Thursday, April 14, 2011

Draught of Hope

I have not yet been with the Shadow, but rather Keats, who has given me this today. (Last 2 lines of each stanza should be indented but I can't figure out how to make this blogger do that.)


Draught of Hope

by David J. LeLacheur


And what if I were Keats re-born?

Born to witness beauty and truth?

If given sight to live, not mourn,

Could I recite, as did that youth?

Shine light on treasures all around?

Hear elves and nymphs in each song bird?

With drunken mead, the world astound?

And scent of grass imbue each word?

And yet, how can this be --

With my own eyes I see.


It could be so, I dream aloud,

We are all atoms, born from stars.

(Did he know that legacy proud:

We are heirs to Venus and Mars?)

A hallowed mote, dazzling strand,

Borne from far by heavenly flow

A kingly gift from his own hand

Infuse my heart -- but can we know

From whither comes a soul?

Would his loss make mine whole?


Forlorn, adrift, from Faery home,

There is no sense to give me hope.

Without is but an empty tome;

No hand will throw a saving rope.

Through darkling doubt, despair of haze,

Tremors afoot, the world's a-quake.

I stoop; I fall; my eyes then raise --

Does light from yonder window break?

Turmoil'd, I close my view.

Within I'll find my hue.


I cannot take, nor live to break;

We must be all our Selves and full.

How then to live, this thirst to slake?

Is glory's dream but shadow's pull?

One sense remains: to touch, to feel.

The dryad's dance my heart will chase.

Noise and chatter must not steal

From me my nature's own embrace.

Yes, there is another:

Of all these, the mother.


Imagination, draught of hope,

I'll drink thee to the dregs with joy.

With burning brand and worldly scope

I'll march, I'll write, I'll be a boy.

Alive, reborn, recovered sight,

New breath will sing to heavens blue:

"From old to young, from dark to light,

Forever be forever new!"

And with these leaves I'll chance,

Once more to join the dance.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

The Shadow

Alright, since this was my choice, I'll get the ball rolling this time.  I've got a lot to say, since I just gave a lecture on The Shadow and The Batman this morning, but I'll try to keep things concise and focused to start us out.

There are a couple of things I absolutely love about this story.  First, there's the propulsive nature of the narrative.  Episode trips on the heel of episode, sending you on a careening thrill-ride of adventure.  Even in the first couple of chapters, if you think about what happens, it's crazy: two mobsters meet to make a criminal plot, which is foiled by zombis, who are interrupted by The Shadow, cue the fist and gunfight, thrilling escape, followed by a car chase, a murder attempt via poison gas at a doctor's office, followed by another car chase!  And that's just the set-up.

I always enjoy The Shadow's notions of justice: searing lead from the twin .45s.  The inherent conflict between law and justice is often at the heart of this particular pulp figure and he always errs on the side of criminal execution.

Notions of identity also play a heavy part here.  The Shadow uses the identity of Lamont Cranston, but he's not really Lamont Cranston.  Who is this figure of dark justice?  I mean, who is he really?

One final thing I'll mention, since it's getting late, is the totally hyperbolic writing style.  No one is just a criminal, he's the blackest-hearted demon-spawn ever to tread the earth's soil.  Etc.  Really fun stuff.  Like prose on steroids.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

New Reading

Since you left it up to me (fools!), the next reading is one I'm using in my pulp fiction class in a few weeks.  It's called Voodoo Trail and features the iconic pulp hero, The Shadow.  It's written by Walter Gibson, who wrote most of The Shadow stories over the years.  If you want any further background on Gibson or The Shadow, an excellent place to start is:

The Pulp Net

Here We Go

Okay, this is designed to be the communal blog for the reading/viewing/kvetching group.  I think this will be somewhat easier to follow than the e-mail threads.  I lose those in my inbox very easily.  Let's get off and running.  I'll be e-mailing out the first reading later today, so check your inboxes and get cracking.

Also, feel free to use this space for other ideas, queries, etc.