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Limits of the Novel Evolutions of a
from Omuccr
to
Form
RohhcGrillct
Limits of the Novel Evolutions of a
from Chaucer
DAVID
I.
to
Form
Rohhc-Grillct
GROSSVOGEL
Cornell Paj^crlacks
Cornell University Press ITHACA AND LONDON
Copyright
©
1968
by Cornell University
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a re-
view, this book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in
any form without permission
lisher.
in writing
from the pub-
For information address Cornell University 124 Roberts Place, Ithaca,
New
York
Press,
14850.
First published 1^68 First printing, CorJiell Paperbacks, i^ji
Quotations from Jean-Paul Sartre, Nausea, translated by
Lloyd Alexander, Copyright
©
1964
New
by
Directions
Publishing Corporation, reprinted by permission of Directions Publishing Corporation. Quotations from
genious Gentleman
Don
Quixote de
la
New
The
In-
Mancha, Volumes
and II, by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, translated by Samuel Putnam, Copyright 1949 by The Viking Press, Inc., reprinted by permission of The Viking Press, Inc. I
International Standard
Book Number
0-8014-9115-0
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 68-16381
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BY VAIL-BALLOU
PRESS, INC.
Per John L' inter o libro invece di tante note
Acknowledgments
The
following authorizations to quote are herewith ac-
knowledged: James Joyce,
A
Portrait of the Artist as a
Young Man, copyright 1944 by Viking
Press, Inc.
(also
Jonathan Cape Ltd, for the Executors of the James Joyce Estate,
and the Society of Authors), and Ulysses, copy-
by Random House, Inc.; Franz Kafka, The by Willa and Edwin Muir, copyright © 1957 by Alfred A. Knopf Incorporated; Marcel Proust, Remembrance of Things Fast, translated by C. K. Scott right
1946
Trial, translated
Moncrieff and Frederick A. Blossom,
copyright
1941
by Random House, Inc.; Alain Robbe-Grillet, The Erasers, translated by Richard Howard, copyright © 1964 by Grove Press, Inc., For a New Novel, translated by Richard Howard, copyright © 1965 by Grove Press, Inc., and The Voyeur, translated by Richard Howard, copyright © 1958 by Grove Press, Inc.; and Laurence Sterne, Tristram Shandy, edited by James A. Work, copyright 1940 by The Odyssey Press, Inc. Grateful thanks are also extended to the John Simon
Guggenheim Foundation authors.
for time to read
some of
these
Acknowledgmeiits
via
And
because they demonstrated
best reader
is
my
contention that the
perforce a critic (though he
helpful friend),
my
Professors Robert
deepest appreciation to
M. Adams,
may
my
also
be a
colleagues:
Dalai Brenes, Paul de
Man,
Jean-Jacques Demorest, Neil Hertz, Jean Parrish, Karl-
Ludwig
Selig,
Michael Shinagel
cero and Judith
S.
— and especially John Frec-
Herz. Qui a'nne bien corrige
bieji.
D. Ithaca,
New
York
November ipSj
I.
G.
Contents
Introduction
i
1
The Novel and
2
Chaucer: Troilus and Criseyde
3
Cervantes:
Don
4
Lafayette:
La Princesse de Cleves
5
Sterne:
6
Kafka: The Trial
160
7
Proust: Revie7nbrance of Things Fast
189
8
Sartre:
9
Joyce and Robbe-Grillet
ID
the Reader
Tristra?n
6
44
Quixote
74 108
Shandy
136
Nausea
The Novel
as Ritual:
226 256
Defoe's Crusoe and
Dostoevski's Idiot
300
Books Cited
324
Index
337
vx
Limits of the Evolutions of a
from Chaucer
to
Novel Form
RohhcGrillct
Introduction
Pero usai
di dire tra
i
miei amici, secondo
la
sen-
tenzia de poeti, quel Narcisso convertito in fiore essere della pittura stato inventore: la
pittura fiore d'ogni arte, ivi tutta
cisso viene a
proposito.
Che
che
intent
sia
Nar-
con
arte quella
fonte?
Leon Battista Alberti,
The
ove di
tu essere dipi-
dirai
gniere, altra cosa che simile abracciare ivi superficie del
gia,
la storia
and methodology of
Della pittura
this essay are simple:
they assume that the reader's response to the fiction of a novel will depend, according to the extent of tication,
on
belief or appreciation.
They assume
his sophis-
further that
more primitive response which becomes eventually esthetic commentary; that the first response supposes commitment, the latter detachment; that the first ingests the work of art through a form of osmosis, while the second turns it into a phenomenal object. And lastly, this theory relies on the heresy that the writer, however apbelief
is
a
will
not be
may
be of
his reader's esthetic appreciation,
satisfied until
he has reached the reader beyond
preciative he
Introduction
2 that appreciation, until he has
become
that reader's truth.
But before examining the impUcations of between writer and reader, one must
human
the
read:
first
this interaction
be
satisfied that
instinct involves an urge to write or a
need to
since both activities suppose self-consciousness
awareness of
defines and situates
self that
mentary attempts
In the beginning, there are
manifests
man
to
itself
widespread
as are the
propitiated.
But
form danger
is
as
—more
many
gods.
When
all
for.
nature
primarily as threat, gods are as
evidences of danger that must be
man
achieves control and the multi-
reduced to those refractory questions that
will continue to elude him, pluralism
nature speaks to
man with one
oneness to his need not
becomes pantheism:
voice, responding with
to feel
associated with the godhead.
A
its
incomplete. Notions of
transcendency, unity, circularity, timelessness
sees his
rudi-
must be accounted
at self-situation
— an
come
to be
victim of irrationality,
man
peace and fulfillment in control: against chaos, he
opposes logos. For him order supposes the imposition of the
mind upon
can
exist
the erratic or nonminded, for such a reality
only in
his
mind. Aristotle establishes
within the control of a superior mind the realization of the thought of
God, but of
exercises himself only in contemplation. This
nature fect is
all
is
a
all
—God's: a
nature
nature
God
is
that
means that
form of perfection (a conclusion that will afcome) and God is perfect: he
art for centuries to
an essence whose absolute purity
and self-defining thought.
act;
The God
he
is
the
is
denoted by
mind
of Aristotle might be a
being the most lofty attribute of lute assertion), but a
man and
man without
his single
that thinks about
man his
(thought
only abso-
the god-creating short-
comings of man.
These considerations have
a relevancy to the literature
Introduction
man
that
level, the
5
devises for himself.
But
more
a
superficial
fortunes of his divinities also suggest a symbolic
analogue for
his art.
Art
first
appears as a
But
identify and particularize nature. carries
at
him beyond
as
way his
surfaces, he first represents
for
him
to
exploration
through
fa-
mihar equivalents that for which he no longer has an apparent image.
he
Once he
feels akin to a
god
dwells at the heart of the mystery,
—and
when
the godlike sense
in
is
him, nature need not serve as a pretext or as a symbol for his representations; he assumes the proud
and
his representations
end, his gesture is
is
become
worthy of
his
name of poet
guaranty of truth. In the
like that of Aristotle's
none more lofty or more
activity
a
significant,
concern or
it
God:
since there
becomes the only
definition.
A poet like Valery keeps returning to the image of Narcissus; for
him,
all
and
art stems from,
is
contained within,
the poet's need to elucidate his creation. Since Narcissus
was perfect beauty, he knew the perfection of
that
which
the water reflected. His contemplation, since he
was
a per-
fect artist, could have self in his act
no
lesser object:
One
of creation.
he immobilized him-
day, as an
tempted to comprehend the perfection of
moved
into his reflection;
it
was then
artist,
he
his creation
that the gods
at-
and
drowned
him.
As
the
God
of Aristotle turns into pure thought think-
ing about thought, pure art becomes for the pure
self-commentary that defines him
artist
the
in his creative gesture:
The poem by Mallarme starts Platonic ladder. The Idea is the
action and creation are one. at the first
rung of the
only formulation worthy of the poet.
It will
always remain
within his sight and forever elude his grasp, since he
endowed with but one of
the divine attributes
is
—God's
vision. In his attempt, his necessary frustration describes
Introduction
4 the form of the eternally missing Idea;
tensed between the reahty from
and the
flight
Ideal, the
contrives a
poem taking
is
Azure, the Pure Whiteness, the
Absolute, which, whatever
The
it
which the poet
termed, he cannot
it is
painter discovers that the object he
is
attain.
copying be-
comes on his canvas another object, the statement of pig-
No
ments, of their thickness, their areas, their relations.
how
matter
faithfully he tries to submit his painting to
its
object-model, the canvas will always be a thing of colors,
and
shapes,
and
reality
that
And
lines of his
making;
his authorship. Is
its
truth
is its
phenomenal
he then not justified in creating
phenomenal evidence without the pretext of
a
model?
not the musician answerable only to a structure com-
is
posed of the tones he has created and the
harmonic forces
—"presentation"
tion," to use the expression of
The drama and
stress
of these
rather than "representa-
W. J. Ong?
^
the novel follow a similar development,
but because they mediate reality for someone besides the author, their self-commentary also takes into account the
presence of the one in
sumes
its
whom
that mediated reality as-
ultimate definition. During the seventeenth cen-
tury, Corneille writes Vlllusion coviique in anticipation of
Pirandello, Ghelderode, Genet,
dev^elopment
is
the
within an action that
by contriving
a play
whose
questioning of the spectator's part is
itself
dramatic commentary.
And
when the novel can no longer tell a simple tale, it becomes the mode that notes the indifference of its reader and finds the new dimensions of its fiction in the relation of that reader to the author through the object between them.
The God
of Aristotle, being a god, could limit his
self-
was
suf-
definition to thought thinking about thought. It ficient:
^The
no more
is
expected of
Barbarian Within, p.
33.
a
god for
whom
desire
is
Introduction
j
equivalent to deed. But man, no matter
remains frustrated in
his doing.
what
his vision,
His attempts are tragic and
magnificent; they measure his limitation and his utmost
grandeur.
God
cannot not do; but, dying,
hind him the imperishable evidence of art.
x\nd to speak for him in
his desire
an immortal thing and absolute: pure itself. It is
single
man
leaves be-
his frustration
and
art
—
his
his vision, it is
commenting upon
the one redemption of man's mortality and his
triumph over the immortals.
1
The Novel and the Reader
Because the definition
than
of art exists in a public domain,
The
artifact
is
metaphor
a
stands for something else
which
fore, ultimately, a thing,
though
varies according to
phor, the artifact
moment
is
its
assessment
is
it
also a sign:
comes into being
it
is
thus, in
the point of
the creation of
many
ways, the outcome of the concritic,
view of the
creator and beholder.
artist,
the artifact must
a truth of
which the
art-
himself possessed, a sense so strong as to compel
expression.
Minor
may
result in pleasant pro-
ductions but will not involve the conscious ciently to define to
its
urges, such as the desire to play, to have
fun, to decorate, and the like,
power
at the
exists also in the eye of the beholder. Its
from the impelling sense of
ist feels
is
objective tangibility
ontological mode. Being a meta-
frontation between artist and
result
—something that — and there-
recalls
its
of interpretation; the object
someone, but
From
it
its
more
generally dialectical and depends on
is
itself.
work
him through
make such
his
work
definition, will
suffi-
artist
and, lacking the
not allow him to de-
fine his artifact as art.
Viewed
in this light,
the artist
is
the poet,
he 6
who
The Novel and makes, and
is
the Reader
7
not unlike God, that other creator.
Still,
there appears to be at least one significant difference be-
tween the poet and
God
tion:
has no
God
in their respective acts of crea-
model from which he proceeds and must
be incontrovertibly an originator, whereas clear to
what extent the poet
The
agent.
bivalence, is
and independent
evincing already an uncomfortable am-
if
we
leave out of account the opinion that the
primarily a copyist with nature as his model. Al-
though such poets are not less
not always
question has been of interest for some time, the
earliest speculation
poet
a free
is
it is
imitator
as derivative as Plato's (the
whose very models turn out
hap-
to be imperfect
copies themselves), they hardly suggest comparison with a life-breathing
ment of
God. They remain timid even
their emancipation.
who
Horace,
ing that "Painters and poets
[.
.
.]
equal right in hazarding anything,"
is
in the state-
begins
by
assert-
have always had an considerably
less as-
"but not so far that savage
sertive in the next breath:
should mate with tame, or serpents couple with birds,
lambs with tigers"
who must with
have been familiar with centaurs, or
less
at least
should have resisted such animal-pairing
griffins,
perhaps
{Ars Poetica, 9-13). That Horace,
when one
surprising
grifRn derives
its
familiar categories
is
considers that the very
symmetrical supernaturalism from two
—the
lion
and the
the supernatural are natural enough:
eagle.
The
parts of
even though called
upon
to fashion the poet's wildest fancy, they are orig-
inally
found
in nature.
The
poet's
a subversion of nature, but nature
freedom is still
may
consist in
the ultimate ref-
erence.^ Admittedly, one of the reasons why Horace rejects these couis that tame should not associate with savage. If a lamb and a tiger are brought into such a combination, what is known of
1
plings
Limits of the Novel
8
Such commonsensical madness was not poet too far
afield.
But there have
God by
placed the poet nearer to
more
also
likely to lead the
been those
relating his inspiration
closely to a divine source than to one that
nature) equally apparent to
all.
who
was
(like
Believing as he did in an
all-
informing intelligence, the Neoplatonist could situate the poet, cially
if
he
felt
kindly disposed toward him, in an espe-
privileged position.
For
Plotinus,
the world soul
Nous) which emanated from the One or Absolute Being. Since man's soul was in touch with the world soul, there was no need for Plotinus' poet to be deceived, like Plato's, by imperfect replicas of flowed from
this intelligence (the
the Idea, and Plotinus substituted for Plato's artist (limited
by misguided concern with the example of Phidias,
many
a
who
bed made by
a carpenter)
fashioned a god
er,
but the fact remains that even
earth,
fact,
gods). Plato had failed to mention whether his car-
penter had a better appreciation of essences than
some
(in
celestial
as
his paint-
imperfect copies of
couch, beds are relatively plentiful here, on
whereas gods go to some pains not to appear
as
It followed that must have "wrought the Zeus upon no model among things of sense but by apprehending what form Zeus must take if he chose to become manifest to sight" {Enneads, V, viii, I).
promiscuously.
Phidias
Plotinus refers presumably to the giant statue at
which was considered
Olympia
to be the masterpiece of Phidias.
each inhibits the effect of the other, and instead of two threats adding their individual awesomeness to the eeriness of their combination, an unwieldy and self-canceling object is produced, whose effect is comic. This comic effect depends, however, on a prior recognition of, and familiarity with, the component parts (against which the unnatural coupling operates). Still, it is not expected that a zoologist would be awed by even a griffin. He is more likely to
be incredulous
or, at the
very
best, interested.
The Novel and There
the Reader
p
no surviving piece of statuary that can be
is
with certainty to that
cribed
as-
though certain
sculptor,
other pieces, such as the Dionysus from the eastern pedi-
ment of the Parthenon (now in the British Museum), show a perfection of form in male and female shapes such as
is
tautologically attributed to Phidias.
statue in the Olympieion, our reference
says of
it:
"The image
worth
is
other images except
all
Rome:
the
For the
colossal
Pausanias,
is
who
seeing. It surpasses in size
colossuses
at
Rhodes and
made of ivory and gold, and considering the workmanship is good" {Description of Greece, I,
it is
size the xviii, 6).
Thus, the apprehension which Phidias had of
human being was
to be
a supra-
conveyed through the huge
size of
the statue, far exceeding that of any mortal; the costly and exotic materials used in lastly,
its
making
though Pausanias appears
—ivory
less
and gold; and
affected at this point
than one might have hoped, the grace and noble bearing of
an ideal
human
figure: here
is
datum indeed
familiar
—the
which allows human cognition. So wrought "upon no model among at least a part of its effect from mat-
crafted artifact and that
the Zeus supposedly things of sense" seeks ter
and the material world of the senses which Plotinus be-
lieved to be at the source of
Even the idealized more convincing dederives from the imperfect
all
evil.
beauty of the statue that attempts
a
human limitations human body. The myths that examined
parture from
the
many
aspects
of Zeus's divinity forces a more drastic break between the reader's awareness of
carnations of the god
an all-consuming that
human
—such
and the various
possibility as a
brilliance. Still
it
must be remembered
—changes
even these were metamorphoses
more recognizable form,
in-
golden shower, a swan, or
for even a
god must
from
retain
a
some
;
Limits of the Novel
10
human
essence
Difficult as
of an
if
it
he
may
is
apprehended by a human.^
be to vouch for the divine inspiration
by pointing
artist
to be
to his material achievements,
at least equally difficult to
account for artistry on the sole
On
basis of its imitative excellence.
would appear of
the face of things,
that for Aristotle, mimesis
Dithyrambic poetry, and the music of the lyre in most of their forms, are tion
modes of imitation"
ing to Aristotle,
is
all
{Poetics,
2)
.
habit, imitate
medium of
concep-
same, accord-
true of the plastic arts, painting, and
"There are persons who, by conscious
singing:
and of the
flute
The
and
also
in their general I,
it
the foundation
is
Comedy
"Epic poetry and Tragedy,
all art:
it is
art or
mere
and represent various objects through the
colour and form, or again
by
the voice"
(I,
4)
moreover, "even dancing instates character, emotion, and action" tion
liest
5).
The
reasons are that "the instinct of imita-
implanted in
is
learns
(I,
man from
childhood" (IV, 2), one
through imitation, and since "to learn gives the
pleasure" (IV, 4), imitation
For
effective imitation,
ceptible reality
is
live-
pleasurable.
the external forms of a per-
must be observed:
there must be nothing irrational"
"Within the action
(XV,
7
—instead of
irra-
Wheelwright and others give supernatural as a translation) for example, the deus ex machina has no place in the action. For a similar reason, tragedians keep to real names because only "what is possible is credible" (IX, 6), and the iambic is used by them because it is, "of all meational,
;
sures, the
most colloquial" (IV,
Moral and didactic 2
Phidias
may
14).
benefits ensue
from such
have been more aware of the human dimension of
his divinities than Plotinus
cared to admit.
equally unreliable accounts of the sculptor's ultimately
imitation.
condemned
One life
of the several,
says that he
was
for impiety because he included the portrait
of Pericles, as well as his own, on the shield of yet another epic statue of his that of the goddess Athene.
—
The Novel and The most
the Reader
important of the
structure of incidents, shows
or misery according to their
between tates
six
aspects of tragedy,
and serious poetry
trivial
pleasure people get
contemplating ring" (IV, 5)
it,
the
how men achieve happiness actions. One may distinguish in that the latter imi-
"noble actions, and the actions of good
The
7).
ii
from
men" (IV,
a painting "is, that in
they find themselves learning or infer-
—since
"the most beautiful colours, laid on
confusedly, will not give as
much
pleasure as the chalk
outline of a portrait" (VI, 15). Still,
the
concerned though he
is
with the object of the
imitation, Aristotle finds himself
ist's
work
of art
the example of
itself is
good
an object. Tragedians must follow
portrait painters
ducing the distinctive form of the
which
is
true to
life
art-
acknowledging that and "while repro-
make
original,
a likeness
and yet more beautiful" (XV,
That beauty, within the
art
8).
form, becomes a matter of or-
ganic concern; for example, "beauty depends on magni-
tude and order" (VII, 4), and the function of the poet
not to relate what happened, but "what possible according to the
(IX, i).
The
poet that "even is
none the
[dramatically]
law of probability or necessity"
original definition of mimesis has
siderably expanded
he
is
if
when
is,
been con-
Aristotle concludes about the
he chances to take an historical subject,
less a
poet; for there
is
no reason
why some
events that have actually happened should not conform to the law of the probable and possible, and in virtue of that
them he is their poet or maker" (IX, 9). would appear then that the poet's truth, even though originally derived from an existing model and patterned upon that model, becomes in its formulation a new entity with a truth of its own. If mimetic perfection were adequate to convey the artist's vision, the artifact would quality in It
need only to afford recognition through
itself
of a truth
Limits of the Novel
12 that
external to
is
it
("Ah, that
viewer of a portrait painting
he!" exclaims Aristotle's
is
[ IV,
5
]
)
.
But
if
in the process
of imitation, the imitative object becomes distinct from that
which
it is
imitating, then
its
appreciation and recog-
nition require other criteria (such as the aforementioned
standards of proportion, harmony, organic necessity), and
must be sought within the
these criteria
The he
artifact itself.
of the viewer turn that to which
critical faculties
responding into an object. But "since the objects of
is
men
imitation are
in action" (II, i),
it
follows that the re-
sponse of the viewer will be forever dual, as will be the artifact itself, a part of
man
whose truth must be found in fails to distinguish between
its
and other
because he supposes that the
arts
tion of each
is
the same
in that
all
hu-
plastic
evidence. Aristotle
human
asser-
intend to commit the
noncritical part of the viewer, reader, or spectator: "Pity is
aroused by unmerited misfortune, fear by the misfor-
tune of a
man
like ourselves'''';
and able to recognize himself
^
unless the viewer
willing
in the object of the artist's
cannot commit himself to
imitation, he
is
it
other than
criti-
cally.
And
so the expression of the artist's vision
becomes
a
subject of contention between the artist and his public.
Even though mines
its
3
2.
XIII,
that vision
expression,
Our
if
italics. It is
is
the impelhng force that deter-
simple mimesis
is
not sufficient for
not altogether clear to what extent pity
We
can be bestowed on a fiction unless it too is "like ourselves." assume that the objects of both our pity and fear must be "like ourselves" and that it is their dramatic circumstances that will de-
termine whether pity or fear will be elicited. It is in this sense that the Aristotelian motions of pity and fear should be interpreted: they represent the utmost extent to which the viewer can be
drawn
into, or repulsed by, the artifact to
has committed himself.
whose human truth he
The Novel and
the Reader
new
understanding,
its
75
new means who is now con-
points of reference and
by
of coercion must be sought
the artist
cerned, not only with the form of his creation, but also
with the ways
can be fashioned so
it
commit the
as to
reader to a reality that transcends the form. For those use words as their medium, and
more
who
particularly, written
words, the contest involves an author whose strategy
to
is
entice his reader into giving his reality to the author's fic-
same reader (especially
tion and the
who
sophisticated),
aware of
thor's creation
This
human impulse
the au-
and hear stories. If, according to the some writers, poetry came before prose
to tell
first
stead of an idea
man
utterance of
—
phrased an emotion
the latter depending for
a store of verbal
story-telling
by being
whom
detachment by the reader departs from the
interpretation of
on
a critic for
an analyzable object.
is
critical
because the
he considers himself
the author's strategy
resists
and thus remains
it,
if
symbols
—
it is
at least
its
in-
formulation
equally true that
closely related to the development of the
is
social structure: structure supposes continuation
and con-
tinuation implies history; the tribe preserves
definition
through
was
ritual rote, part of
—what
in the past
tification for
it
which
is
ivas being a
its
the telling of
major part of
what
it
its jus-
continuing to be. In that sense, the Iliad and
the Aeneid are the distant and sophisticated echoes of a ritual
clan.
whose purpose was once
The danger
to preserve the
form of
a
of listener alienation through critical dis-
tance can scarcely have been a matter of concern at such
an early time.
If historical
man
develops as does the child,
the substance of the ritual tale conjured for
its
listeners a
nearly visible reality and a sense of immediacy. According to
Simon O.
Lesser's preliminary formulation,
start [stories] are
completely
real. It is
"At
the
the capacity to dis-
— Limits of the Novel
/^
between
tinguish
fiction
and
which must be
reality
sume for narration its
ac-
One may asthat reason that the tale itself was a much balder than the complex form into which it grew when
quired" (Fiction ajid the Unconscious,
p. i).
more
authors found the need to attach a
sceptical audi-
ence.
As
individualistic concerns begin
we may
structure,
loosen the ritual
to
suppose that lyric poetry comes into
being, the collective vision
becoming of
immediate
less
terest to the individual than the recognition
of a
more
in-
and rehearsal
private state of being. Therefore, later versions
of even the primitive tale rely, for a part of their suasion,
on the
lyric
—on an appeal
to the intimacy of the reader,
moods, yearnings, or perceptions, rather than on
in his
a
presentation of surfaces, such as a description of external events.
A
Rolajjd
may
reminder of some of the aspects of the Song of help to explain
more
precisely
what
meant.
is
In stanza ex, the chanted, self-contained lines of this asso-
nanced verse turn into the cadence of tion of the death of its
Roland
actual occurrence.
from the
field
The
—over
a
a dirge in anticipa-
thousand
thirty-line laisse
lines
before
away
turns
of battle, where the French are slaughtering
pagans by the thousands, to France, where an apocalyptic scene
is
presently described: the land
lashed
is
by
a storm
of such intensity that darkness descends at high noon.
elements conspire to achieve a landscape of doom.
The The
earth trembles; the heaviest walls, the very heavens are rent.
And
stresses in
throughout,
every
vocalization it
is
is
the
cadenced
strongly
whose
line the single assonance
the stanza's final
word
RoUant.
lament
climactic
Or
again,
the re-echoing of kisses similaires that prolongs the
agony of Roland, who, knowing to destroy his sacred
sword by
that he
striking
is
it
dying, attempts
against the rocks
The Novel and
the Reader
75
As each stanza restates the hero's agony, words repeated become the throbbing of his pain, and
of Roncevaux. the
the motion visually analyzed
is
reconstituted as intensity
within the reader.
Through {cler, halt,
a similar process, a
number of key
adjectives
douce, for example) accumulate an emotional
charge through repetition and become the core of progres-
more
sively
intense motives. "Halt sunt
li
pui" ("tall are
the mountains") endures as a somber note even though the battle
being waged on the plain, since the
is
doom
of
Ro-
land and the French gives the landscape a psychological
more important to the poem than topographical accuracy.^ Douce introduces a rare feminine term to this mascuHne epic, and once again the landscape is fashioned by thoughts about it, as the homeland ("douce France") becomes the tender personification of the past and of the good which death will now forever put aside. dimension that
Nor
is
are these the only instances of poetic
phoses that change an object into an emotion. In
between the forces of Christendom
(all
metamorthis clash
rather stylized,
except for the three heroes, Roland, Oliver, and Bishop
Turpin) and the more particularized heathens (since
must be
specific
under pain of losing
there appears the Lxxviii),
striking
trails
evil
awesomeness),
of Chernuble
figure
whose Samson-like mane
its
to the
(stanza
ground and
Ramon Menendez Pidal feels: "La description est fort mal amenee, car les mots halt sunt li pui ne conviennent pas au riant plateau de Roncevaux, fort eloigne de toute hauteur" {La Chanson de Roland et la tradition epique des Francs, trans. I.-M. Cluzel, [2d ed.; i960], p. 325); he suggests a borrowing from a former version in which Roland died in a mountain pass where "la mort douloureuse de Roland avait lieu conformement a la verite historique." But since the death of Roland is as agonized in the present form of the poem, can we not assume that the poet had to ^
make
his
work conform
to a poetic truth?
6 Limits of the Novel
1
banner to
knight of darkness
who
is
like a
is
so minded, carry the load of four pack mules.
from the
devil's
this
own
when he
can,
He
comes
country, a kingdom upon which the
dew
sun does not shine, where no wheat can grow nor
—and
where,
gather
prophetically,
very stones are
the
black. It is
perhaps not overly surprising to find poetry inform-
ing a national epic that chronicles a national disaster and
means
from
to salvage patriotic pride
of poetry
suffering.
The intent man that
to speak directly to the precritical
is
exists at the level
of sensitivity and emotion:
the lan-
it is
guage through which the grandeur of abstract concepts
may
sciousness.
that
when
achieve meaning as personal perception
ture of universal scope
a ges-
enacted within the reader's con-
is
Poetry humanizes the objects and the landscape
surround Roland
at
time
a
when
his
audience
is
acquiring certain feelings and needs that he does not yet possess. In the epics that follow
man
upon the Roland,
jects of his circumstances.
in the
is
a
Guillaume, the hapless warrior
Garin de Monglane cycle, becomes increasingly
whose human dimensions
figure
level
at a
symboHc
sometimes reach the comic intensity of pathos
when
he
is
forced to carry
feeble squire
his
own
arms,
it is
his
absolutely necessary to
at least a pretense of bravery.
And
that
gether the epics grouped in the cycle of
traitor
which
—
as
too
cannot bear, except very briefly through
populated places where
a hero to
a
are unequal to the battles
he must wage and whose attempts to persist
is
it
that stands within the landscape and amidst the ob-
whom
a
wrong
and apostate, but
who
torn between his desire and
liis
which
Doon
de
has been done, in the
hour of
his
show
links to-
Mayence
who
turns
revenge
is
fear of winning.
After the social structure of the tribe has disintegrated
The Novel and and
vate and recognizable figure to self,
as
fj
become meaningless, the reader
lore has
its
the Reader
whom
or seeks at least an inference of his
may fathom and
poetry
suggest
it.
is
depersonalized
ing of deeds for which there reader no longer share a
is
—
Lacking a recog-
human
nizable projection of the reader or his
poetry, the story
is
seeks a pri-
may entrust himhuman condition
he
equivalent as
merely an account-
no doer once the hero and
common
ancestry.
personalized fiction should exist at
That such de-
appears imputable to
all
on the part of both reader and writer for a sustained mode of writing and to the emergence of a new interest in the reader an interest in pattern (to borrow a a desire
—
term which Arnold Kettle has used, slightly differently, his
in
Introduction to the English Novel). Since intensity
cannot be defined
must be limited
as duration, the effect
to short pieces or can operate only episodi-
cally in longer ones. like ourselves"
of lyric suasion
And
by
rejected
is
mitment
to an extended
lematic.^
Nor
if
the link of Aristotle's
"man
either reader or writer,
com-
form of writing becomes prob-
the Aristotelian persona a guarantee of
is
reader entrapment. For whereas poetry states the poet's truth as lyric
what
is
immediacy and the
ation of even "a
—
fiction 5 It is
tribal
legend chronicles
intended and received as objective truth, the cre-
a
game
man
like ourselves"
is
the creation of a
that proposes to the reader certain condi-
interesting to speculate
how much
may be
Christian ethics
responsible for fostering the critical distance that rejects the Aristotelian persona.
The
awareness that only
God
can create
a
human
being leads to a long-lasting suspicion of the dramatic actor who appears to be usurping the divine privilege and most likely accounts for some of the taboos against transvestites and sexual deviates,
of
whom
earlier ethics
were more
tolerant. It
is
likewise true
that the fictional character emerges only gradually, as literature
becomes something more than tic vehicle.
a representation of facts or a didac-
8
Limits of the Novel
1
which he may
tions (such as the suspension of disbelief)
or
may
not choose to accept.
about a fictional convention
becomes
tion
writer
may
and
as artifact,
is
The only the object
it is
attempt to ground
on
factual reality
which
his parafictional ties
with
reader. The writer knows that the self-distancing of reader moves him from identification to critical com-
the the
prehension and can therefore engage
his reader, in his
withdrawal, by calling his attention to the tern
—an entity that
man echo on
that fic-
that reality that the
not dependent for
is
work
its life
very
as pat-
on
a hu-
or on the affective cooperation of the reader but
his intelligence.
This
is
the allegorical
form whose com-
prehension involves the deciphering of signs
—
as
opposed
to symbolic writing that converts the reader through infra-
(sounds, rhythms)
associations
intellective
or others to
which the reader responds with his feelings rather than such as colors and nonsymbolic obhis knowledge
—
with
jects.®