结尾处:“万物皆有重建之日”

C. Murray
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引用次数: 0

摘要

叶芝的《青金石》(Lapis Lazuli)是对一块刻有乾隆皇帝的一首诗的中国石头的回应。叶芝用济慈式的行话来描述石头。他展示了道家的影响,尤其是庄子的影响,因为他从哲学的角度解释了石头。对叶芝来说,青金石是动荡中的慰藉。这幅画似乎预示着清朝的灭亡,叶芝发现它的乐观主义与第二次世界大战的临近息息相关。石头上圣人在山上的形象促使叶芝引用道教来纠正马修·阿诺德的恩培多克利在埃特纳的悲观主义。青金石表达了一种普遍的智慧,叶芝在卢克莱修和他对悲剧的尼采式解读中都发现了这种智慧。正如他对“半亚洲希腊”的热情——以雕塑家卡利马科斯为例——叶芝敦促古典和亚洲价值观的融合。
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Coda: ‘All Things Fall and Are Built Again’
Yeats’s ‘Lapis Lazuli’ responds to a Chinese stone etched with a poem attributed to the Qianlong Emperor. Yeats describes the stone in Keatsian ekphrasis. He demonstrates the influence of Daoism, particularly Zhuangzi, as he interprets the stone philosophically. To Yeats the lapis offers consolation amidst upheaval. The object appears prophetic of the fall of the Qing Dynasty, and Yeats finds its optimism pertinent as the Second World War approaches. The stone’s portrayal of sages on mountains prompts Yeats to invoke Daoism to correct the pessimism of Matthew Arnold’s Empedocles on Etna. The lapis expresses a universal wisdom that Yeats finds alike in Lucretius and in his Nietzschean reading of tragedy. As in his enthusiasm for ‘half-Asiatic Greece’—exemplified by the sculptor Callimachus—Yeats urges a fusion of classical and Asian values.
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