their logic is sound: give him a bad enough wound and he'll come round, round to the ways of this hard-boiled old egg of world and timetables, cycling night to compromising night...."</div><div><br></div><div>"Scorpia's talc-white face, through the last window, across the last gate, was a blow to his heart. A flurry of giggles and best wishes arose from the Wonder Midgets and their admirers. Well, though Pirate, guess I'll go back in the Army...."</div><div><br></div><div>It sounds like an apocalyptic death-sex fantasy. </div><div><br></div></div>