David Mitchell plays around with a bit of poetry in The Bone Clocks: A Novel
David Mitchell takes the thoughts of one of his protagonists, Crispin Hershey, and segues into a bit of poetry in The Bone Clocks: A Novel, following the . . .
. . . spirals [of] Hershey's absent mind, known only unto squirrels and crows; the Hudson River stately winds between the Catskills' pigeon-toes; a train's revealed, a train's obscured, a quote around a broken cup, "I like to see it lap the miles and lick the valleys up."Those quotation marks reveal Mitchell to be alluding to an Emily Dickinson poem:
I like to see it lap the Miles -Dickinson seems to be describing the 'iron horse' - ironically enough, for Crispin Hershey's train of thought has gone off track.
And lick the Valleys up -
And stop to feed itself at Tanks -
And then - prodigious step
Around a Pile of Mountains -
And supercilious peer
In Shanties - by the sides of Roads -
And then a Quarry pare
To fit it's sides
And crawl between
Complaining all the while
In horrid - hooting stanza -
Then chase itself down Hill -
And neigh like Boanerges -
Then - prompter than a Star
Stop - docile and omnipotent
At it's own stable door -
But what's this ungrammatical "it's" doing in the poem? Twice even! Doesn't Dickinson know the difference the contraction "it's" and the possessive "its"? How could she call herself a poet if she gets "it" wrong?
Just kidding . . .
Labels: David Mitchell, Poetry
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