Wordsworth’s Re-Formation of Individuality: "Spots of Time," the Fragment and the Autobiography
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Wordsworth s Re formation of Individuali
Lyrical Ballads
. The “spots of time” under discussion can also be consid- ered as a dominant mode of memories that constitute not only The Prelude but the poet’s endeavor to re-form his individuality through a life-long process of writing. Considering that empirical aspects of frag- mented perception are intrinsic to the formation of our cognition, numer- ous other memories that are integral to and scattered in The Prelude can be comparable to different “spots of time.” It is crucial to be reminded of the fact that in his lifetime Wordsworth did not publish The Prelude, whose title was given by his widow only after his death in 1850. More importantly, Wordsworth planned to write The Prelude primarily as an “ante-chapel” of the “gothic church” of The Recluse, which remains an unborn philosophical poem “on Man, on Nature, and on Human Life” (1949, 2). 4 In the Preface to The Excursion (1814), Wordsworth was thinking of a kind of organic relation among his entire poetical works that could include The Excursion, The Prelude, The Recluse and his minor poems. Similar to The Prelude, which was initially conceived only as a part and yet happens to be an independent poem due to the poet’s death, the “spots of time,” childhood memories, and individuals can be complete fragments in their incompletion. Although all of them to some extent presuppose the myth of an unseen whole, such a premise does not dictate their meaning. While revisiting the first “spot of time,” Wordsworth reflects upon the “mystery of man” (12. 272), whose greatness lies in early childhood and yet whose sublimity is beyond the persona’s comprehension. The magni- 1368 Mikyung Park structure. It is the structure of textuality in general. A text is signed only much later by the other. And this testamentary structure doesn’t befall a text as if by accident, but constructs it” in his work The Ear of the Other: Otobiography, Transference, Translation , ed. Christie V. McDonald, trans. Peggy Kamuf (New York: Schocken Books, 1985), 51. 4 Wordsworth regards “the conclusion of the first book of The Recluse” (which turns out to be Home at Grasmere) “as a kind of Prospectus of the design and scope of the whole Poem” (1949, 2). Kenneth R. Johnston provides a comprehensive investigation into the chronological history of Wordsworth’s composition in his book Wordsworth and The Recluse (New Haven: Yale UP, 1984). tude of the human mind is accounted for in this passage: The days gone by Return upon me almost from the dawn Of life: the hiding-places of man’s power Open; I would approach them, but they close. I see by glimpses now; when age comes on, May scarcely see at all; and I would give, While yet we may, as far as words can give, Substance and life to what I feel, enshrining, Such is my hope, the spirit of the Past For future restoration. (12.277-86) Due partially to its self-defeating quality, the act of remembering accu- mulates failures to revivify the nostalgic memories, that is, fragments of the past experiences/phenomena. In the above lines, however, remember- ing hinges not only upon the impossible task of restoring the past in the present but upon the potential to re-create the past into future hope. The persona sees childhood memories, or “the hiding-places of man’s power” only “by glimpses,” which are hard to grasp but tantalizingly spread before the mind’s eye through the mediation of words. Regarding the predicament inherent in the representation of memories, it is quite apt to refer to Paul de Man’s claim that poetic language is “essentially paradox- ical” in that it is already “condemned in advance to failure” (7). De Man continues to note, “Poetic language seems to originate in the desire to draw closer and closer to the ontological status of the object, and its growth and development are determined by this inclination” (7). Unable to maintain ontological priority, memories frustrate attempts at proximity and invoke “the nostalgia for the object” (Ibid.) On the other hand, de Man maintains that “it becomes difficult to distinguish between object and image, between imagination and perception, between an expressive or constitutive, between a mimetic or literal language” (Ibid.). In writing a literary form of life, Wordsworth’s memories seem to dispute the incip- ient shapes and to elicit metamorphoses. Put otherwise, the boundary between life and writing is constantly constituted and reconstituted in the practice of remembering and revisiting the past moments of import. Both as the foundation and source of irretrievable anxiety, the two specified spots of time urge us to question how they come to play a deci- sive role in nourishing and invisibly repairing the persona’s mind “depressed / By false opinion and contentious thought, / Or aught of Wordsworth’s Re-Formation of Individuality: “Spots of Time,” the Fragment and the Autobiography 1369 heavier or more deadly weight, / In trivial occupations, and the round / Of ordinary intercourse” (12.210-14). Indeed, they are so traumatic and distressing that they are rather haunting memory-traces than “[a] renovat- ing virtue” (12.210), “by which pleasure is enhanced, / That penetrates, enables us to mount, / When high, more high, and lifts us up when fall- en” (12.216-18). Both “spots of time” demonstrate the young persona’s alienation from his companion(s) in spite of the apparent presence of company. The first spot of time sums up a five-year-old boy’s experience of getting lost and encountering a gibbet-mast and a girl with a pitcher on her head. The incident is the direct result of the boy’s transgressive desire to be a sovereign person; he gets lost because he handles a horse with his own inexperienced hands. The second spot of time marks a critical point at which the persona turns into an orphan. Registering a peak in the young mind’s anxiety in mapping his life, the second spot of time is cen- tral to Wordsworth’s project of writing his own life since it covers the death of his father. Here we find a voluntary estrangement undertaken in order to practice self-governance. Moreover, the persona thinks that he should have distanced himself from his father, or from his former self even though he is well aware of the continuity, particularly because of the very nature of these memories. That is, memories, the construction of which is possible, are never to be re-enacted in the present; memories disclose constantly shifting versions of the past experience only within a transitory present. In order to render the growth of the poet’s mind, Wordsworth takes the past as moments to link his life to the future. Yet the past days seem to be wavering between temporary emergences and lasting disappearance on the surfaces of the text. In the first “spot of time,” the memory is itself uncanny in that such a young child perceives his experience in great detail. A closer look at the passage, however, reveals that it is the persona’s retrospective desire to rewrite the reminiscence once again that culminates in the moment when the depiction itself transcends the limits of human language. The young boy, by averting his eyes from the gibbet-mast and fixing them on a girl with a pitcher on her head, overcomes a horrifying encounter with the gibbet-mast, the reminder and grave-marker of an ancient wife-murderer. To the persona, nonetheless, that which does matter is not the fearful event itself but the “remembrances” and the “power they had left behind” (12.268-69). The peculiarity of the experience lies in its consequential effects upon the speaker’s feelings, not “in the [external] action and situ- ation” (“Preface” to Lyrical Ballads 73). Download 130.28 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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