Rainbow & Parabola (was NP)

Terrance lycidas2 at earthlink.net
Thu Jul 29 05:39:32 CDT 2004


 A Grimm Parable. 





jbor wrote:
> 
> > "But it is a curve each of them feels, unmistakably. It is the parabola.
> > They must have guessed, once or twice--guessed and refused to
> > believe--that everything, always, collectively, had been moving toward
> > that purified shape latent in the sky, that shape of no surprise, no
> > second chances, no return. Yet they do move forever under it, reserved
> > for its own black-and-white bad news certainly as if it were the
> > Rainbow, and they its children...."
> >
> > GR.209
> 
> Precisely: "as if it were". It's a literary conceit, not a literal
> assertion.
> 
> on 25/7/04 11:39 AM, jbor wrote:
> 
> >> The only way to equate the trajectory of a projectile under the force of
> >> gravity with the arc of a rainbow is via the rhetorical scheme (or trope) of
> >> Parabola, defined as a "resemblance mystical" (Puttenham, _The Arte of
> >> English Poesy_, 1569), and thus as a function of language and communication
> >> (some might say intersubjectivity, or poetic licence, or "transformation",
> >> or even "spin").
> >
> > Point here being that, yes, the V-2 rocket's arc is a (if not the) primary
> > referent of the novel's title, but that as with those other phenomena to
> > which it is connected in the text: the curve of a banana or an erect penis,
> > the earth's orbit around the sun, S-shaped spokes and architecture, a
> > theatre's proscenium arch, running water warping the square holes of a
> > harmonica or the passage of human life and death, and more; it is a literary
> > conceit which makes it so.
> 
> best



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