114
TJ123-8-2009 LK VWD0011 Tradition Humanistic 6th Edition W:220mm x H:292mm 175L 115 Stora Enso M/A Magenta (V)READING 31. 2
Poetry in the Late Nineteenth
Century: The Symbolists
Science and Technology
114 CHAPTER 31 The Move Toward Modernism
114
fine rods of ruby surround the water rose.” The Symbolists
tried to represent nature without effusive commentary, to
“take eloquence and wring its neck,” as Verlaine put it. In
order to imitate the indefiniteness of experience itself, they
might string words together without logical connections.
Hence, in Symbolist poetry, images seem to flow into one
another, and “meaning” often lies between the lines.
Mallarmé
For Stéphane Mallarmé, the “new art” of poetry was a
religion, and the poet–artist was its oracle. Inclined to
melancholy, he cultivated an intimate literary style based
on the “music” of words. He held that art was “accessible
only to the few” who nurtured “the inner life.” Mallarmé’s
poems are tapestries of sensuous, dreamlike motifs that
resist definition and analysis. To name a thing, Mallarmé
insisted, was to destroy it, while to suggest experience was
to create it.
Mallarmé’s pastoral poem, “L’après-midi d’un faune”
(“The Afternoon of a Faun”) is a reverie of an erotic
encounter between two mythological woodland creatures,
a faun (part man, part beast) and a nymph (a beautiful for-
est maiden). As the faun awakens, he tries to recapture the
experiences of the previous afternoon. Whether his elusive
memories belong to the world of dreams or to reality is
uncertain; but, true to Bergson’s theory of duration, expe-
rience becomes a stream of sensations in which past and
present merge. As the following excerpt illustrates,
Mallarmé’s verbal rhythms are free and hypnotic, and his
images, which follow one another with few logical transi-
tions, are intimately linked to the world of the senses.
From Mallarmé’s “The Afternoon
of a Faun” (1876)
I would immortalize these nymphs: so bright 1
Their sunlit coloring, so airy light,
It floats like drowsing down. Loved I a dream?
My doubts, born of oblivious darkness, seem
A subtle tracery of branches grown 5
The tree’s true self—proving that I have known,
Thinking it love, the blushing of a rose.
But think. These nymphs, their loveliness... suppose
They bodied forth your senses’ fabulous thirst?
Illusion! which the blue eyes of the first, 10
As cold and chaste as is the weeping spring,
Beget: the other, sighing, passioning,
Is she the wind, warm in your fleece at noon?
No; through this quiet, when a weary swoon
Crushes and chokes the latest faint essay 15
Of morning, cool against the encroaching day,
There is no murmuring water, save the gush
Of my clear fluted notes; and in the hush
Blows never a wind, save that which through my reed^1
Puffs out before the rain of notes can speed 20
Upon the air, with that calm breath of art
According to Bergson, two primary powers, intellect
and intuition, governed the lives of human beings. While
intellect perceives experience in individual and discrete
terms, or as a series of separate and solid entities, intuition
grasps experience as it really is: a perpetual stream of sen-
sations. Intellect isolates and categorizes experience
according to logic and geometry; intuition, on the other
hand, fuses past and present into one organic whole. For
Bergson, instinct (or intuition) is humankind’s noblest fac-
ulty, and duration, or “perpetual becoming,” is the very stuff
of reality—the essence of life.
In 1889, Bergson published his treatise Time and
Freewill, in which he described true experience as dura-
tional, a constant unfolding in time, and reality, which
can only be apprehended intuitively, as a series of qualita-
tive changes that merge into one another without precise
definition.
Bergson’s poetical view of nature had much in common
with the aesthetics of the movement known as symbolism,
which flourished from roughly 1885 to 1910. The
Symbolists held that the visible world does not constitute
a true or universal reality. Realistic, objective representa-
tion, according to the Symbolists, failed to convey the
pleasures of sensory experience and the intuitive world of
dreams and myth. The artist’s mission was to find a lan-
guage that embraced the mystical, the erotic, and the inef-
fable world of the senses. For the Symbolists, reality was a
swarm of sensations that could never be described but only
suggestedby poetic symbols—images that elicited moods
and feelings beyond literal meanings.
In literature, the leading Symbolists were the French
poets Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867), Paul Verlaine
(1844–1896), ArthurRimbaud (1854–1891), and Stéphane
Mallarmé (1842–1898), and the Belgian playwright
Maurice Maeterlinck (1862–1949). Arthur Rimbaud, who
wrote most of his poetry while in his teens, envisioned the
poet as seer. Freeing language from its descriptive function,
his prose poems shattered the rational sequence of words
and phrases, detaching them from their traditional associ-
ations and recombining them so as to create powerful sense
impressions. In one of the prose poems from his
Illuminations, for example, Rimbaud describes flowers as
“Bits of yellow gold seeded in agate, pillars of mahogany
supporting a dome of emeralds, bouquets of white satin and
1877 Thomas Edison (American) invents the phonograph
1892 Rudolf Diesel (German) patents his internal
combustion engine
1893 Henry Ford (American) test-drives the
“gasoline-buggy”
(^1) A pipe or flute.