In
the middle of the night, I finished TheBlue Flower, by Penelope Fitzgerald, making good use of a couple of
sleepless hours. In the book, the character of Fritz (who will grow up to be
Novalis) has begun a story in which a listener is enraptured by a stranger’s
story of a blue flower. There is also treasure, in the form of conventional
riches, but the narrator longs to see
the blue flower and Fritz, the writer, asks, “What is the meaning of the blue
flower?”
Stop
now, if you don’t want to hear another character’s answer to the question. But
usually a symbol in literature can mean many related things; a symbol has great
complexity, interpretations that ripple out like circles on a pond. (Wikipedia
kindly ripples out the meaning of the blue flower from German Romanticism to
the present day.) I’m still pondering the blue flower of the novel and won’t
name all the ripples I see, but I do plan to quote “the Bernhard,” one of the
children in Fritz’s family, a blond boy also called the angel in the house, who
loves water—the river—and is relentlessly curious.
He had been struck—before he crammed the story
back into Fritz’s book-bag—by one thing in particular: the stranger who had
spoken at the dinner table about the Blue Flower had been understood by one
person and one only. This person must have been singled out as distinct from
all the rest of his family. It was a matter of recognising your own fate and
greeting it as familiar when it came.
This
is what rippled inside me, the “matter of recognising your own fate and
greeting it as familiar when it came.” (Spellcheck has automatically recognized
and provided the familiar American spelling of Fitzgerald’s “recognising” as I
compose….and I have obstinately changed it back in three cases.)
Still
awake, the new issue of The Sun at
hand, I read the interview with Stephen Harrod Buhner on plant intelligence and
natural healing. You should know that Sophie, the betrothed in The Blue Flower, is seriously ill. When
Fritz first sees her, age 12, across the room, he is inexplicably drawn to her.
Says Buhner, “The ancient Athenians had a word for that moment when some
intangible part of ourselves leaves our bodies and touches a living
intelligence in the world: aisthēsis.
There is an exchange of soul essence accompanied by a gasp of recognition, a
deep breath, an inspiration.” As Fritz recognized Sophie, I recognized the Bernhard,
with a little gasp at his
inspiration.
And
finally, for now, as I’m sure I’ll keep rippling in the blog, yesterday’s mail
brought the current issue of Quiddity,
in which I have a very short poem called “Broken Clouds.” You can hear it here,
and it has blue in it. The magazine defines itself up front:
quiddity—the real nature or
essence of a thing; that which makes it what it is (OED)
4 comments:
So glad you read The Blue Flower! Much enjoyed your poem - you read beautifully.
Thank you! For compliment and for book recommendation.
Penelope Fitzgerald is one of my favorite novelists.
I read "The Beginning of Spring" recently, another historical novel. I don't know how she does it. A lot of research maybe, but it seems so effortless.
Terrible that she lived in poverty for much of her life.
Thanks for letting me know! I will look for The Beginning of Spring at the library! Her writing is so rich and so spare simultaneously. I love it!
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