Jupiter, Mercury and the Virtue (1515-18)
Dosso Dossi (1490-1542)
Wawel Royal Castle, Poland
இڿڰۣ
Genius, Virtue, and Reputation,
three great friends, agreed to travel over
the island of Great Britain, to see whatever might be worthy of observation. But as some misfortune, said
they, may happen to separate us,
let us consider, before we set out, by what means we may find each other again. “Should it be my ill
fate,” said Genius, “to be severed
from my friends – heaven forbid! – you may find me kneeling in devotion before the tomb of Shakespeare; or
rapt in some grove where Milton talked
with angels; or musing in the grotto where Pope caught inspiration.”
Virtue,
with a sigh, acknowledged, that her friends were not very numerous; “but were I to lose you,”
she cried, “with whom I am at present
so happily united, I should choose to take sanctuary in the temples of religion, in the palaces of royalty,
or in the stately domes of ministers of
state; but as it may be my ill fortune to be there denied admittance, inquire for some cottage where
contentment has a bower, and there you
will certainly find me.”
“Ah,
my dear friends,” said Reputation very earnestly, “you, I perceive when missing, may possibly be recovered; but
take care, I entreat you, always to
keep sight of me, for if I am once lost, I am never to be retrieved.”
Genius,
Virtue and Reputation, Aesop’s Fables
Penelope Weeping over the Bow of Ulysses, (c. 1779)
Angelica Kauffmann (1741-1807)
Wolverhampton Art Gallery
இڿڰۣ
Genius
expresses her devotion to productions of herself, and unlike Penelope in her
letter to Ulysses –
Your Penelope sends you this, slow
Ulysses (Heroides 1.1)
- maintains that devotion by kneeling
before genius, by allowing herself to be enraptured in the
grove where Milton communed with angels, and in her musings in the grotto where
the Pope found himself in accordance with inspiration.
In Penelope’s epistle to the absent
Ulysses, the reader ‘knows’ from Homer, Penelope’s anxiety in Ulysses’ ‘delay’
in returning home may have erotic causes, that behind the mora may lie amor
(74-6), is not as foolish as she proclaims. This gap in ‘knowledge’ between the
Ovidian reader and the fictive writer makes irony the dominant mode of Heroides
I and is central to the ironic relationship humans have with knowledge and the
source or essence from which it derives.
The Cyclops Polyphemus
Annibale Carracci (1560-1609)
இڿڰۣ
The
other heroines of Aesop’s Fables play similar roles in illuminating our
understanding. Virtue, sighs in acquiescence and resigns herself to taking
sanctuary in the temples of religion, in the palaces of royalty, or in the
stately domes of ministers of state, much like how Odysseus, after his
encounter with the Cyclops, must achieve a new epic identity, an epic about his
homecoming, about his own nostos 'return', but, for the moment, his confidence in
his power to bring about this nostos is reduced to nothing. He has lost
his confidence in the power of his own mētis 'craft' to devise a stratagem for achieving a nostos.
When he reaches the island of Circe and learns that this place, though it first
seems familiar and reminiscent of his own island, is in fact strange and alien
and antithetical to home, he despairs (10.190-202). The wording that expresses
his desperation connects the hero’s metis with his nostos:
My
friends, I am speaking this way because I do not know
which
place is west and which place is east
-which
is the place where the sun, brining light for mortals,
goes
underneath the earth
and
which is the place where it rises. Still, let us start thinking it
through,
as quickly as we can,
whether
there is still any craft left. I must tell you, though,
I
think there is none.
Odyssey
10.190-93
Odysseus and Penelope (1802)
Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein (1751-1829)
Private Collection
இڿڰۣ
The
hero feels he has no craft left in him to devise a stratagem for a successful
homecoming, and like Reputation, expresses his despair and feeling of
disorientation. Unlike Genius and Virtue, Reputation, like the epic hero
Odysseus, must live out the master of her own heroic life, and like Odysseus
must have a nostos or ‘homecoming’. For Odysseus to succeed in coming
home to Ithaca, however, his nostos must be more than simply a
‘homecoming’: it must also be a ‘song about a homecoming’. The kleos or 'epic glory' of Odysseus depends on his nostos, that is, on the song about
his homecoming, which is the Odyssey. By contrast, the kleos of
Reputation depends not on Reputation’s nostos but on Reputation staying
home.
For
Odysseus to get over the Iliad, he must sail past it. For Reputation to
stay in tact, she must remain home and not venture forth into the ironic and
disoriented domains of Genius and Virtue. But staying home is a false Iliad,
which is why, like Odysseus, Reputation must sail past the Island of the
Sirens. The Sirens, as false Muses, tempt the hero by offering to sing for him
an endless variety of songs about Troy (Odyssey 12.184-91). The sheer
pleasure of listening to the songs of the Sirens threatens not only the
homecoming of Odysseus, but the self-knowledge that may be gained by Reputation
from embarking on an Odyssey into genius.
Genius of Music (Allegory of Music)
François Le Moine (1688-1737)
Hermitage
இڿڰۣ
It
is tempting to linger and never stop listening to the endless stories about
Genius, but just as Polyphemus the Cyclops was deceived and blinded by a false
name, so too does the designation Genius deceive and blind Reputation.
The
noun noos means thinking in the sense of being conscious, not
being unconscious: like the noun nostos, it is derived from the root
*nes- in the mystical sense of returning to light and life.
Odysseus’
nostos ‘return’ connects with his noos ‘thinking’ not only in the
explicit sense of thinking about saving his own life but also in the
implicit sense of being conscious of returning home. This implicit sense
is encoded in Aesop’s fable when Reputation expresses her belief that once she
is gone, she cannot be retrieved.
Return of the Prodigal Son, 1773
Pompeo Batoni
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna
இڿڰۣ
The
very idea of consciousness as conveyed by noos is derived from
the metaphor of returning to light from darkness, as encapsulated in the
moment of waking up from sleep, or of regaining consciousness after
losing consciousness, that is, of “coming to.”
This metaphor of coming to is at work when one embarks on an Odyssey of discovery, when we venture forth from belief and return awakened from our journey. As Reputation warns, we may not retrieve that which we lose by doing so, but what we gain in return is as illuminated as the morning star that welcomes the coming of the dawn in each person’s homeland.
This metaphor of coming to is at work when one embarks on an Odyssey of discovery, when we venture forth from belief and return awakened from our journey. As Reputation warns, we may not retrieve that which we lose by doing so, but what we gain in return is as illuminated as the morning star that welcomes the coming of the dawn in each person’s homeland.
No comments:
Post a Comment