Wastrel’s Reviews > Selected Poems > Status Update
Wastrel
is on page 99 of 128
But when this life is from the body fled,
To see itself in that eternal glass
Where time doth end, and thoughts accuse the dead,
Where all to come is one with all that was;
Then living men ask how he left his breath,
That while he lived never thought of death.
— Jun 19, 2018 05:06PM
To see itself in that eternal glass
Where time doth end, and thoughts accuse the dead,
Where all to come is one with all that was;
Then living men ask how he left his breath,
That while he lived never thought of death.
Like flag
Wastrel’s Previous Updates
Wastrel
is on page 111 of 128
I'd just been thinking how many phrases in these poems would make good book titles, when all of a sudden up in my feed pops someone's review of "Monarchy of Fear"...
(from Greville's "LIX")
— Dec 02, 2018 05:18AM
(from Greville's "LIX")
Wastrel
is on page 50 of 128
This long tranche of poems remains love-obsessed, more often addressed to Cupid himself than to his lover - though some broader cynicism about the world enters in. It also remains messy, confusing, and visceral. "Cupid doth head his shafts in women's faces". "Then cut I self-love's wings to lend him feathers / Gave him mine eyes to see in Myra's glory", etc.
— Dec 31, 2017 10:20AM
Wastrel
is on page 29 of 128
The early Caelica poems are indeed very conventional love poems. They're made interestingly odd by Greville's sometimes strange diction and syntax, a distinctive awkwardness of rhythm (lot of feminine rhymes). The 'note on the text' explains that it's left Greville's obsession with commas intact specifically to preserve this awkwardness.
— Jul 18, 2017 03:13PM
