Gate of Lilacs
A Verse Commentary on Proust
Clive James
Macmillan, RRP $37.99, Trade
Paperback
A unique book resulting from
Clive James’s love and engagement with Proust’s eternal masterpiece
Over a period of fifteen years
Clive James learned French by almost no other method than reading À la
recherche du temps perdu. Then he spent half a century trying to get up to
speed with Proust's great novel in two different languages. Gate of Lilacs is the
unique product of James's love and engagement with Proust's eternal
masterpiece.
With À la recherche du temps
perdu, Proust, in James's words, 'followed his creative instinct all the way
until his breath gave out', and now James has done the same. In Gate of Lilacs,
James, a brilliant critical essayist and poet, has blended the two forms into
one.
I had always thought the
critical essay and the poem were closely related forms . . . If I wanted to
talk about Proust's poetry beyond the basic level of talking about his language
- if I wanted to talk about the poetry of his thought - then the best way to do
it might be to write a poem. There is nothing like a poem for transmitting a
mental flavour. Instead of trying to describe it, you can evoke it.
In the end, if À la recherche du
temps perdu is a book devoted almost entirely to its author's gratitude for
life, for love, and for art, this much smaller book is devoted to its author's
gratitude for Proust.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Clive James is the multi-million-copy
bestselling author of more than forty books. His poetry collection Sentenced to
Life and his translation of Dante's The Divine Comedy were both Sunday Times
top ten bestsellers, and his collections of verse have been shortlisted for
many prizes. In 2012 he was appointed CBE and in 2013 an Officer of the Order
of Australia.
No comments:
Post a Comment