Melville's Kid's
Lear's Fool
Lycidas at worldnet.att.net
Fri Jun 2 06:24:09 CDT 2000
In another chapter, Mr. Bloom points out Melville's
considerable debts to Shakespeare, comparing Ahab to
the likes of King Lear and Macbeth, and he goes on to
argue that writers as disparate as Faulkner, Nathanael
West, Thomas Pynchon, Ralph Ellison and Toni Morrison
"are Melville's children."
FOOL Toni? I didn't know Melville had a Toni. Did she
love
him as a daughter?
As he did in his 1994 magnum opus, "The Western Canon,"
Mr. Bloom demonstrates his taste in these pages for
categorizing literary works and ranking them in
strict hierarchies. He declares that modern short stories
are either Chekhovian or Borgesian, the first gratifying
"our hunger for reality," the second teaching us "how
ravenous we
still are for what is beyond supposed reality."
FOOL Categorizing? Prithee, nuncle, tell me whether a
madman be a teacher or a critic.
LEAR A Bloom, a Bloom.
FOOL No, he's a teacher who has a critic for a King.
He asserts that "Don Quixote" is the best of all novels, and
that Cormac McCarthy's "Blood Meridian" is "the strongest
imaginative
work by any living American writer."
FOOL Old men cannot remember the living from the dead, but
that old man that wrote that knightly tale owes much your
maker and mine some say, and your makers maker some say,
and your child of the sea is the father of a
Toni. I didn't know he had a Toni?
As for human nature, he suggests that all people -- not to
mention all Literary characters -- can be divided into four
types:
Hamlets, Falstaffs, Don Quixotes or Sancho Panzas.
FOOL Are you a Don or a Hamlet nuncle?
LEAR Oh madness, I am two crowns from one egg.
OSWALD How's Sancho Falstaff?
http://www.nytimes.com/library/books/060200books.html
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