On Friday, November 6, 2020 at 5:57:24 PM UTC-10,
[email protected] wrote:
On Sunday, November 1, 2020 at 7:53:04 PM UTC-10, [email protected] wrote:
According to this:
- ...Strauss and Hofmannsthal constantly remind us that change, good or bad, is inevitable. Only the Marschallin appears to have learned that vital lesson. “One must be light, light of heart, light of hand, holding and taking, holding and letting
go,” she tells her young lover. “Life punishes those who are not so and God has no mercy upon them.”
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/dec/14/strauss-rosenkavalier-a-dance-to-the-music-of-time-gavin-plumley
Concerning Proust's REMEMBRANCE OF THINGS PAST:
Inevitability of Change
.......Many people go through life believing that things will always be as they are now. There is a certain comfort in living as if the world will always be as it is. Marcel makes the point, however, that change will occur even when people are certain
that it will not: "Thus the face of things in life changes, the centre of empires, the register of fortunes, the chart of positions, all that seemed final, are perpetually remoulded and during his life-time a man can witness the completest changes just
where those seemed to him least possible" (Time Regained)
https://www.cummingsstudyguides.net/Guides6/Remembrance.html#Themes
Concerning Proust's REMEMBERANCE OF THINGS PAST:
- The Inevitability of Time
Proust expresses a repeated, painful understanding of the inevitability of time. He knows he's growing old. Even as a child, he understood that time was endlessly marching forward and that he was powerless to effect it. Perhaps this is the origin of his
nighttime anxieties -- a recognition of the forward progress of time, like a ray, with only one origin, irreversible. In this recognition, however, Proust finds the mandate for his writing. He does not want to be forgotten. In his writing he finds
commemoration and celebration, even meaning. As a defiance of time itself, he records his experiences in a format which will surpass his own lifetime. This rather bleak truth is embodied in Proust's character in younger years, contributing to his
inability to find joy in the vain social scheming of his peers. He refuses to accept the lie that social esteem or popularity will remedy the inevitability of time and ultimately death, making him rather a grim party-goer.
https://www.gradesaver.com/in-search-of-lost-time/study-guide/themes
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