Against Dryness Iris Murdoch
Against Dryness Iris Murdoch
Against Dryness Iris Murdoch
Against Dryness
Polemical Sketch
rl E complaintswhichI wish to make consists in the joining of a materialistic
are concernedprimarily with prose,
behaviourism with a dramatic view of the
individual as a solitary will. These subtly
not with poetry, and primarily with
novels, not with drama; and they are brief,
give support to each other. From Hume
simplified, abstract, and possibly insular.
through Bertrand Russell, with friendly help
They are not to be construed as implying from mathematical logic and science, we
derive the idea that reality is finally a quanany precise picture of "the function of the
writer." It is the function of the writer to
tity of material atoms and that significant
write the best book he knowshowto write.
discourse must relate itself directly or inThese remarks have to do with the backdirectly to reality so conceived. This posigroundto present-day literature, in Liberal
tion was most picturesquely summedup in
democraciesin general andWel-rareStates in
Wittgensteins Tractatus. Recentphilosophy,
particular, in a sense in whichthis must be
especially the later workof Wittgensteinand
the work o Gilbert Ryle derivative therethe concernof anyserious critic.
Welive in a scientific and anti-metafrom, alters this a little. TheatomicHumian
picture is abandonedin favour of a type of
physical age in which the dogmas, images,
and precepts of religion have lost muchof
conceptual analysis (in manyways admirtheir power. Wehave not recovered from able) whichemphasisesthe structural depentwo wars and the experience of Hitler. We dence of concepts upon the public language
in whichthey are framed. This analysis has
are also the heirs of the Enlight.mment,
Romanticism, and the Liberal tradition.
important results in the philosophyof mind,
where it issues in modified behaviourism.
These are the elements of our dilemma:
whosechief feature, in myview, is that we Roughly:myinner life, for me just as for
others, is identifiable as existing onlythrough
have been left with far too shallow and
flimsy an idea of humanpersonality.. I shall
the application to it of public concepts, conexplainthis.
ce~ts whichcan only be constructed on the
ba]is of overt behaviour.
This is one side of the picture, the Humian
PHILOSOPHY,
LIKE THE NEWSPAPERS,
is both
and post-Humianside. Onthe other side, we
the guide and the mirror of its age. Let us
look quickly at Anglo-Saxonphilosophy and derive from Kant, and also Hobbes and
Benthamthrough lohn Smart Mill, a picture
at French philosophy and see what picture
of the individual as a free rational will. With
of humanpersonality wecan gain from these
two depositories of wisdom. Upon Anglo- the removal of Kants metaphysical backgroundthis individual is seen as alone. (He
Saxonphilosophy the two most profound influences have been Humeand Kant: and it
is in a certain sense alone on Kants view
is not difficult to see in the current philoalso, that is: not confronted with real dissophical conception of the person the work similar others.) Withthe addition of some
of these two great thinkers. This cor.ception
utiIitarian optimismhe is seen as eminently
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Hgainst Dryness
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Iris Murdoch
Against Dryness
hess" whichweassociate with the symbolist
movement, with writers such as T. E.
Hulmeand T. S. Eliot, with Paul Valery,
with Wittgenstein. This "dryness" (smallness, clearness, self-containedness) is
nemesis of Romanticism. Indeed it is
Romanticismin a later phase. The pure,
clean, self-contained "symbol,"the exemplar
incidentally of what Kant, ancestor of both
Liberalism and Romanticism,required art to
be, is the analogue of the lonely selfcontainedindividual. It is whatis left of the
other-worldliness of Romanticismwhenthe
"messy" humanitarian and revolutionary
elementshave spent their force. Thetemptation of art, a temptationto whichevery work
of art yields except the greatest ones, is to
console. The modernwriter, frightened of
technology and (in England) abandoned
philosophy and (in France) presented with
simplified dramatictheories, attempts to console us by mythsor by stories.
Onthe whole:his truth is sincerity andhis
imaginationis fantasy. Fantasyoperateseither
with shapeless day-dreams(the journalistic
story) or with small myths, toys, crystals.
Eachin his ownwayproducesa sort of "dream
necessity." Neither grapples with reality:
hence "fantasy," not "imagination."
~. properhomeof the sy~nbol,in the
T rI"symbolist"
sense, is poetry. Eventhere
it mayplay an equivocalrole since there is
somethingin symbolismwhichis inimical to
words, out of which, we have been reminded,
poemsare constructed. Certainly the invasion of other areas by whatI maycall, for
short, "symbolist ideals," has helped to
bring about a decline of prose. Eloquenceis
out of fashion; even"style," exceptin a very
austere sense of this term, is out of fashion.
T. S. Eliot and Jean-PaulSartre, dissimilar
enoughas thinkers, both tend to undervalue
prose and to deny it any imaginative function. Poetryis the creationof linguistic quasithings; prose is for explanation and exposition, it is essentially didactic, documentary,
informative.Proseis ideally transparent;it is
only [aute de mieuxwritten in words. Theinfluential modernstylist is Hemingway.
It
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2O
Iris Murdoch
Christopher Hollis
H E F I R S T
white sctdcrs
came to
the