Bruno Schulz:
The Mythologization of Reality
In: (Bruno
Schulz, "Mityzacja rzeczywistosci", Republika marzen. Warszawa:
Chimera, 1993: 49-50. Translated
by John M. Bates)
The essence
of reality is meaning. That which has no meaning is not real for us. Every
fragment of reality lives due to the fact that it partakes of some sort of
universal meaning. The old cosmogonies expressed this in the maxim 'in the
beginning was the Word'. The unnamed does not exist for us. To name something
means to include it in some universal meaning. The isolated, mosaic-type word
is a later product, is the result of technique. The original word was an
hallucination circling the light of meaning, was the great universal totality.
The word in its colloquial, present-day meaning is now only a fragment, a
rudiment of some former, all-encompassing, integral mythology. For that reason,
it retains within it a tendency to grow again, to regenerate, to become
complete in its full meaning. The life of the word resides in the fact that it
tenses and strains to produce a thousand associations, like the quartered body
of the snake of legend, whose separate pieces sought each other in the dark.
The thousandfold yet integral organism of the word was torn into individual
phrases, into letters, into colloquial speech and in this new form, applied to
practical needs, it has come down to us as an organ of understanding. The life
of the word and its development have been set on new tracks, on the tracks of
practical life, and subjected to new notions of correctness. But when in some
way the injunctions of practice relax their strictures, when the word, released
from such coercion, is left to its own devices and restored to its own laws,
then a regression takes place within it, a backflow, and the word then returns
to its former connections and becomes again complete in meaning - and this
tendency of the word to return to its nursery, its yearning to revert to its
origins, to its verbal homeland, we term poetry.
Poetry is the
short-circuiting of meaning between words, the impetuous regeneration of
primordial myth.
When we employ
commonplace words, we forget that they are fragments of ancient and eternal
stories, that, like barbarians, we are building our homes out of fragments of
sculptures and the statues of the gods. Our most sober concepts and definitions
are distant offshoots of myths and ancient stories. There is not even one of
our ideas that is not derived from mythology, a mythology that has been
transformed, mutilated, remoulded. The spirit's first and foremost function is
to tell stories and to make up 'tales'. The driving force of human knowledge is
the conviction that at the end of its investigations, it will discover the
ultimate meaning of the world. It seeks this meaning on the heights and
scaffolding of its artificial mounds. But the elements which it uses in construction
have been used once before, have come from forgotten and shattered 'stories'.
Poetry re-cognizes the lost meanings, restores words to their proper place, and
links them according to their ancient denotations. In the hands of the poet,
the word, as it were, comes to its senses about its essential meaning, it
flourishes and develops spontaneously in keeping with its own laws, and regains
its integrity. For that reason, every kind of poetry is an act of
mythologization and tends to create myths about the world. The mythologization
of the world has not yet ended. The process has merely been restrained by the
development of knowledge, has been pushed into a side channel, where it lives
without understanding its true meaning. But knowledge, too, is nothing more
than the construction of myths about the world, since myth resides in its very
foundations and we cannot escape beyond myth. Poetry arrives at the meaning of
the world anticipando, deductively, on the basis of great and daring short-cuts
and approximations. Knowledge tends to the same inductively, methodically,
taking the entire material of experience into account. At bottom, both one and
the other have the same aim.
The human
spirit is tireless in its glossing of life with the aid of myths, in its
'making sense' of reality. The word itself, left to its own devices, gravitates
towards meaning. Meaning is the element which bears humanity into the process
of reality. It is an absolute given. It cannot be derived from other givens.
Why something should appear meaningful to us is impossible to define. The
process of making sense of the world is closely connected with the word. Speech
is the metaphysical organ of man. And yet over time the word grows rigid,
becomes immobilized, ceases to be the conductor of new meanings. The poet
restores conductivity to words through new short-circuits, which arise out of
their fusions. The image is also an offshoot of the original word, the word
which was not yet a sign, but a myth, a story, or a meaning.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário