As, many times, motive is inaccessible, must we get used to the art of the
plausible, and let live? And thrive as prats do on chat shows, toasting
each other in bat juice, and coasting?
I would not encourage others of my late age to be always handling a proximity-
fuse of indignant rage to demonstrate the art of self harming. Keep
counsel, stay charming, I now advise.
Politics and law back then—Age of Milton, I mean—were visceral; poetry
not; though republicans read the Pharsalia, inter alia, and imitated
it a lot. To Lucan, indeed, “viscera” was a word forty or more times
taken up, buzzing the era.
Coriolanus worked best by being intravenous; no great effusion of plaudits,
then, for that particular manifest. It could entertain, sustain, its mean
-ing by means subterrane. It came to the surface, for instance, in Paris
in the nineteen thirties, rendering each clangorous scene timely and
dangerous.
Season 4 Trailer
The Paris Review Podcast returns with a new season, featuring the best interviews, fiction, essays, and poetry from America’s most legendary literary quarterly, brought to life in sound. Join us for intimate conversations with Sharon Olds and Olga Tokarczuk; fiction by Rivers Solomon, Jun'ichirō Tanizaki, and Zach Williams; poems by Terrance Hayes and Maggie Millner; nonfiction by Robert Glück, Jean Garnett, and Sean Thor Conroe; and performances by George Takei, Lena Waithe, and many others. Catch up on earlier seasons, and listen to the trailer for Season 4 now.
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