Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Prefatory Remarks
- 1 Theme and syllabic position
- 2 The octosyllable, rhythmicity and syllabic position
- 3 Figure and syllabic position
- 4 A privileged syllable
- 5 Rhythmicity and metricity
- 6 Rhythmicity and metricity in free verse
- Conclusion: Choice and Authority in verse
- Appendix The fundamentals of French versification
- Notes
- Bibliographical references
- Index
3 - Figure and syllabic position
Simile in the poetry of Wilde and Baudelaire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Prefatory Remarks
- 1 Theme and syllabic position
- 2 The octosyllable, rhythmicity and syllabic position
- 3 Figure and syllabic position
- 4 A privileged syllable
- 5 Rhythmicity and metricity
- 6 Rhythmicity and metricity in free verse
- Conclusion: Choice and Authority in verse
- Appendix The fundamentals of French versification
- Notes
- Bibliographical references
- Index
Summary
With recent concentration on the metaphor/metonymy polarity, comparatively little attention has been paid to the relationship between metaphor and simile. Criticism continues in the view that simile is essentially a metaphor that has come to consciousness, that metaphor is simply an elliptical form of simile; both figures are seen as figures of comparison, the difference between them being structural. Geoffrey Leech (1969), for example, says that ‘metaphoric transference can only take place if some likeness is perceived between tenor and vehicle’ (p. 151) and, further on, that ‘simile is an overt, and metaphor a covert comparison’ (p. 156). Where a distinction is made, the implications explored are not the expressive ones, but the different kinds of generical shadow that each figure casts; David Lodge (1977) concedes: ‘Metaphor, it is sometimes said, asserts identity, simile merely likeness’, but this challenging differentiation is absorbed into the generical remark: ‘… and perhaps on this account the former trope is usually considered the more “poetic”’ (p. 112).
The assumption upon which my own exploration is based is that metaphor and simile, in their ‘pure’ state, are indeed radically different. Metaphor is an identification of one phenomenon with another, simile is a comparison.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Question of SyllablesEssays in Nineteenth-Century French Verse, pp. 61 - 85Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986