Report of Arrival

A PBS broadcast of Cyrano de Bergerac was shown yesterday nationally and this evening, a day late, by WNED TV, Buffalo.

From the translation by Anthony Burgess:

Cyrano speaks of falling leaves–

  They fall well. With a sort of panache.
  They plume down in their last
  Loveliness, disguising their fear
  Of being dried and pounded to ash
  To mix with the common dust.
  They go in grace, making their fall appear
  Like flying.
ROXANE  You’re melancholy today.
CYRANO  Never. I’m not the melancholy sort.
ROXANE  Very well, then. We’ll let
  The leaves of the fall fall while you
  Turn the leaves of my gazette.
  What’s new at court?
CYRANO … There have been some scandals
  To do with witches. A bishop went to heaven,
  Or so it’s believed: there’s been as yet no report
  Of his arrival….”

Later….

CYRANO … See it there, a white plume
  Over the battle– A diamond in the ash
  Of the ultimate combustion–
  My panache.”


Related material:

Today’s previous entry
and the Epiphany
link to the
four-diamond symbol
in Jung’s Aion
with an epigraph by
Gerard Manley Hopkins:

That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire…