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The
Myth of Orpheus in Milton’s “L’Allegro,”
“Il Penseroso,” and “Lycidas.”
Luiz
Fernando Ferreira Sá
8.
The recreative powers of the Orpheus myth in "L'Allegro,"
"Il Penseroso," and "Lycidas"
The
Orpheus myth has either helped Milton order his poetic cosmos,
or has been recreated in his writings. Milton, the Renaissance
poet, received this myth as myth. The figure of Orpheus represented
the extent to which poetry could outfight death, outwit fate,
and aspire to life in its completeness. By his initial success-and
his initial failure-the archetypal poet seems to have conjured
the forces upon which human art and life draw their existence:
dream of creation, illusion of creation, and true creation.
Inserted in the dialectics of creation, the Orpheus myth was
recreated in Milton's "L'Allegro," "Il Penseroso,"
and "Lycidas," and pointed towards the only true
creative power: generative transformation, or recreation.
The tragedy of human life was on its way to being reassessed
in terms of the two orders of existence: the divine and the
human.
In
"L'Allegro" the Orpheus myth is the thesis: a "quite
set free" Eurydice is a dream, mirth in poetry is dream-like,
and as such, poetry is dream-like, art is also dream-like.
The apparent symmetry of this poem is based on Allegro's glance
outward, and on his static equilibrium. Allegro's world is
on the threshold between light and darkness, and he is idle
to the point of being unproductive and static. The only time
Allegro is deeply touched by external phenomena is when he
realizes that the power of his song and art is like that of
Orpheus in golden slumber, when the musician himself would
raise his head to hear the strains that would have quite set
free his Eurydice. At the exact moment Orpheus is recreated
in Allegro's song, however, he seems to have discovered that
his act of writing with mirth was but a dream, and his poem
ends half-told, with a half-regained Eurydice. The hesitancy
in face of such a revelation, or dream, and the inconclusiveness
of the whole poem is heightened by the intrusion of the speaker
of the coda that resumes the vision by underlining it. As
in the beginning of the poem, when light was perceived through
its absence, the speaker of the coda conditioned his choice
to mirth as if it were the final absence of light, and against
which Allegro's provisionally epiphanic vision could be measured.
Every thesis has an antithesis, for it depends on the eyes
of the beholder and on how much light is subjected unto an
object. "Il Penseroso" is the antithesis of "L'Allegro."
The innocent (lacking or deprived of something), dream-like,
and unambitious figure of Allegro is opposed to the inquisitive
(as for something that has been lost), illusive, and ambitious
figure of Penseroso. Again, the apparent symmetry of this
poem is based on Penseroso's inward glance and on his static
equilibrium. Penseroso is everywhere looking for something,
but his glance is always turned towards the inner darkness
of the soul. The equilibrium of Penseroso rests on his projection
of darkness onto the world of phenomena together with his
technique of creating an absolute inner light. With the help
of his attending muse, Penseroso forges darkness in the surface
and a bright light in depth. His epiphany too happened with
the help of Orpheus, and it took him some time to be aware
of it. Only when he summons the figure of Orpheus, does Penseroso
start his temporary process of vision, for iron tears are
not what love seeks, but they are all hell may grant. By the
time Penseroso links his song with those songs left half told,
with those songs with much left untold, and with the high
and clear music that would bring forth dissolution, it is
then that the speaker discloses his illusion: he finally realizes
that a prophetic strain he is to attain in an old age, and
that his song was like the pleasures melancholy give. Again,
the speaker of the coda intrudes, for it is not the right
time to conclude with "These pleasures," but those
pleasures, the ones Penseroso had been intellectually misled
by before he cited Orpheus. At the time Penseroso starts to
emerge towards the true light, the speaker of the coda concludes
the poem by bringing it back again to the depths of melancholy.
In
relation to melancholy, Penseroso had first seen that it brings
about illusion when he summoned Orpheus, and that as such,
poetry is illusory, art is illusion. The ambitious Penseroso
wanted to intersperse his song with the silence of darkness,
as if it would bring about serious and solemn answers. Nevertheless,
"the robe of darkness grain worn by Melancholy is the
physical emblem of the poetry that absorbs silence into song,"
the poetry of veiled illusion that, hoping to climb to a prophetic
strain, finally "stands in self-conscious awareness of
limitation in sight of the paradise beyond" (Brisman
1973:92). Both Allegro and Penseroso have been fully and coherently
dedicated to their poetry, and this outspoken dedication to
poetry is what makes the invocations to Mirth and Melancholy
be preceded by the invocation to Orpheus, the voice who wraps
both muses in a mantle of wisdom's hue; "and the sign
that such a voice has been heard is the wrapping-up of the
revelation of 'Lycidas'" (Brisman 1973:93). In this sense,
"L'Allegro" and "Il Penseroso" find their
synthesis in the revelatory process of the elegy.
"Lycidas"
encompasses, to a certain degree, the dialectics of ending
and ongoing process. The many voices within the swain's song,
and the framing voice of the persona of the coda may be viewed
as refrains. Every time a new voice is introduced, or the
swain reinstates his own voice, it seems as if this formal
device would both mark "the closure of individual strophes,"
and provide "a regular focus for memory and anticipation
in the temporal unfolding of the poem as a whole" (Gross
1983:24). The unfolding of "Lycidas" is definitely
temporal, but it is also provisional, for its internal process
participates in the dissipation of previous voices, in the
dissolution of insights that have been left behind, to the
point the speaker realizes the two orders of existence, and
is dismissed as uncouth. As in "L'Allegro" and "Il
Penseroso," the coming to terms of these two orders is
such a heavy change of perspective that it must be balanced
against another standpoint, otherwise it fails to be seen.
It is at this crucial moment that the speaker of the coda
intrudes and proposes that the swain be seen as uncouth, and
his song as an eagerly warbling of a Doric lay. In this sense,
the speaker of the coda appears to retrocede, and it was as
if Orpheus were looking back and his Eurydice were again becoming
a shade; revealed, but unseen, known, but uncouth (unknown),
the processional revelation carried through the swain that
wept for Lycidas is asymmetric. The asymmetry of this procession/process
is not related to ill-proportioned closures of the individual
strophes, nor is it related to the use of rhymed and unrhymed
lines, it is rather due to the process being bonded to different
and progressive perspectives.
If the asymmetrical use of language and voices that Milton
makes of the pastoral in "Lycidas" is situated where
the ecphrasis of pastoral poetry and revelatory insights interpenetrate,
then, asymmetry of voices and text breaks the antinomy of
relations of equivalence. The voices of Allegro and Penseroso
do reverberate in the text and in the voices of "Lycidas:"
if Allegro is the one "to sport with Amaryllis in the
shade, / Or with the tangles of Naera's hair" (68,60),
Penseroso is the one supposed "To scorn delights, and
live laborious days" (72), because of "That last
infirmity" of the so-called "Noble mind" (71).
Their voices lose any possible contradiction, even though
they are two equally correct inferences upon the poetic choice.
The apparently unresolved conflict between the twins does
not override death, and thus, their apparent symmetry gives
way to the asymmetry of "Lycidas." When the recreation
of a pre-established and settled convention enters the scene,
mediation by a third element yields to "neither this
nor that," or "not both this and that." Milton
pushed the sign of death-and-rebirth in "Lycidas"
toward its irreversible completion: its interpretant-the myth
of Orpheus-is analogous to Lycidas's death to the same extent
poetic transcendence acquires the status of myth; the sparagmos
of the poet gives rise to the possibility of true recreation;
and the fragments of the myth of Orpheus are scattered in
every symmetric strophe of the elegy. This mediating thirdness,
the myth of Orpheus as interpretant of the poems, is negation
of the pastoral ethos, since the ideal and real worlds are
not sharply separated in the poem, and is also aperiodicity-the
irregular handling of parts of the myth, or the use of different
mythologemes as devices. That is, generative transformation
is dissipative because in order to stay alive, it must dissipate
entropy and static equilibrium (maximum entropy) that destroy
life. "Lycidas" is an asymmetric synthesis in prospect
out of the dialectics entertained by the twin poems. "Asymmetry
is more general and more fundamental than symmetry,"
in other words, "symmetry within asymmetry, we meet again
and again" (Merrell 1994:185,186), and for this reason,
the elegy is dissipative, symmetric, and asymmetric above
all.
Where
the elegy dissipates outward and inward visions, the approaches
of Allegro and Penseroso, the pastoral speaker asserts that
Lycidas has been saved through the dear might of Christ. "Weep
no more, woeful Shepherds weep no more" (165), for Lycidas
and King are not dead, they not only live on in the elegy,
but they also acquired a kind of livelihood in another order.
This supervening order is one where they "sing, and singing
in their glory move" (180), for, as Fowler (1970:175)
puts it,
It
is fitting, therefore, that the mourners, broken in their
grief at the dismemberment of King in reenactment of the archetypal
dismemberment of Orpheus, should be made whole-and with them
the form of the ode itself (...) . The 8-line total of the
commiato (...) may symbolize either the octave of harmony
or the eternal life beyond mortality (...).
In this representation of death and dismemberment, symmetry
and asymmetry are dialectical principles in a shifting and
infinitely correctable form of observation that alone conducts
heroes and readers in a new direction: not up a preestablished
ladder of signs into a static revelation, but down and out
into a variable course of existence in which they participate
not only by reading and interpreting, but also by recreating.
In "Lycidas," Milton warbles his Orphic lyre to
link heaven with earth, and to express the resolution its
content describes. The revelation the swain reports is not
the harmony of the commiato with its eight lines rhyming abababcc,
the harmony of the spheres is here forever changing, it represents
instead eternal life through recreation beyond the mortality
of static symmetry.
Early
and late Milton seems to have had in mind the Orphean modeling
power of recreation. In Paradise Lost, for instance, Milton
summons the meaning of Urania, and not her name, to help him
end his poem with the immortal voice. But as Milton himself
made clear, Urania was not the muses nine, it was not even
a name, it was a power to aid creation. It is not impossible
to link the power of Urania, that of an immortal voice, with
the power of Orpheus: true recreation. The following similes
of Paradise Lost book 4 and "Lycidas" intrude "by
pointedly emphasizing the inevitable disruption of pastoral
'mirroring' in a universe which has never, in either mythical
or historical time, included only static reflections"
(Martin 1993:171), but which is always already subject to
an ample spectrum of ambiguity and dissolution:
(...)
Not that fair field
Of
Enna, where Proserpine gathering flowers,
Herself
a fairer flower, by gloomy Dis
Was
gathered, which cost Ceres all that pain
To
seek her through the world; nor that sweet grove
Of
Daphne by Orontes, and the inspired
Castalian
spring, might with this Paradise
Of Eden strive (PL 4:319).
And
as Atropos has cut the threads of Lycidas's life:
(...)
But not the praise,
Phoebus
repli'd, and touch'd my trembling ears;
Fame
is no plant that grows on mortal soil,
Nor
in the glistering foil
Set
off to th'world, nor in broad rumour lies,
But
lives and spreads aloft by those pure eyes
And
perfect witness of all judging Jove (76-82).
This
so-called digression on fame by Phoebus Apollo, one of the
supposedly fathers to Orpheus, shows how, in spite of initial
appearances, fair fields or fame mingle interchangeably in
epical, pastoral, or historical worlds. The allegories of
an edenical paradise, or an immortal fame can only be if they
strive with other elements, or are transposed into the changing
contexts of exemplar. The strife of allegory, and the efforts
of the poet towards the attainment of a true poetic voice
of recreation are "like Milton's later (and earlier)
quiet endings, this testifies to order attained through struggle"
(Bush 1965:66). The Orphean power of recreation, from the
time of "Lycidas" and the twin poems, to the time
of the epics is an ordering principle that has meant much
debate, conflict, intrusion, and struggle.
John Shawcross believes that "Samson Agonistes marks
the beginning of the artist's struggle to search God's unsearchable
ordering and probe his uncontrollable intent" (Shawcross
1993:175). I would say that the brief epic shows Milton not
only probing, but also rummaging God's intent. As to what
concerns the struggle to search for God's superseding order,
Milton has always assembled God's order in relation to the
heavenly music of the spheres, to harmony, and to the mediating
figure of Orpheus. "In the early poems particularly,
Milton seldom refers to music without associating it with
the original creative power of the Word of God, as a power
that still works, partly through the musical arts, to recreate
harmony in the soul of man. (...) Such a symbolism would most
readily be focused on the figure of Orpheus" (Frye 1966:50).
The change of addressers in all three poems account for his
association of Orpheus with the true creative power, that
is, at the exact time of a sustained vision and an almost
epiphany, its existence had to be confirmed against the limina:
darkness and light, static reflections and dissipation, symmetry
and asymmetry, order and superseding (dislodge/depose)/supervening
(follow/succeed) order. In "A Mask," for example,
the Elder Brother resumes his preoccupation with mental states:
"He that has light within his own clear breast / May
sit i'th' center, and enjoy bright day, / But he that hides
a dark soul and foul thoughts / Benighted walks under the
mid-day Sun; / Himself is his own dungeon" (Milton 1937:238-239).
Of course, this overflow of symmetry, (Light within - clear
breast, center - bright day, hide - dark soul and foul thoughts,
benighted - mid-day sun leaning to the dungeon within) may
be problematized if one thinks it was delivered by a "reasonable"
Elder Brother to an "unreasonable" Second Brother,
and that the dialogue is part of a masque. Moreover, in the
story of the Nativity, it seems Milton had already labored
with the symbolic texture of the images of light and music
(order) and darkness and noise (disorder). In any case, by
the time Milton wrote the twin poems, and "Lycidas,"
he had already been aware that such symmetrical clear-cut
divisions are not to be expected from the highly artificial
worlds of the pastoral, nor from the unartificial world beside
them.
Renaissance men have been haunted by the difficult and provisional
divisions of an idealized world and the "real" world.
They have been worried about the uncertainty, the impossible,
and the inexpressible in human existence. The commonplace
answer to these complex questions seems to have been in this
fashion: "Learning is, after all, a mere tool for purging
the sight; the vision of Truth is finally the only knowledge;
and since faith alone can attain that vision for understanding"
(Samuel 1965:129), Christian humanism preached faith in God
above all things. In Milton's words, whereas learning would
restore the ruins of our original forefathers, knowledge is
the higher truth of knowing God aright: of knowing good through
the agency of good. The contrast of the two orders-human and
heavenly-may be thus dissolved by the transformational grace
of "true" knowledge and faith. In Christian terms,
transformational grace enables the medium of reason in man
thus making him locate "perfect truth in infinity-one
in a Second Coming, the other in a counterfactual situation
of full communicative freedom" (Guss 1991:1.164-1.165):
the dialogics of the twins that comprises no fixed synthesis;
the dialectics between the twins and "Lycidas" that,
although being open-ended, is framed by the speaker of the
coda; and all their inner antitheses that recognize difference
in a two-orderly world.
Milton's poetic choice in the context of Renaissance culture
and seventeenth-century England could not have been any other
than dialectics and dialogics as a further development of
the academic debate. His scholastic education relied heavily
on rhetoric, and on the other classical discursive arts. In
this account, no matter what culture is articulating its ideas
by these practices, or when these practices are being worked
out, it may be said that dialectics "aims at discovering
the truth of ideas (...) rhetoric at determining the decisions
of people, and dialogics at articulating the meaning of people's
ideas" (Bialostosky 1986:789). It is in the aforementioned
sense that the twin poems are not a piece of rhetorical exercise;
that Allegro and Penseroso do not want to be eloquent to influence
or determine any poetic choice; that they are much more entertained
at giving birth to their genuine ideas, at always finding
means to renew their verbal expressions, and at living them
coherently in their many intersections. Brought together in
"Lycidas," these two world views are articulated
in the process of estrangement and encounter. The dramatic
dialogues within the elegy may be thought of as projections
of this process, and the progressive stance of the speaker
as his and the whole pastoral landscape's strife to recognize
the bearings of the diverse voices. Each voice seems to add
a nuance of vision till the final revelation. The elegy, in
the context of Renaissance critical theory as well, aims to
discover the truth the Orpheus myth was portending all along.
There
is no synthesis of views or hierarchical reconciliation; Milton
simply left the opposition between the twin poems unresolved,
but marked his awareness of this irresolution in view of the
two orders Orpheus indirectly forebodes in the elegy as such:
"Had ye been there-for what could that have done"
(57)? The larger point in relation to the twins and "Lycidas"
is that their texts are contradictory at times, and that multiple
readings are suspended within them. Thus, the contradictions
between proems and codas, inductions and central sections,
commiato and proem are the "chaos" of the twin poems
being resolved into a cosmos of two orders. "Orpheus'
dismemberment and Christ's crucifixion, like Lycidas's drowning,
are part of a divine plan accepted by the speaker but terrifying
nonetheless in its inscrutability" (Watterson 1993:52).
Terrifying indeed for those who are still searching for God's
unsearchable order, but ineffectual towards those who have
come to terms with not only the inscrutability, but also of
the unaccountability of man's indefinite existence, his tragedy,
and the disorder of the world of phenomena.
In Milton's time, the warring over religious dogmas, the strict
rule of the Laudian clergy, and the misrule of political affairs
may have caused the poet to think of this world as one of
disorder, chaos, death, and sin. A world that may have appeared
to Milton as a place where death was almost unredeemable,
and sin reinforced. Yet, "one problem in understanding
Milton's historical position has been the desire to mark off
his lofty idealism from the vulgar polemics of more engaged
figures" (Norbrook 1995:626) of his times. In any case,
Milton was always very engaged in prose treatises, and his
ideas were lofty but they were not simple, sterile idealism.
For one thing, as to what concerns "L'Allegro,"
"Il Penseroso," and "Lycidas," the framework
of the poems is in the like of these fruitful contrasts: pure
and impure, negative and positive, dark and light polarities
that evolve out of the intertwined foundation of Milton's
poetic language. Moreover, the polarities that are mirrored
in his pastoral worlds in particular make his idealism open-ended
because they appear to be part of a "repeated strategy
of provoking allegorical interpretations while refusing to
supply an unequivocal 'key' to the allegory" (Achinstein
1994:150). But such a "key" is not needed; in the
same fashion of myth, criticism and interpretation are cultural
practices that ineluctably construct the meanings they purport
to analyze. Allegory, criticism, interpretation, and myth-in
a world of provisional conclusions-share a degree of recreation.
The present conclusion is provisional insofar as the whole
thesis has hopefully revved up the engine of Peirce's semiotics,
reveled in Johansen's pyramid, and ultimately retrieved its
own perspectives in terms of an interpretant. In relation
to the three poems, the Orpheus myth has been viewed as their
main interpretant. In the elegy, the power of Orpheus, his
loss of power, and his lack of power have been problematized
in terms of a look outward, inward, and Godward. Of course,
the recreational powers of Orpheus are the expressive powers
of poetry, the effectual powers of life, and the transformative
powers of death towards the godhead, for the Orphic movement
is one that conflates interiorisation and negation, subversion
of representation and intensification of the indeterminate
space between polarities. Milton recreated his medium; he
recreated his voice in the particular space of "L'Allegro,"
"Il Penseroso," and "Lycidas;" he moved
outwardly, and subverted the movement; he moved inwardly,
and negated, renounced this seduction; he fragmented the voice
of Orpheus, his voice, in asymmetry; he voided the filled,
and he wrote on it. Milton intensified the indeterminate,
the ineluctable, and the tragic through the recreative powers
of Orpheus. The Orpheus myth as the interpretant of the three
poems, their common denominator, is the attainment of the
power of recreation proper: the maximum offices of poetry.
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