Quantcast

Video of the Day

Masthead

Editor-in-Chief
Alex Carnevale
(e-mail/tumblr/twitter)

Features Editor
Mia Nguyen
(e-mail)

Reviews Editor
Ethan Peterson

Live and Active Affiliates
This Recording

is dedicated to the enjoyment of audio and visual stimuli. Please visit our archives where we have uncovered the true importance of nearly everything. Should you want to reach us, e-mail alex dot carnevale at gmail dot com, but don't tell the spam robots. Consider contacting us if you wish to use This Recording in your classroom or club setting. We have given several talks at local Rotarys that we feel went really well.

Pretty used to being with Gwyneth

Regrets that her mother did not smoke

Frank in all directions

Jean Cocteau and Jean Marais

Simply cannot go back to them

Roll your eyes at Samuel Beckett

John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion

Metaphors with eyes

Life of Mary MacLane

Circle what it is you want

Not really talking about women, just Diane

Felicity's disguise

This area does not yet contain any content.

Entries in valery bryusov (2)

Thursday
Feb192015

In Which Things Take A Turn For Valery Bryusov

This is the third in a series. You can find part one here and part two here.

This Surfeit Of Happiness

Things were going so well for the Russian poet Valery Bryusov. He was married and had achieved some degree of success and notoriety in his home country. He was starting to clash with the restrictive government policies of Nicholas II, but he was able to spend relaxing summers in Europe, where he developed a deep dislike of the future Estonian city of Revel. For the moment his depression seemed to have abated, as he writes in his diary of his search for something more in life beyond the physical, the real. As ever, he thought that he was the greatest master the world had ever known.

NB: Some of the dates below are approximate, and some of the entries are abridged.

May 12 1899

Let the twelfth notebook end with this, the notebook in which alone is concealed more happiness than in all the other eleven, with their dreams of childhood and youth. Yes, indeed, this cycle of my life has given me too much happiness and success! Speaking generally, I have succeeded in almost everything that I began, have accomplished a great deal of what I had expected these long, cold years.

And another positive thing: all of this since Eda and I have been together. It will be two years since I last felt those mad, boundless attacks of depression which cut me off from life, which kept me from writing anything at all in this diary. Sanguine feelings, assurance, hopes - this is now my usual frame of mind. I have faith, I am at peace.

May 25

Success with examinations. It was a dangerous game I resolved to play. At the beginning, I was far from prepared and might well have failed. I risked a great deal, because for me to fail would have been very shameful. Everyone, everyone who knows me and who understood what was happening, as well as those who did not understand, would have regarded it as my fall.

August 27

Autumn has begun for me. we've returned to Moscow, to books, to studies and only in memory there will unexpectedly flash gorges, foaming waves and wild goats.

September 7

Went to the city hall about military service. Lately I've gotten so used to the idea of barracks that I almost yearned for them. But they judged me "completely unfit." This might also qualify as a success, one of the successes of 1898-1899.

October 15

Merezhkovsky is writing on Tolstoy and Doestoevsky. I don't see why he bothers. Everything that he could say about them has already been said. (Footnote: I was mistaken. 1901)

November 3

In general, a peaceful existence with my wife and my sister, a rhythm of occupations... "I rule my days, with order my mind is in harmony..." For now, I like it.

December 26

Not long ago we arranged a littel jaunt outside the city. Baltrushaitis, Polyakob, Anna Shesterkina and I. We went all around Sokolni Park walking in the snow. I pressed Anna's little fingers and she favorably responded. If I had even a little of my former urges, my former soul, akin to the great Spanish seducer, I could continue. But I'm bored.

1900

January 12

Have just read Resurrection. Good, without any doubt. It is a summation of everything that Tolstoy has said at one time or another, his last will and testament. The beginning is better written. Towards the end he broke down under the weight of the material. There are some small contradictions (to say nothing of anachronisms, such as treating "Decadence" and the Tonkin expedition as simultaneous with Notes of the Fatherland).

February 1

Bunin and Pertsov are in Moscow. Have seen Bunin three times or so. He is much deeper than he seems. Some of his thoughts on humanity, on the ancient Egyptians, on contemporary vulgarity and the shameful state of our science and learning - are even powerful and impressive.

March 2

Somebody named Lev Amozov arranged an evening of new art at the Sportsman's Club. He came and invited me to appear. But everything of my own that I wanted to read was forbidden by the special censor. So I recited something by Balmont. The hall was full, and most of my crowd was there (even without my invitation). When I came to the platform, they applauded. I recited "The Wilderness," with rather lukewarm response, but "I Love You Bitterly, O Poor Deformed Ones" seemed to make an impression. As an encoure I recited, "Oh, Yes I Am Chosen, Wise, Consecrated." However, to tell the truth, the program was a poor one.

April 19

I saw Nikolai Fyodorov, the great teacher of life and rambunctious elder, from whose tongue both Vladimir Solovyov and Tolstoy have suffered. From the very start of the conversation, I was taken with him. "One way or another, we all have to die," I said. "And did you take the trouble to reflect whether this is so?" he asked.

We talked about Nietzsche, and generally Fyodorov was hard on me. I enjoyed it very much, and when leaving (I was in a hurry), I thanked him. However, Yury Bartenev imagined that I was offended and send me an apologetic letter. I finished the evening at Baltrushaitis', where I deliberately provoked the girls with my paradoxes.

June-July

Revel is in north Naples, eine Welstadt, as Bartenev said. The Revel Germans dote on their city. For them there can be no better. Unquestionably, Revel is a European city. It is self-sufficent, having in itself everything it needs. It could go on existing if the whole world fell apart.

We stayed in Revel two months. The first half of the time we lived alone, knowing no one, living quietly like Germans. In the mornings I translated the Aeneid, after dinner we read, sitting in the park, and in the evenings I worked on my autobiography, and that is how it went, day after day.

July-August

Right away, and more strongly than I expected, I was seized by the usual Moscow impressions, the whole circle of friends. Lang (who is now staying in our house) presented himself first. Then soon, very soon (by chance), came Polyakov, Baltrushaitis and Balmont himself.

Vladimir Solovyov is dead. Bartenev knew him well, and I went to the funeral with him. Thus, as fate would have it, I met the critic of my first poems. And I had dreamed - often, at that - of personal conversations. "But he would have charmed you," Bartenev said to me. I kissed the hand of my chance enemy, the poet and thinker whom I revered. Bartenev proposed that I write an article on the poetry of Vladimir Solovyov.

September 10

Am assiduously attending spiritualist Wednesday meetings. I preach, teach and wield a certain influence. Once, when we were coming out of such a meeting, the neophytes began to thank me. "Since you've been coming a great deal has changed. Before, it was just Christian propaganda. For hours on end they kept telling us what the fluid is when it separates from the body. But now they are afraid of you."

September 28

I dreamed last night of an end for Brothers Karamazov.

It was Saturday, I think, when we saw Gorky at the Grand Moscow Hotel. As always he was in a peasant shirt. A peasant-style moustache. Half-deliberate coarseness of speech. We dined together. "But I won't go into the main dining room, they'll gape. We drown in our own fame, like frogs in a swamp." Later he said, "Time to spoil my reputation! I'm tired of it!" And: "Only let's have no talk of social issues!"

He clasped my hand very hard and asked me to send him my book.

Later, under the cover of the general conversation, Gorky and I had a separate chat. "What's disgusting is these various human inventions, starting with the pavements and ending with the idea of God. Of course, I, as a sinful man, walk the streets and sometimes pray to the Lord God, but that's all wrong."

1899-1900

"Lifted Up (1985)" - Passion Pit (mp3)

"Where The Sky Hangs" - Passion Pit (mp3)

Tuesday
Dec232014

In Which We Have Taken On Ourselves This Obligation

This is the second in a series. You can find the first part here.

Replicators

Years ticked by for Valery Bryusov. He was married, financially viable if afflicted as a result of pleurisy from time to time, and focused on his writing. Still something strange was happening in his life. He was becoming more like the world, and the world was becoming more like him.

November 26

Now, several weeks before the publication of my most recent book of verse, I solemnly and seriously give my word to abstain from literary activity for two years. I would like to write nothing in that time and of all books to leave myself only three - the Bible, Homer, and Shakespeare. But even if this is impossible, I'll try to approach this ideal. I will read only what is great and write only in those moments when I have something to say to the whole world. I bid farewell to the noisy life of a journalistic warrior and the loud pretensions of a Symbolist poet. I will withdraw into life, submerge myself in its trifles, and permit my imagination, my pride, my ego to slumber. But this sleep will be only seeming. Thus a tiger closes its eyes, the better to watch its victim. And my quarry is already doomed to be mine. I am on my way. Trumpets, cease!

December 23

Letter to Balmont in Paris. - O my brother! Today they brought me the first copy of Me Eum...and suddenly I looked back on the past. Our wanderings in Sokolniki! Our cold arguments! My impassivity, oh, my impassivity! I did not expect such bitter mockery from life. Just as the Renaissance connects with the antique world, forgetting the Middle Ages, so the day of our separation was the eve of this day. They never happened, they don't exist - these fifteen long weeks, they did not happen.

February 6

Again, the dismal, colorless life. The history of the lyric, the Church Fathers, the Bible - that's all, unless you add tutoring my sisters and card playing with my father. Not much.

February 8

My voluntary isolation subjects me to a severe trial. Have I enough spiritual strength to preserve my aspiration amid the petty vulgarity of the life which surrounds me? Have I perceived my path clearly enough to follow it firmly amid gossip about money and conversations about women, amidst cards and carousal, alone in the whirlpool? My bright star! Stay pure and blessed. Do not fade...

March 17

Writing? Writing isn't hard. I could write many novels and dramas in six months. But it is necessary, essential, to have something to write about. A poet must be reborn, he must meet at the crossroads an angel who will pierce his breast with a sword and place there, instead of his heart, a burning coal. Until that happens, you must drag yourself mutely through the "wild desert"...

October 2

The weeks before my wedding are not recorded. This is because they were weeks of happiness. And how can I write now if I can describe my conditions with only one word, bliss? I'm almost ashamed to make such a confession, but what can I do, that's the way it is. Is this possibly the "intoxication" about which the old poets wrote so much? - No! No! - For so long I sought that closeness with another soul, that total merging of two beings. I was born for just such endless love, for endless tenderness. I have come into my native sphere - I was destined to know bliss.

To say, "I am happy" is to say a great deal. Do many dare say these words, to say, "I am happy" in the present tense? In memory of these days I will not dare to condemn anything in the future. "Even if I am destined for a moment of repentance..."

November 19

Balmont has come, he whom I so waited and longed for. He is wearing a double necktie and his hair is so carefully cut...

I wrote to Balmont today that I would be alone this evening. He came. I think he wanted to take revenge on me. He had so longed to see me, had created such a picture of me in his imagination. He wrote in his letters that I was the only person he needed in Russia. And of course the original isn't up to the dream! And besides, much that Balmont is seeking I will never accept.

We talked of Christ. Balmont called him a lackey, a philosopher for beggars. But is a conversation carried on in words? There is a dialogue of souls. And much was said. I felt like crying. When we parted, Balmont half apologized: "Don't be angry..."

December 1

We were mistaken. We met again and the flame of love quivered between us.

Another time Balmont came early in the morning. After a sleepless night he woke me. We left the house quickly, roamed the streets, dropped into a bookstore, went to his place then to Lokhvitskaya's. It was a complete resurrection of the past. We rejoiced like children, laughing at everything.

However, we parted more coldly than I had expected. Perhaps he was offended by my negative remarks about Lokhvitskaya, who struck me as a rather untalented woman. Why does she have such a big mouth? And then she had to go and say to me: "I'm used to people diverting me." I answered, "Then we have nothing to say to each other." However, her most recent poems are good.

February 11

I went out today for the first time after nearly two months' confinement. The fresh air intoxicated me; my head spun.

April 9

I must go forward! I must conquer! Could all these proud beginnings, these plans, this work, this ceaseless work of many years possibly come to nothing? My youth was the youth of a genius. I so lived and acted that only great deeds can justify my behavior. They must occur, or I will be ridiculous. To lay the foundation for a temple and build an ordinary hotel! I must go forward, I have taken on myself that obligation.

April 19

Five days of life with nature. The sea is now clear, calm, with dolphins, with gulls, and now foaming, roughened by an uneven wind which hurls it on the shoreline rocks; waterfalls shattered into spray before falling, hanging like flying white dust over the abyss; and torrents, where it is wonderful to sit on jutting ledges amidst the roar of the water from above and below, drowning the voice. Everywhere is that wall of mountains.

1897-1898