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The Impossible Dream (Song)

Song / Down Memory Lane

"The Impossible Dream" - from the film Man of La Mancha

"The Impossible Dream (The Quest)" is a popular song composed by Mitch Leigh, with lyrics by Joe Darion. It is the most popular song from the 1965 Broadway musical Man of La Mancha and is featured in the 1972 film of the same name starring Peter O'Toole, Sophia Loren, and James Coco. (refer video below). 

The song, which is awarded the Contemporary Classics Award from the Songwriter's Hall of Fame, is first sung by Don Quixote as he stands vigil over his armor, in response to Aldonza (Dulcinea)'s question about what he means by "following the quest."  It is reprised partially three more times – the last by prisoners in a dungeon as Miguel de Cervantes and his manservant mount the drawbridge-like prison staircase to face trial by the Spanish Inquisition.






Emily Dickinson

Literature / Writers Datebook: December 10

 

Brief biography and a list of poems of famous poet Emily Dickinson, one of the finest.

 

Emily Dickinson was an American poet, considered one of the greatest poets in the English language.

Though virtually unknown in her lifetime, along with Walt Whitman, she has been regarded as one of the two quintessential American poets of the 19th century. Dickinson lived a hermetic life. Although she wrote numerous poems, only a handful of them were published during her lifetime, anonymously or probably without her knowledge. 

 

Early Life of Emily Dickinson

Emily Elizabeth Dickinson was born on December 10, 1830, in Amherst, Massachusetts, to a prominent family well-known for their political and educational influence. Her grandfather, Samuel Fowler Dickinson, was one of the founders of Amherst College. Her father, Edward Dickinson, politically well-placed, was a lawyer and treasurer for the college. He also served on the Massachusetts General Court, the Massachusetts Senate, and the U.S. House of Representatives, to which in 1852 he was elected as a Whig candidate. Emily's mother, Emily Norcross Dickinson, was chronically ill.   

Siblings

Her older brother, William Austin Dickinson, was usually known by his middle name. In 1856, he married Emily's best friend, Susan Gilbert, and made his home next door to the house in which Emily lived most of her life. Their younger sister, Lavinia Norcross Dickinson, called "Vinnie," encouraged the posthumous editing and publishing of her sister's poetry.

Education

In 1840, Emily was educated at the nearby Amherst Academy, a former boys' school which opened to female students just two years earlier. She studied English and classical literature, learned Latin and read the Aeneid over several years. She also learned other subjects including religion, history, mathematics, geology and biology.

At 17, Dickinson began attending Mary Lyon's Mount Holyoke Female Seminary which  later become Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley. In less than a year at the seminary, she went back home and did not return to school. There is a speculation that she was homesick or that she refused to sign an oath stating she would devote her life to Jesus Christ.

Later Years

After that, Dickinson left home only for short trips to visit relatives in Boston, Cambridge, and Connecticut. For decades, popular wisdom portrayed Dickinson as an agoraphobic recluse. She lived most of her life in the family's houses in Amherst, which have been preserved as the Emily Dickinson Museum.

Emily Dickinson asked Susan, her best friend and sister-in-law to critique her poems. She died on May 15, 1886, from nephritis, reported as Bright's disease. After her death, her family found some 40 hand-bound volumes of more than 1700 of her poems.

Here's Dickinson's quotation about pain, its timelessness and dominance:

"Pain has an Element of Blank;

It cannot recollect

When it begun, or if there was

A time when it was not."

 

"It has no future but itself;

Its infinite realms contain

Its past, enlightened to perceive

New periods of pain."

(From Pain)

 

Poems by Emily Dickinson

(Published after she died) 

Poems by Emily Dickinson, 1890

Poems: Second Series

Poems: Third Series, 1896

Then Single Hound, 1914

The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, 3 vols.), 1955

The Letters of Emily, 3 vols, 1958

Final Harvest, 1961

 

Image Credit:

Emily Dickinson. Wikipedia / Public Domain

 

Resources:

1. Goring, Rosemary, editor. Larousse Dictionary of Writers. New York: Larousse, 1994

2. McGovern, Una, editor. Chambers Biographical Dictionary. Edinburgh: Chambers Harrap, 2002 

3. Emily Dickinson. Poetry Dickinson. Accessed December 10, 2022 

4. Emily Dickinson. en.wikipedia.org.  Accessed December 10 2008


(c) December 10, 2008. Updated December 10, 2022. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.

Composer and Pianist Manuel Ponce

Classical Music Dateline: December 8

Manuel Ponce, Mexican Pianist and Composer

Mexican pianist and composer Manuel Ponce was best known for his composition, Estrellita (Litte Star).


Manuel María Ponce Cuéllar (December 8, 1882 – April 24 1948) was a distinguished Mexican composer. His work as a composer, music educator and Mexican music enthusiast researcher, connected the concert scene with a usually forgotten tradition of popular song and Mexican folklore. Constant citation of harmonic and formal traits from traditional song within his works characterised some of his compositional periods.

An important group of Ponce's works were previously unknown to the public, as self-proclaimed heir Mr. Carlos Vásquez, Mexican piano performer and educator who studied with Ponce, kept most of the original manuscripts under his possession. Most of them were finally donated to the National School of Music (UNAM) in Mexico City, as an analytic catalogue of his works could still be published.

Rainer Maria Rilke

Literature / Poets Datebook: December 4

 

Brief biography and work of Rainer Maria Rilke, Czech-Austrian poet, novelist and writer, famous for Sonnets to Orpheus and Duino Elegies.  

Rainer Maria Rilke was an outstanding lyric poet, one of the most important figures in modern German literature. He belonged to the Symbolist movement, who used images to represent what a person felt or thought.

Early Life of Rainer Maria Rilke

Rilke was born on December 4, 1875, in Prague, at that time a part of the Austrian Empire, and now the capital of Czech Republic. He was sent to a military academy, but this was apparently not his interest. He left to study art history in Germany. He was rather shy, and did not make friends easily, not a sociable young man, and in times of social difficulties his response was to stay away.

The Wanderer: European Travels

Rilke became a constant wanderer through Europe. He made two journeys to Russia, where he met Leo Tolstoy and was deeply impressed by what he learned of Russian religion. However, he settled in Paris where he became secretary to the sculptor Auguste Rodin, and in 1901 he married one of the pupils of Rodin.

Writing Style

Rilke's work was highly influenced by his education and classic authors. Ancient gods Apollo, Hermes and Orpheus are found in his poems according to his lyrical interpretations. He also represented his work with metaphors. 

Below,  Rilke's 'On the Beauty and Difficulty of Solitude'. YouTube, uploaded by That you are here now. Accessed December 4, 2022.  Solitude is a painful and beautiful thing. Rainer Maria Rilke thought so. In his 'Letters To A Young Poet', Rilke speaks of the beauty and difficulty of solitude - and its necessity in our lives.


Prose and Poetry

Rilke consecrated his life to poetry. His first book of poems, Life and Songs, was published when he was 19. His earliest poems were about nature and traditional religion. Later, these simple themes were left behind as his poems became increasingly mystical, and poems became things to him, particularly the sacred ones. Between the ages of 30 and 40 he produced some of his finest poetry and the important prose, The Tale of the Love and Death of Cornet Christopher Rilke. He also wrote the book Journal of My other Self, which is the story of an imaginary poet. Rilke's two masterpieces are verse sequences, Sonnets to Orpheus and Duino Elegies, written shortly before his premature death from blood poisoning.  He died on December 29, 1926 at the age of 51, in Montreux, Switzerland.   

Rainer Maria Rilke's influence has been far and wide – often quoted and celebrated by literary greats, quoted in music, television, and films.

He chose his own epitaph:

"Rose, oh the pure contradiction, delight, of being no-one's sleep under so many lids."

 

Works by Rainer Maria Rilke

Life and Songs, 1894

Stories of God, 1900

The Book of Hours, 1905

The Tale of the Love and Death of Cornet Christopher Rilke, 1905

New Poems, 1907

The Notebook of Malte Laurids Brigge, 1910

Journal of My Other Self, 1910

Sonnets to Orpheus, 1923

Duino Elegies, 1923

Where Silence Reigns, 1978 (Published after his death)

 

Resources:

1. Illustrated Biographical Dictionary edited by John Clark. London: Chancellor Press, 1994

2. Chambers Biographical Dictionary, edited by Una Mcgovern, Chambers Harrap, Edinburgh, 2002

3. Larousse Dictionary of Writers, edited by Rosemary Goring. Larousse, 1994

4. The A-Z of Great Writers, by Tom Payne. Carlton Book, 1997


(c) December 2008. Updated December 4, 2022. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.