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The green casque could refer also to the 'scarab' in these lines from Canto
74:
the great scarab is bowed at the altar
the green light gleams in his shell
The katydid's another candidate:
being given a new green katydid of a Sunday
emerald, paler than emerald
minus its right propeller
Here we find also the intersection of 'war' with 'green world', in 'its
right propeller'.
Tim Romano
Burt Hatlen wrote:
> I haven't been following the "green casques" thread very closely, and
> I've erased a good many messages, so someone may have made this point
> already. But the association of the green casques with army helmets
> seems to me totally wrong. I have always associated the "Paquin"
> passage with the final lines of Canto LXXX, five pages previous:
>
> as the young lizard extends his leopard spots
> along the grass-blade seeking the green midge half an ant-size
> [then five lines about London]
> and if her green elegance
> remains on this side of my rain ditch
> puss lizard will lunch on some other T-bone
>
> sunset grand couturier.
>
> We have here an association of "green" with "elegance," and Paquin was
> in fact a couturier. A midge is a small fly, and its closed wings might
> look like a "casque." But I also think that Carroll Terrell is correct
> in association the green casque with the cocoon from which the wasp
> emerges, in Canto LXXXIII.
>
> Burt Hatlen
>
>
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