In Byron's Don Juan Canto I there is a footnote that discusses line 210 that involves a comparison between Donna Inez and Lady Byron. The footnote discusses the similarities in behavior (specifically referencing trying "to prove her loving lord was mad" (210)) between Donna Inez and Lady Byron, because Lady Byron had also sought medical advice about whether Lord Byron was crazy. However, the footnote then continues to say that Lord Byron "insisted that Donna Inez was not intended to be a caricature of Lady Byron."
There is a clear comparison between these two women, yet the author himself said that a reader who draws this comparison does so incorrectly. This got me thinking. Does the author have this power? Can't the author be wrong about his own work? I personally don't think that Lord Byron has the authority, nor does any author, to come out and say what his work means. The author can say what they intended, but that is different from the actual meaning. For example, if I say something about a friend that I mean to be funny but everyone else around me takes offense, then the comment is offensive. I did not intend it that way, but that is how it was perceived. Communication relies on the perceiver not the sender, and with a published work, the poem is the author communicating with the reader. The reader ultimately should have the power to decide what the poem is about and what it means.
I also think it is important to note that the author can subconsciously reference things. Byron may not have intended to invoke Lady Byron in his depiction of Donna Inez, but for this suggests that he potentially may have thought to include that line because it was something he experienced even if he did not realize at the time why he was writing the line. Once again, the perceiver has the power, because we as humans are not very good at reading ourselves. Therapy is a perfect example of this process. We say and do things because we think they mean one thing, but when someone sees a therapist he or she realizes that the reason for cry when they get a bad grade isn't really about a job, it goes back to trying to impress his or her parents. I personally think that this line is too conveniently tied to a part of Byron's life to simply be dismissed as a coincidence, but regardless I think as the reader I should get to decide no matter what Byron says.
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Monday, April 13, 2015
Byron's Upside-Down Apocalypse
Brughel, The Tower of Babel
Jacques-Louis
David’s The Death of Socrates
There are already a few posts about “Darkness,” but it’s been a rough
and very weird day wherein many students, myself included, were locked in dark
windowless places during one of the most beautiful light-filled days of the
semester. So perhaps this is especially relevant and too close to home at the
moment.
Coming off the fanciful dream-imaginings and flirtations with Death
involved in reading Keats, I was struck in reading Byron’s “Darkness,” which so
ominously begins: “I had a dream, which was not at a dream” (1). Keats’
romantic vision of a waking dream end, albeit his own individual ending, is
immediately swept away with the speaker of this poem proclaiming: “All earth
was but one thought — and that was death, / Immediate and inglorious” (42-43). Any
poem-painting of an end-times even broaching on the baroque seems impossible
here. This is not Jacques-Louis David’s depiction of the
death of Socrates, but instead a Babel painting by Brueghel,
elaborate, surely, though muted and ominous in its twisting lines and lack of
human figures.
And this is different than most end-times stories. The lion and the
lamb lay down, sort of: “The wildest brutes / Came tame and tremulous; and
vipers crawl’d / And twined themselves among the multitude, / Hissing, but
stingless — they were slain for food” (34-37). The paradoxes multiple but
remain less than startling and “stingless.”
My favorite lines involve the upside-down mountain of the volcano,
which becomes a place of refuge instead of Pompey-horror: “Happy were those who
dwelt within the eye / Of the volcanoes, and their mountain-torch: / A fearful
hope was all the world contain’d” (16-18). In the end, not only does everything
somehow become its opposite, but what once represented doom transforms into a “fearful
hope.”
This poem also provoked the question, for me, regarding how one writes
about nothingness. Or a fantastical space – the future, the death of the
universe – as non-fantastical, i.e. the “chaos of hard clay”? (72). Another
work that I think does this trick especially well is Cormac McCarthy’s novel The Road, where nothing really happens
in a desolate atom-bombed landscape for hundreds of pages, and yet an artwork
is produced. It is a dream suspended dreamless, all hard stuff lumped at the
bottom.
I don’t have much else to comment on this poem at the moment, but I
appreciated the other posts on it and I look forward to Kathleen’s presentation
tomorrow! I liked Addie’s idea of Byron “captur[ing] the end of humanity by honing in on the small
characteristics that make us human,” even though I read the poem as distinctly
humanless. Perhaps this is a more hopeful reading of the poem; something that
makes “Darkness” light.
some "Darkness" things
I’m
presenting on “Darkness” tommorow so here are some kind of related odds &
ends that hopefully won’t make it so we have nothing to talk about tomorrow… :
"Manfred"
Manfred
is referred to a lot as a “Child of Clay” (131)—the concept of man being made
from clay is Biblical and also a characteristic of many religions (Genesis
2:7—“And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into
his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul”). The
Bible/religious allusions in “Manfred” are offset and/or questioned by the
supernatural elements; ultimately Manfred really defies religion by defying
Abbot and choosing to die alone rather than to be saved.
The
involvement and sort of reappropration of religion reminded me of the last two
men in “Darkness” who use “holy things/For an unholy usage” (59-60) when they
burn the holy artifacts on an altar for light rather than for worship. Manfred’s
Spirit also tells Abbot in Act 3 Scene 4 to “Waste not thy holy words on idle
uses”—another holy/unholy moment.
The
clay is also present in “Darkness”---the world becomes “a chaos of hard clay” (72),
another interesting/sort-of perversion of religion and man, where the clay
becomes hardened and perhaps thus dissociated from God.
In
Act 3 Scene 3 Abbot says: “It is an awful chaos—light and darkness—/And mind
and dust—and passions and pure thoughts/Mix’d, and contending without end or
order/All dormant or destructive” (3.3 164-7). These ideas are interesting to
think about with “Darkness,” too—there is a chaos in the mix, but then also in “Darkness”
men have lost their passions and are in perhaps a different kind of chaos.
The
poem suggests that this dog, despite being “deny’d in Heaven,” had “all the
virtues of man without his Vices.” The
speaker of the poem is mourning what he considers to have been his only true
friend; whereas the honors on men’s tombs describe them in perhaps faulty/or
overly complimentary terms, the speaker seems to feel that a dog is deserving
of such praise in a way that men are not. This was written after the death of
Byron’s dog Boatswain in 1808, who was (according to Wikipedia) sick with
rabies and who he also apparently cared for until the dog’s death without
caring there was a chance he could have been infected. Wikipedia also notes
that the dog’s tomb is bigger than Byron’s.
There’s
also a dog in “Darkness,” and he appears to play the same loving role—of course
he is the only dog to do so—thus it isn’t just a general appreciation for dogs
but rather an affection for this one dog who demonstrates the virtue of man
without his vice. After learning about this poem and Byron’s affection for his
dog the one true/pure dog in “Darkness” is even more interesting.
"She Walks in Beauty"
I
think the line “all that’s best of dark and bright” (3) is interesting to look
at in the context of “Darkness,” just as it draws that light/dark contrast
ought that is obviously important in both. It’s interesting to think, too,
about the “She” in this poem in contrast with the final “She” of “Darkness”—who
is darkness. The footnote obviously informs us that Byron supposedly wrote “She
Walks in Beauty” about Anne Wilmot, whereas the She in “Darkness” doesn’t
appear to refer to any person as much as it does to a personification of the
Darkness. Still, “She walks in beauty, like the night,” immediately associates
the woman of “She Walks in Beauty” with another darkness. Her darkness appears
to also be pure and “innocent” (18), though, a sentiment that is pretty absent
from “Darkness.”
The Sound of Silence
So
I haven’t exactly done an intense analysis of this song in relation to “Darkness,”
but the first line does personify it in a similar way (though of course Byron’s
personification doesn’t come until the end of the poem). The vision/dream in
this song is also interesting—especially as it is a vision and a dream and kind
of blurs the line between the two, just as Byron does with the line “I had a
dream, which was not all a dream” (1). The neon signs in “The Sound of Silence”
are also a kind of aritificial light that perhaps aligns with the image of the
fire in “Darkness,” though the song and poem do seem to consider religion
differently.
NBC’s Revolution
Maybe
almost embarrassed to post this because it is admitting that I’ve seen some of
this show. But I just thought of it so thought I’d throw it in… we all appear
to remain interested in the concept of the lights “going off”—how we refer to
losing light and electricity as “losing power.” The loss of light results in a
chaotic dystopia in the show, too. Our obsession with imagining the end of the
world/the possibility of the world ending doesn’t seem to have faded since
Byron’s time---both the poem and show (and also the many other dystopic
shows/movies that exist today) also feature the way that men play a key role in
their own downfall.
What does the light bring?
Throughout Lord Byron’s apocalyptic “Darkness,” he describes
the world ending in a slow and detailed manner. There is no “big bang” or gory
description of bloody war (although there is definitely the implication of
brutality and cannibalism). However, Byron captures the end of humanity by
honing in on the small characteristics that make us human, all of which, the
light enables us to have. Brian mentioned in his post the class system being
dismantled by the need for fire and subsequent light. On a larger scale, the
class system is representative of order and systematic culture. Along with this
culture comes the innate need for companionship. “Men were gather’d round their
blazing homes to look once more into each other’s face” (14-15). Solidarity has
always been viewed by society as unhealthy – perhaps a punishment or even an
experience to fear. It leads to an insanity that can only be cured by the
presence and interaction of another human – as if one’s mind is dangerous when
left alone with it.
Byron continues to discuss hope as a characteristic of
humanity that quickly dwindles throughout the poem. “A fearful hope was all the
world contain’ed” (18). This parallels the idea that “men forgot their passions
in dread” (7). This emphasizes the idea that passion, love of something is worth living for – even a
fearful hope provides the idea that eventually their will be something to live
for again; however, “some lay down and hid their eyes and wept: and some did rest
their chins upon their clenched hands, and smiled” (23-25) suggests that hope
has been lost. Those weeping have acknowledged the darkness and those smiling
have accepted it.
Loyalty appears in the poem as one of the last components of
humanity to exist. The last dog was “faithful to a corse, and kept the birds
and beasts and famish’d men at bay, till… he died” (48-54). Even attempts to
quell the darkness by grasping at basic human compassion cannot overcome the
darkness. We see these traits disappear one by one and thus slowly diminish
society as a whole until all that is left is fear. It is this fear that finally
takes out the final two living humans when “they lifted up their eyes as it
grew lighter, and beheld each other’s aspects – saw, and shriek’d, and died.”
The poem ends when all that is left in the darkness is a complete and total
lack of purpose. Ships are “sailorless” and clouds have perish’d because the
darkness “has no need.” Society has been
stripped of every aspect and characteristic that makes it human until the world
is complete darkness; this creates a much more understated yet realistic and frightening
image of the end of the world.
The Growing Hopelessness of "Darkness"
“Darkness” was born from a long
tradition of apocalyptic poetry and imagery.
However, in describing the End of Days, Lord Byron imagines less of a
vision of “fire and brimstone” and more of a subtle decline for humanity. Rather than beginning with bleak imagery of a
world that can not be recovered and humans that cannot be redeemed, “Darkness”
demonstrates the slow deterioration of humanity’s hope. In the beginning of the poem, Byron suggests
that that humanity will endure and adapt to a world of darkness. However,
ultimately he reveals how this hope cannot sustain itself and will eventually
be extinguished by the forces of nature.
The poem’s description of how
humanity first copes with the darkness demonstrates how humanity’s ingenuity
has the potential to save the species. The
poem begins with the sun and stars being smothered by darkness. Byron describes how mankind’s survival
instinct is evoked by the darkness, for he states that the, “selfish prayer for
light” (9) consumes all men. To ensure
their continued existence, men and women light fires – attempting to do all
they can to adjust to the new world they exist in. An instant benefit of the darkness is that
the class system is dismantled, as the fact that both thrones and huts become
pyres suggests a more level playing field between royalty and the poor. Moreover, Byron describes how the range of
emotions that accompany the loss of light extend beyond merely grief. There are those who “wept” (24) and those who
“howl’d” (31), however there are also those who “smiled” (25). For example, Byron describes those who “dwelt
within the eye / Of the volcanos” as “Happy” (16-17). Byron even describes how the presence of such
a threat to humanity existence causes humans to form bonds of friendship with
one another, remarking how the survivors, “look once more into each other’s
face” (15). Therefore, Byron
demonstrates how there may be unexpected fruits to the terrible situation. However, the “fearful hope” (18) that was
established by the burning watchtowers was not to last.
The poem undergoes a sudden shift
from suggesting that humanity can thrive in the darkness to asserting that man’s
ruination is inevitable. For example,
Byron emphasizes that mankind’s downfall as being the result of its own
penchant for conflict. Byron details how
the brief period of peace ended, stating, “War, which for a moment was no more,
/ Did glut himself again” (38-39). The
bonds of friendship that had been formed during the pyre-making evaporated, for
“Even dogs assailed their masters” (47).
Even those who survived the conflict between humans, such as the last
loyal dog or the last two enemy humans, succumbed to their wounds and died. Therefore, even the innocents – the unsullied
and the pure – were eventually wiped out not due to their own hand, but due to
fortune. Byron not only demonstrates how
war is predestined in humans – he also makes it clear that its devastating
effects are equally fated. Even in
circumstances as dire as that of the apocalypse, humanity will still find ways
to reinvigorate its old cycles of violence.
The last lines of the poem, “And the
clouds perish’d; Darkness had no need / Of aid from them – She was the Universe”
(80-81), signify the overwhelming power of darkness. The Earth is surrounded by darkness – it is a
bright dot on the black canvas of space.
Byron views it as inevitable that the darkness will encroach upon the
Earth. He views it as a force that will
sweep over the world without thought or sentiment. Not even mankind’s strongest wishes and
cleverest minds can prevent such a cataclysm. In suggesting hope for humanity in the opening
of the poem before revealing it to be a false aspiration, Byron ignites the
reader’s optimism before dousing it completely.
Such a method of apocalyptic writing makes the pain of the End of Days
that much more severe for the reader than a text that depicts the end as
completely horrific.
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