Nature and Function of Poetry According to Philips Sidney
Q. Describe, the nature and function of poetry.
Ans. Sidney, following
Aristotle's concept of Mimesis, defines poetry as an art of imitation.
He explains imitation as representation the aim of which is to teach, and to
delight. He explains three kinds of poetry—(I) divine poetry such as is
to be found in the Bible (II) philosophical and moral poetry produced by
ancient poets and (III) proper poetry the sort with which Sidney
is directly concerned. It is this third kind of poetry which imitates, it
delights and teaches; and "moves" the minds to goodness.
Then Sidney proceeds
to elaborate the view that poetry is an imitation. The poet, like other men
learning, imitates the objects of Nature. However, the poet goes beyond
Nature. The poet is carried forward and upward by the vigour of his own
invention and imagination, in fact, build up another Nature. The poet
either makes things better than those which exist in Nature, or makes
absolutely new forms such as do not exist in Nature before. The poet creates
such new forms as the demi-gods, Cyclops, and Furies. The world, which the poet
depicts in his work, is more beautiful than the real world. Poet’s world
is a golden world as distinguished from the brazen world of Nature. The poet
portrays human beings of the kind who never existed in Nature. Nature has-
never created such a constant friend as Pylades, such a valiant man as Orlando,
such a true prince as Cyrus, so excellent a man in every way as Aeneas.
All these men were created by poets. The Greeks, says Sidney were fully
justified in giving to the poet the title of a "maker". To Sidney,
therefore, a maker is a creator. Indeed, the creative faculty is the
highest gift with which man has been blessed; and this creative faculty is
found in the poet to a greater extent than in any other kind of man. Thus
Sidney does not regard poetic imitation as something slavish. The poet's
imitation of Nature is not a servile imitation. His imitation of nature is
not a tame copy of what is to be seen and found in real world. The poet rises
above this world of reality. As Sidney puts it, the poet "transcends
Nature". The imagination of the poet transmutes and transfigures
reality. Here of course, Sidney is on very firm ground. The creative aspect of
poetry must be recognized; and Sidney rendered great service to literary
criticism by recognizing and emphasizing it.
Sidney defends poetry by pointing out that poetry was the earliest
form of composition everywhere, and that for a long time the philosophers
of ancient Greece appeared to the world in the guise of poets, while even the historians
readily borrowed the poetic style of writing. Among the ancient Romans a poet
was called "Vates", meaning a diviner or a prophet. The
ancient Greeks regarded the poet as a "maker". The poet, says
Sidney, imitates the "works of Nature, as do other artists and men of
learning. But the poet, while imitating Nature, transcends it and builds a new
Nature. Poetry is superior to both philosophy and history so far as teaching
virtue and urging human beings to live virtuously. The philosopher
teaches only by precept, and the historian teaches only by example. The
poet employs both the method of precept and the method of example. The
philosopher conveys virtue in an abstract manner. But the poet conveys virtue
by a concrete portrayal of virtuous characters. The poet is therefore superior
to the philosopher. As for the historian, he describes virtue and vice through
actual historical examples; but he has to remain tied to what has actually
happened. The poet can mould the facts of life in any way he likes so,
he has a greater freedom than the historian. History describes what was
actually done while poetry tells what is fit to be said or what is fit to be
done according to the law of probability or necessity. Besides, history
deals with the particular, while poetry deals with the universal.
Quoting Aristotle, Sidney says that poetry is more philosophical and more
serious than history. Poetry is superior to philosophy because it has the power
to stir or move the mind of the reader in a way philosophy cannot do. The poet
wins the mind of the reader.
According
to Sidney, Poetry teaches and delights; but that is not all. Sidney also points
out the power of poetry to move the mind and to stir the heart. It is by
its power to move the minds it influences the behaviour and conduct. After
reading Homer's Odyssey, and after going through the incident of Aeneas
everybody would like to perform a deed of similar virtue. Menenius Agrippa, the
statesman was able by using a poetical device in his oration, to avert a civil
war in Rome. These examples show that the poet, using delight as his
instrument, influences the mind of the readers more effectively than any other
art does. As virtue is the most excellent end of all worldly learning, so is
poetry the most familiar way to teach virtue. It is wrong to condemn or censure
poetry in any of its forms, says Sidney. He then goes on to defend the various
forms of poetry and states the benefits of pastoral poetry, elegiac poetry,
comic and satiric poetry, tragic poetry, heroic poetry, etc. Sidney speaks of
lyrical poetry: "I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas that I
found not my heart moved more than with a trumpet."
Sidney comes very
close to Longinus' view about the power of poetry to
"transport". In this respect, Sidney takes up a position which links
him with romantic poets though, on the whole, he is a neo-classical critic.
The only thing which jars upon minds is Sidney's repeated emphasis upon the
moral and didactic aim of poetry. But here it should be remembered the
context in which Sidney puts this emphasis on the moral aspect of poetry.
Poetry was censured by the Puritans and it was necessary for Sidney to
meet the challenge which men like Stephen Gosson were flinging at it.
Sidney regards poetry as the most
fruitful form of knowledge and therefore as the monarch of all branches
of learning. In this way Sidney glorifies poetry and ranks it not only above
philosophy and history but also above the sciences like astronomy and
geometry. He goes to the extreme when he says: "I still and utterly
deny that there is, sprung out of earth, a more fruitful knowledge (than
poetry). It is off the mark to assert that poetry is the profoundest or
the most fertile cause of knowledge. Poetry has its rightful place as an
art which offers delight, pleasure, and moral instruction, which reveals the
mysteries of the human mind and of human nature, which consoles in distresses
and sorrows, which uplifts souls and transports into another world and makes
lives worth living. Similarly Sidney goes off the
mark when he says an astronomer, a geometrician, or a physician may tell lies but
a poet does not tell lies. We agree that a poet does not tell lies, but we
do not admit that a scientist tells lies either. A scientist, whether he is
an astronomer, a geometrician, or a physician, aims wholly at truth.
As regards the stylistic
qualities of poetry. Sidney has some very useful suggestions to offer. He condemns
the use of gaudy and ostentatious diction which he compares to a prostitute
who has tried to beautify herself by an excessive use of cosmetics. He condemns
the use of far-fetched words which appear like strangers to readers. He
also condemns the, fantastic devices which were used in his time to make the
writing appear attractive. He condemns those writers who maintained a
collection of high-sounding words. He censures the poets for drawing
their metaphors from all kinds of miscellaneous sources such as the stories of
beasts, birds, and fishes. He also says that an excess in the use of
metaphors is highly undesirable. A metaphor should be used only to make an
idea more clear and to convince a reader. Beyond that, it is a waste of words
to use metaphors.
Another very important point which Sidney
makes is that rhyme, or verse, or metre is not indispensable to poetry.
He says, "It is not rhyming and versing that maketh a poet",
just as it is not a long gown which maketh an advocate. The poet is
recognized by the notable images of virtues and vices which he offers in his
work, and which impart both delight and instruction. The work of a poet is
distinguished by its delightful teaching. However, Sidney admits that a large
majority of poets have written in metre. Here we find it difficult to agree
with Sidney. It is true that many other writers too have regarded metre as
an ornament of poetry and as a device which lends greater charm to poetry;
but this is only a theoretical position. Even Wordsworth declared
that metre was not essential to poetry, and Coleridge in this respect
agreed with Wordsworth. Both these men took up the position that metre was not
indispensable to poetry, but it was yet highly desirable and even necessary.
Now, to assert that poetry can dispense with metre is an extreme position. This
position is almost untenable. The actual practice of poets shows that metre is
very much an integral part of poetry. Metre and verse are certainly an ornament
of poetry, but this ornament cannot be discarded without causing damage to it.
Historical accounts and philosophical propositions certainly do not become,
poetry by being put into metre; but even the most imaginative nights of the fancy
and the most imaginative inventions, when clothed in words, do not become
poetry unless they are clothed in metrical language.
Points to Remember:
1.
Poetry-an
art of imitation
2.
Poet
transcends nature.
3.
Poet is
considered as a maker and a vote.
4.
Law of probability
and necessity.
5.
Poetry has
the power to move the mind.
6.
Longinus’
view of poetry.
7.
Where
Sidney goes off the mark.
8.
Stylistic
qualities.
9.
Conclusion.
*****
excellent
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