Robert Muir
  • News
  • About THE DIVE
    • Blog
    • Buy the Book
  • About Robert
  • The Scene
  • Media/Reviews
  • Contact

On Marcel Proust - Part Seven - Time Regained

9/10/2018

0 Comments

 
 Even after reading the first three parts of ‘Recherché du Temps Perdue’ (In Search of Lost Time) a.k.a. ‘Remembrances of Things Past’, bragging in an earlier blog about it and then pausing to draw a few breaths that were perhaps considerably longer than originally intended, I stopped in to one of my favorite secondhand bookstores one day, possibly drawn by some inexplicable force, but more likely from force of habit, where I began to search for those numbers of the work I’d not read, knowing that in the end, I must eventually learn what the remaining parts of the piece contained, almost as if swept along  by some flow, a stream of consciousness or another spark of current to find once and for all answers to the question its title seems to provoke so that I might describe the whole piece in a style similar to Marcel Proust’s.  In other words,   I needed something new to read, as did Mona and Proust    wouldn’t be finished or blogged about until I'd read the rest of it 

Later and after a search through more than one bookstore, actually having in ones hands all of the requisite volumes, used though they be and cobbled together in editions and translations from different publishers as a complete text, one pauses again knowing it has become something that has to be dealt with not necessarily immediately, but in just the right way, because the whole thing may be too heavy to carry around for any longer than necessary, in whatever way it’s looked at.

​But that’s not why one pauses, is it?  No, and it’s not even because the novel's languid pace  has become either  infectious or on the other hand, lulled one to sleep.  After the reader has turned enough pages through the ensuing volumes he or she becomes comfortable enough with Proust's ‘fictional’ characters they have followed from the first as well as those they've met since continuing, that they don’t want to see them disappear once the bottom of the final page is reached. It’s natural, other epics have had this effect and this one joins them, taking one back in time to special memories that either still touch one sentimentally or haunt a person in some other almost subconscious  way.  And the reader may decide that Proust was to some degree been toying with his audience as well,  with his sentence structure and style merely because he enjoyed entertaining them in a way distinctly, artistically and in a fashion different from the usual fare of the day.

Gustave Flaubert is one author who inspired Proust, but to me this story is more reminiscent of some of Emile Zola's raunchier efforts, albeit  far more subtle and far, far longer.  In both, the Paris portrayed is  bursting with a ‘colourful’ or ‘questionable’ morality that shows the broad range of behavior making up the metropolis where the elite played and the where the Moulin Rouge -   in  it's time -    must have fit right in, simply one facet of some grand kaleidoscopic gem.

Admittedly, the tale is not for any without the patience or the time to enjoy it.  And it’s certainly not for those without a modicum of tolerance for the sexual proclivities exhibited by some characters after reaching Part Four: Sodom and Gomorrah or Cities of the Plain, as it’s more politely titled in some editions. A general atmosphere of decadence pervades the work, which for a few there degenerates into a thinly veiled depravity that by the final installments  seems to parallel the descent of the ‘Gilded Age’ into the madness of the first world war as it proceeds and which finally grinds to a halt, leaving the narrator’s social circle aged, as well as decimated  along with everything else in the 'new' world he sees.  But as he remembers it all and looks back he sees that there still with all the artistic and flowery (though more faded and jaded) horticultural references,   scattered   as if for contrast through those latter memories, remained the only one: the so called 'madeleine moment', that almost insignificant instance from the past that stood out, compared to the rest and seemed like it had happened  perhaps only  the day before.

It all ends with neither a bang nor a whimper, but simply, with the narrator of the tale having found, from all he’d seen and remembered, the brushstrokes necessary to apply to his own canvas,  he finally begins to contemplate  - it is implied -  that actual work which the reader is just finishing.  I too, after more words, time and effort than usually spent now put down this rambling blog that you, the current readers, have just now perused  to   see this piece as sketched as well.
0 Comments

    Blog

    This is the blog of author Robert Muir.

    Archives

    January 2021
    September 2019
    April 2019
    December 2018
    September 2018
    July 2018
    March 2018
    November 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.