Part 7 (1/2)
The use, however, must be determined by the occasion. Those outbursts of pa.s.sion which drive onwards like a winter torrent draw with them as an indispensable accessory whole ma.s.ses of metaphor. It is thus in that pa.s.sage of Demosthenes (who here also is our safest guide):[1]
[Footnote 1: See Note.]
2 ”Those vile fawning wretches, each one of whom has lopped from his country her fairest members, who have toasted away their liberty, first to Philip, now to Alexander, who measure happiness by their belly and their vilest appet.i.tes, who have overthrown the old landmarks and standards of felicity among Greeks,--to be freemen, and to have no one for a master.”[2] Here the number of the metaphors is obscured by the orator's indignation against the betrayers of his country.
[Footnote 2: _De Cor._ 296.]
3 And to effect this Aristotle and Theophrastus recommend the softening of harsh metaphors by the use of some such phrase as ”So to say,” ”As it were,” ”If I may be permitted the expression,” ”If so bold a term is allowable.” For thus to forestall criticism[3] mitigates, they a.s.sert, the boldness of the metaphors.
[Footnote 3: Reading ?p?t??s??.]
4 And I will not deny that these have their use. Nevertheless I must repeat the remark which I made in the case of figures,[4] and maintain that there are native antidotes to the number and boldness of metaphors, in well-timed displays of strong feeling, and in unaffected sublimity, because these have an innate power by the dash of their movement of sweeping along and carrying all else before them. Or should we not rather say that they absolutely demand as indispensable the use of daring metaphors, and will not allow the hearer to pause and criticise the number of them, because he shares the pa.s.sion of the speaker?
[Footnote 4: Ch. xvii.]
5 In the treatment, again, of familiar topics and in descriptive pa.s.sages nothing gives such distinctness as a close and continuous series of metaphors. It is by this means that Xenophon has so finely delineated the anatomy of the human frame.[5] And there is a still more brilliant and life-like picture in Plato.[6] The human head he calls a _citadel_; the neck is an _isthmus_ set to divide it from the chest; to support it beneath are the vertebrae, turning like _hinges_; pleasure he describes as a _bait_ to tempt men to ill; the tongue is the _arbiter of tastes_.
The heart is at once the _knot_ of the veins and the _source_ of the rapidly circulating blood, and is stationed in the _guard-room_ of the body. The ramifying blood-vessels he calls _alleys_. ”And casting about,” he says, ”for something to sustain the violent palpitation of the heart when it is alarmed by the approach of danger or agitated by pa.s.sion, since at such times it is overheated, they (the G.o.ds) implanted in us the lungs, which are so fas.h.i.+oned that being soft and bloodless, and having cavities within, they act like a buffer, and when the heart boils with inward pa.s.sion by yielding to its throbbing save it from injury.” He compares the seat of the desires to the _women's quarters_, the seat of the pa.s.sions to the _men's quarters_, in a house. The spleen, again, is the _napkin_ of the internal organs, by whose excretions it is saturated from time to time, and swells to a great size with inward impurity. ”After this,” he continues, ”they shrouded the whole with flesh, throwing it forward, like a cus.h.i.+on, as a barrier against injuries from without.” The blood he terms the _pasture_ of the flesh. ”To a.s.sist the process of nutrition,” he goes on, ”they divided the body into ducts, cutting trenches like those in a garden, so that, the body being a system of narrow conduits, the current of the veins might flow as from a perennial fountain-head. And when the end is at hand,” he says, ”the soul is cast loose from her moorings like a s.h.i.+p, and free to wander whither she will.”
[Footnote 5: _Memorab._ i. 4, 5.]
[Footnote 6: _Timaeus_, 69, D; 74, A; 65, C; 72, G; 74, B, D; 80, E; 77, G; 78, E; 85, E.]
6 These, and a hundred similar fancies, follow one another in quick succession. But those which I have pointed out are sufficient to demonstrate how great is the natural power of figurative language, and how largely metaphors conduce to sublimity, and to ill.u.s.trate the important part which they play in all impa.s.sioned and descriptive pa.s.sages.
7 That the use of figurative language, as of all other beauties of style, has a constant tendency towards excess, is an obvious truth which I need not dwell upon. It is chiefly on this account that even Plato comes in for a large share of disparagement, because he is often carried away by a sort of frenzy of language into an intemperate use of violent metaphors and inflated allegory. ”It is not easy to remark” (he says in one place) ”that a city ought to be blended like a bowl, in which the mad wine boils when it is poured out, but being disciplined by another and a sober G.o.d in that fair society produces a good and temperate drink.”[7] Really, it is said, to speak of water as a ”sober G.o.d,” and of the process of mixing as a ”discipline,” is to talk like a poet, and no very _sober_ one either.
[Footnote 7: _Legg._ vi. 773, G.]
8 It was such defects as these that the hostile critic[8] Caecilius made his ground of attack, when he had the boldness in his essay ”On the Beauties of Lysias” to p.r.o.nounce that writer superior in every respect to Plato. Now Caecilius was doubly unqualified for a judge: he loved Lysias better even than himself, and at the same time his hatred of Plato and all his works is greater even than his love for Lysias.
Moreover, he is so blind a partisan that his very premises are open to dispute. He vaunts Lysias as a faultless and immaculate writer, while Plato is, according to him, full of blemishes. Now this is not the case: far from it.
[Footnote 8: Reading ? ?s?? a?t??, by a conjecture of the translator.]
x.x.xIII
But supposing now that we a.s.sume the existence of a really unblemished and irreproachable writer. Is it not worth while to raise the whole question whether in poetry and prose we should prefer sublimity accompanied by some faults, or a style which never rising above moderate excellence never stumbles and never requires correction? and again, whether the first place in literature is justly to be a.s.signed to the more numerous, or the loftier excellences? For these are questions proper to an inquiry on the Sublime, and urgently asking for settlement.
2 I know, then, that the largest intellects are far from being the most exact. A mind always intent on correctness is apt to be dissipated in trifles; but in great affluence of thought, as in vast material wealth, there must needs be an occasional neglect of detail. And is it not inevitably so? Is it not by risking nothing, by never aiming high, that a writer of low or middling powers keeps generally clear of faults and secure of blame? whereas the loftier walks of literature are by their very loftiness perilous?
3 I am well aware, again, that there is a law by which in all human productions the weak points catch the eye first, by which their faults remain indelibly stamped on the memory, while their beauties quickly fade away.
4 Yet, though I have myself noted not a few faulty pa.s.sages in Homer and in other authors of the highest rank, and though I am far from being partial to their failings, nevertheless I would call them not so much wilful blunders as oversights which were allowed to pa.s.s unregarded through that contempt of little things, that ”brave disorder,” which is natural to an exalted genius; and I still think that the greater excellences, though not everywhere equally sustained, ought always to be voted to the first place in literature, if for no other reason, for the mere grandeur of soul they evince. Let us take an instance: Apollonius in his _Argonautica_ has given us a poem actually faultless; and in his pastoral poetry Theocritus is eminently happy, except when he occasionally attempts another style. And what then? Would you rather be a Homer or an Apollonius?
5 Or take Eratosthenes and his _Erigone_; because that little work is without a flaw, is he therefore a greater poet than Archilochus, with all his disorderly profusion? greater than that impetuous, that G.o.d-gifted genius, which chafed against the restraints of law? or in lyric poetry would you choose to be a Bacchylides or a Pindar? in tragedy a Sophocles or (save the mark!) an Io of Chios? Yet Io and Bacchylides never stumble, their style is always neat, always pretty; while Pindar and Sophocles sometimes move onwards with a wide blaze of splendour, but often drop out of view in sudden and disastrous eclipse.
Nevertheless no one in his senses would deny that a single play of Sophocles, the _Oedipus_, is of higher value than all the dramas of Io put together.
x.x.xIV