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Zmj reminded me of a poem when he said, tongue in cheek, Back in college my then-girlfriend found this poem (by W. H. Auden) and was delighted with it. I too was delighted when she shared it with me, and never forgot it. And thanks to zmj, I now recognize the pun in the last two lines.
Walked whistling round and round the Maze, Relying happily upon His temperament for getting on. The hundredth time he sighted, though, A bush he left an hour ago, He halted where four alleys crossed, And recognised that he was lost. "Where am I? Metaphysics says No question can be asked unless It has an answer, so I can Assume this maze has got a plan. If theologians are correct, A Plan implies an Architect: A God-built maze would be, I'm sure, The Universe in miniature. Are data from the world of Sense, In that case, valid evidence? What in the universe I know Can give directions how to go? All Mathematics would suggest A steady straight line as the best, But left and right alternately Is consonant with History. Aesthetics, though, believes all Art Intends to gratify the Heart: Rejecting disciplines like these, Must I, then, go the way I please? Such reasoning is only true If we accept the classic view, Which we have no right to assert, According to the Introvert. His absolute pre-supposition Is--Man creates his own condition: This maze was not divinely built, But is secreted by my guilt. The centre that I cannot find Is known to my Unconscious Mind; I have no reason to despair Because I am already there. My problem is how not to will; They move most quickly who stand still; I'm only lost until I see I'm lost because I want to be. If this should fail, perhaps I should, As certain educators would, Content myself with the conclusion; In theory there is no solution. All statements about what I feel, Like I-am-lost, are quite unreal: My knowledge ends where it began; A hedge is taller than a man." Anthropos apteros, perplexed To know which turning to take next, Looked up and wished he were a bird To whom such doubts must seem absurd. | ||
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What a lovely poem. Thanks, H&U. anthropos apteros is not to be confused with the mock logical definition of man as a featherless biped. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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It is a quite excellent piece of poetry. | |||
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With incredible hubris I'd like to add a couple of verses to Mr. Auden's fine poem to be inserted somewhere in the middle. Ranks of linguists join the queue To tell me what I ought to do. No two of them speak with one voice, At every turn they offer choice. Prescriptivists select the ways That I may wander in the Maze. "This path allowed! This one not!" Until they root me to the spot, While others hold a different view Of how to find a way that's true. Descriptivists, with furrowed brow. Tell me what I'm doing now. But neither of these types alas Can help me through this pretty pass, For though they offer much advice None of it seems to suffice. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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Excellent, Bob! Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Very nice poems, Hic and Bob. Bob, yours goes quite nicely with your post on OEDILF about prescriptivism with commas. You'd be quite proud of Bob and me there, Zmj! | |||
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