The Language of Paradox by Cleanth Brooks
The Language of Paradox by Cleanth Brooks
holy time, and become lite the evening itself, nUD1ikc; but she seems
less worshipful than inanimate nature itse1f. Yet
If rhou appear ~ by IO/emn t'lttni6it,
Thy narur, il lIOt rh4rIfur, 1m tJip¡", :
Thou IWt in Abraham's bosom all ri.year,'
And fJ1OrSlrip'1t at ri. Temple', ÎnIrIIr ~,
God beint fI1ith - "'''''' fN knorD it lIOt.
The underlying paradox (of which the enthusiastic: reader !Day well
be unamscious) is neverthe1ess tborougbly 11fœSaary, even for that
reader. Why does the innocent girl worship more deeply than the
self-conscious poet who walks beside ber? Because she is filled with
ID UIlCoDaCious sympathy for all of nature, not merely the grandiose
and solemn. One remembers the lines from Wordsworth's friend,
~m.: .
He pt'ayeth Iwt, ",ho Iowth Iwt
AlltAints both great 4IJà small.
Her uncoDSCious sympathy is the 1II1COaIdoua worship. She is in
c:ommUDion with nature 'all the year', and ber devotion is c:oatinual
whereas that of the poet is sporadic: and momemuy. But we bave not
done with the paradox yet. It not only underlies the poem, butsome-
thing of the paradox informs the poem, though, ainœ this is Words-
worth,. rather timidly. The c:omparison of the evening to the nun
actually bas more than onc dimension. The c:alm of the eveniua
obviously means 'worship', even to the duB-witted and ÏDseaaitive.
It corresponds to the trappings of the nun, visible to everyone. Thus,
it suggests not merely holiness, but, in the total poem, even a him of
PharisakaI holiness, with which the girl's careless innoœnœ, i1lclf a
symbol of her continual secret worship, stands in contrast.
Or considc:r Wordsworth's sonnet, 'Composed upon Westminster
Bridge'. I believe that most readers will agree that it is one of Words-
worth's most successful poems; yet most students have the greatest
d.ifticulty in accounting for its goodness. The attempt to account for
it on the grounds of nobility of sentiment soon breaks down. On this
level, the poem merely saya: that the city in the IJlO1'DÎDg light pre&en1I
I picture which is majestic and toucbiDg to aD but the most dull of
2
TRI LANGUAGI OP PAIADOI:
soul; but the poem says very little more about the sight: the city is
beautiful in the morning light and it is awfully still. The attempt to
make a case for the poem in terms of the brilliance of its images also
quickly breaks down: the studeDt searches for graphic detIils in
vain; there arc nezt: to DO tealistic touches. In fact, tbepoet aimply
huddles the details together:
silmt~ bt.Jrw~
S1rip$~ tDrI1er$~tIoma~ tIr«ma~ and ,.""", M
Open IIIItD ,. jiiIds ••••
We get a blurred. ÎmpIaSioo - 'points or roofi and piDDades aloa¡
the skyline, an twinkJiDg in the monùrlg qht. More than tbat,tbe
sonnet as a whole contains some very fiat writing and some well-wom
comparisoas.
The reader may uk: Where, then, does the poem get its power?
It gell it, it IICaDS to me, from the paradœical situadonout of which
the poem arisca. The'apeaIœr is.hoacsdy IUIpl'isecl, and be JDID8pI
to get some sease of awed surprise into the poem. It it,óddto the
poet thauhe city should beabJe to 'wear the beauty of the .JDOrDÏD.I'
at all. Mount SDowdcJa, Stiddaw, Mont ·BIIDe - these war it·by
DaturIl right, but aurel7 DOt pmy, fcmriahLoDdoa. This is the
point oCthe aImèIst ahodœdercJemMioa: '
N"", did _''_'' ~ ,,,.,
¡n1tùjirn "'__'~ftl1ey.rock.",. biU. •••
Tbecsmokelaa .... rmaJt e' city wbich. the poet did not know
aitted:man-macte Loadœ ise pI1't ofDltUle too, is liabted by the
1\111 of IIatUl'e, aDd upted to .beautiful· effect.
ellatic:ity, the curved line of UlUle itself. The poet ha4Dm:r heeD
able to reprd this one .. a real river -now,UIlduttcRidby batps,
the ri~ reveals itIeIf' ... DaturaltbiDg,aot It aD äcipJiDed hito .•
rigid and mec1umical patta1l: it is Jib the ddodiIa,ortbè moumaiD
broob, artless, ad whimsical, ancl 'Danuar,' ... they.TIte poem
closes, ,ouwDl remember, 88 toJlows:
B
THB WBLL WROUGHT URN
The city, in the poet's insight of the morning, has earned its right to
be c:onsidcrcd°organic, Dot merely mecbanic:al. That is why the stale
metaphor of the sleeping houses is strangely renewed. The most ex-
citing thing that the poet can say about the houses is that they are
tUùep. He has been in the habit of counting them dead _ as just
mc:œaaica1 and inanimate; to say they are 'asleep' is to say that they
are alive, that they participate in the life of nature, Inthe same way,
the tired old metaphor which secs a great city as a pulsating heart of
empire becomes revivified. It is only when the poet secs the city
under the semblance of death that he can see it as ac:tua1lyalive _
quiek with the only life which he can accept, the organic life of
'nature'.
It is Dot my intention to ez&ggcrate Wordsworth's own conscious-
Dell of the paradoz involved. Inthis poem, he prefers, as is usual with
him, the frontal attack. But the situation is paradozica1 here as in 80
many of his poems. Inhis preface to the second edition of the Lyrical
Bal/ad, Wordsworth stated that his general purpose was C choose
to
incidents and situatioœ from common life' but so to treat them that
'ordinary things should be presented to the mind in an unusual
aspect'. Coleridge was to state the purpose for him later, in terms
which make even more evident Wordsworth's exploitation of
the paradoxical: cMr Wordsworth ••• was to propose to himself
as his object, to give the charm of novelty to things of every day,
and to excite a feeling analogous to the supernatural, by awakening
the mind's attention from the lethargy of custom, and directing
it to the lOveliness and the wODders of the world before us ••• '
Wordsworth, in short, was consciously attempting to show his
audienc:e that the common was really uncommon, the prosaic was
really poetic.
Coleridgets terms, 'the charm of novelty to things of every day',
-awakening the mind',suggat the Romantic preoccupation with
wonder - the surprise, the revelation which puts the tarnished fami..
liar world in • new light. This may well be the raison dtl", of DlOIt
..
Romantic paradœes; and yet the neocIasaic poets use paradœ for
THI LANGUAGE OF PARADOX
much the same reason. Consider Pope's lines from 'The Basay on
Man':
In doubt his Mind or Body to prefer,·
Born but to die, and reaining but to err]
Alike in ignorance, his Reason INCh,
Whether 114 thinlu too little, or too mtd ..••
Cl This poem, along with seven other poems discussed in this book, may be
found in the Appendix. The texts of the two other poems discussed, MtUbetIJ
and TM Rap, o/ fM Lock, are too lengthy to be included, but the passages ex-
amined in most detail are quoted in full.
7
THI WILL WROUGHT URN
\
TBB WBLL WROUGBT URN
bue PetrI1'chan conventionalities; they bave sharpness and bite.
The lut one, the likening of the loven to the phoenix, is fully seri-
ou, and with it, the tone bas shifted from ironic banter into a defiant
but controlled tenderness.
The effect of the poet's implied awareness of the loven' apparent
madness is to cleanse and revivify metaphor; to indicate the sense in
which the poet acc:eptl it, and thu to prepare us for accepting seri-
ously the fine and seriously intended metaphors which dominate the
lut two stanzas of the poem.
The opening Une of the fourth stanza:
WeI can dy' by it, if nor lw, by low,
achieves an effect of tenderness and deliberate resolution. The loven
are ready to die to the world; they are committed; they are not callow
but confident. (The basic metaphor of the saint, one notices, is being
carried on; the loven in their renunciation of the world, bave some-
thing of the confident resolution of the saint. By the bye, the word
'legend'-
... if unfit for tomba and Mar"
Our kgmd be, -
in Donne's time meant 'the life of a saint'.) The loven are willing to
forgo the ponderous and stately chronicle and to accept the trifling
and insubstantial 'sonnet' instead; but then if the um be well
wrought, it provides a finer memorial for one's ashes than does the
pompous and grotesque monument. With the finely contemptuous,
yet quiet phrase, 'balfe-acre tombes', the world which the loven
reject expands into something gross and vulgar. But the figure worb
further; the pretty sonnets will not merely hold their ashes as a
decent earthly memorial. Their legend, their story, will gain them
canonization; and approved .. love's saints, other loven will invoke
them.
In this lut stanza, the theme receives a final complication. The
loven in rejecting life actually win to the most intense life. This
paradox bas been hinted at earlier in the phoenix metaphor. Here it
receives a powerful dramatization. The loven in becoming hermits,
fiAd that they bave not lost the world, but bave gained the world in
10
TBI LANGUAGE OP PARADOX
each other, now a more intense, more meaningful world. Donne is DOt
content to treat the lovers' discovery as something which comes to
them passively, but rather as something which they actively achieve.
They are like the saint, God's athlete:
Who did till fDholI r.vorlds .rDUll·contract,and drove
Into thl gla.r.ru of your '.)'B" •••
The image il that of a violent squeezing as of a powerful hand. And
what do the lovers 'drive' into each other's eyes? The 'Countrics,
Townes', and 'Courtes', which they renounced in the first stanza
of the poem. The unworldly lovers thus become the moat 'worldly'
ofaD.
The tone with wbich the poem closes is one of triumphant achieve-
ment, but the tone is a development contributed to by various earlier
elements. One of the more importaDt clements which works towards
our ac:ceptance of the final paradox is the figure of the phoenix, which
will bear a little further analysis.
The comparison of the lovers to the phoenix is very skilfully related
to the two earlier comparisons, that in which the lovers are like burn-
ing tapen, and that in which they are like the cagle and the dove. The
phoenix comparison gathers up both: the phOC1ÛXis a bird, and like
the tapers, it bums. We have a selected series of items: the phoenŒ
figure seems to come in a natural stream of association. 'CaU us what
you will,' the lover saya, and rattles oft'in bis desperation the first
comparisons that occur to him. The comparison to the phoenix seems
thus merely another outlandish one, the most outrageous of all. But
it is this most fantastic one, stumbled over apparently in his haste,
that the poet goes on to develop. It rcaUydescribes the 10vers best
and justifies their renunciation. For the phoenix is not two but one,
'we two being one, are it'; and it bums, DOt like the taper at its own
cost, but to live again. Its death is.life: 'W ce dye and rise the same •• .'
The poet literally justifies the fantastic assertion. Inthe sixteenth and
sevenœcnth centuries to 'dic' means to experience the coDSUlDlliation
of the act of lovc. Thc lovers after the act are the same. Their love
is not exhausted in mere lust. This is their title to canonization. Their
love is like the phoenix.
I hope that I do not seem to juggle the meaning of dis. The meaning
Il
THB WELL WROUGHT URN
r
"í
THI WILL WROUGHT URN ri
or ought to rise; but will not arise for all our mere sifting and meas-
uring the ashes, or testing them for their chemical content. We must
be prepared to accept the paradox of the imagination itself; else
'Beautie, Truth, and Raritie' remain reduced to inert cinders and we
shall end with essential cinders, for all our pains. ,
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