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On Poetic Knowledge (II.)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2024
Extract
At the beginning of this essay we noted that what a philosopher, reflecting on poetry, observes first of all is that it belongs to the sphere of Art or productive activity. Now the proper end of Art is not knowledge but production or ‘creation,’ not in the manner of physical nature, as radium produces helium or one living thing another, but in the free manner of the mind; it is intellectual productivity ad extra.
Of itself the intellect is expressive; it produces within itself its ‘mental words’ which, besides being the media through which it knows things, are also effects of its own spiritual plenitude, expressions or inward manifestations of the things it knows.
Further, this plenitude is a superabundance which tends of itself, naturally, to an external expression and manifestation, to a song. Not only does the mind’s vitality form words within, it tends also to overflow into works; and this with a natural need or desire which reaches out over the frontiers of intellect itself, and which therefore can only be realized with the aid of the will and the other appetites whose movement, whereby the intellect goes out from itself following a desire natural to itself, is initiated and nourished at its source by the intellect, in such a way that, following this start, they predetermine in a general way the primary tendency of the operative intellect in a poetic (in the aristotelian sense) or in a practical direction. Once this original determination has been given, the ‘poetic ‘activity develops along a line that is much more purely intellectual—the human will with its characteristic ends and purposes being far less involved—than is the line of moral activity (Ethics as a mode of the practical).
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- Copyright © 1944 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 There are Speculative Arts, logic for instance. As such they remain purely intellectual and the Will has nothing to do with them apart from the decision to exercise them. They bring the notion of Art to its limit where it is still realised 2nd even most purely realised, because there is still a factibile, but where all is achieved within the mind. Note too that although one may speak of the poetry of logic, as of mathematics, inasmuch as both are contemplated objectively, yet within logic itself poetry and poetic knowledge have no place at all. If, then, logic be the purest form of art, it seems that poetry in its pure state (of which I speak later) and art in its pure state are diametrically opposed.
2 Cf., Arthur Lourié, De la Mélodie, ‘La Vie Intellectuelle.’ 24 Dec., 1935.
3 Considered on the deepest and least obvious level the ‘Aristotelian’ imitation must be connected with poetic knowledge itself.
4 Cf. Frontières de la Poésie, p. 197.
5 J. Cocteau, Les Chevaliers de la Table Ronde.