The Grotesque Harold Bloom's Literary Themes
The Grotesque Harold Bloom's Literary Themes
The Grotesque Harold Bloom's Literary Themes
F
Alienation
Death and Dying
Human Sexuality
Rebirth and Renewal
e American Dream
e Grotesque
e Heros Journey
e Labyrinth
Blooms Literary emes
THE GROTESQUE
Edited and with an introduction by
Harold Bloom
Sterling Professor of the Humanities
Yale University
Volume Editor
Blake Hobby
Blooms Literary emes
THE GROTESQUE
Blooms Literary Themes: The Grotesque
Copyright 2009 by Infobase Publishing
Introduction 2009 by Harold Bloom
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Contents
Series Introduction by Harold Bloom: xi
emes and Metaphors
Volume Introduction by Harold Bloom xv
e American and European Grotesque 1
Notes on the Grotesque: Anderson, Brecht, and
Williams by James Schevill, in Twentieth Century
Literature (1977)
As I Lay Dying (William Faulkner) 13
Great God, What ey Got in at Wagon?:
Grotesque Intrusions in As I Lay Dying by Michael
Gillum
e Bacchae (Euripides) 23
e Bacchae by Siegfried Melchinger (Trans. Samuel
R. Rosenbaum), in Euripides (1973)
e Birds (Aristophanes) 33
Empire and the Grotesque in Aristophanes e Birds
by Khalil M. Habib
Candide (Voltaire) 41
Optimism by Voltaire (Trans. William F. Fleming), in
Voltaires Philosophical Dictionary, Vol. IV (1910)
Contents
Don Quixote (Miguel de Cervantes) 49
Heine on Cervantes and the Don Quixote by
Heinrich Heine, in Temple Bar,
(1876)
Edgar Allan Poes Short Stories (Edgar Allan Poe) 57
e Grotesque in the Age of Romanticism: Tales of
the Grotesque and Arabesque by Wolfgang Kayser
(Trans. Ulrich Weisstein), in e Grotesque in Art and
Literature (1981)
Frankenstein (Mary Shelley) 65
Elements of the Grotesque in Mary Shelleys
Frankenstein by Robert C. Evans
Good Country People (Flannery OConnor) 75
A Sharp Eye for the Grotesque in Flannery
OConnors Good Country People by Robert C.
Evans
Gullivers Travels ( Jonathan Swift) 87
e Political Signicance of Gullivers Travels by
C.H. Firth, in e Proceedings of the British Academy
(1919)
Henry IV, Part 1 (William Shakespeare) 97
e Grotesque in Henry IV, Part 1 by John Kerr
Inferno (Dante Alighieri) 109
Grotesque Renaissance by John Ruskin, in e Stones
of Venice, Volume the ird: e Fall (1880)
King Lear (William Shakespeare) 115
King Lear and the Comedy of the Grotesque by G.
Wilson Knight, in Twentieth Century Interpretations of
King Lear: A Collection of Critical Essays (1978)
viii
ix
e Metamorphosis (Franz Kafka) 135
Aspects of the Grotesque in Franz Kafkas
e Metamorphosis by Robert C. Evans
Miss Lonelyhearts (Nathanael West) 145
Carnival Virtues: Sex, Sacrilege, and the Grotesque
in Nathanael Wests Miss Lonelyhearts, by Blake G.
Hobby and Zachary DeBoer
e Mysterious Stranger (Mark Twain) 155
Grotesque Bodies in Twains e Mysterious Stranger
by Matthew J. Bolton
e Overcoat (Nikolai Gogol) 167
Reading Gogols Grotesque Overcoat
by James N. Roney
Revelation (Flannery OConnor) 177
e Grotesque Protagonist by Gilbert H. Muller,
in Nightmares and Visions: Flannery OConnor and
the Catholic Grotesque (1972)
Six Characters in Search of an Author (Luigi Pirandello) 189
Luigi Pirandellos Six Characters in Search of an Author
and the Grotesque by J. R. Holt
Winesburg, Ohio (Sherwood Anderson) 199
e Book of the Grotesque by Irving Howe,
in Sherwood Anderson (1951)
Acknowledgments 209
Index 211
Contents
xi
1. T T
What we now call a theme or topic or subject initially was named a
topos, ancient Greek for place. Literary topoi are commonplaces, but
also arguments or assertions. A topos can be regarded as literal when
opposed to a trope or turning which is gurative and which can be a
metaphor or some related departure from the literal: ironies, synec-
doches (part for whole), metonymies (representations by contiguity)
or hyperboles (overstatements). emes and metaphors engender one
another in all signicant literary compositions.
As a theoretician of the relation between the matter and the rhet-
oric of high literature, I tend to dene metaphor as a gure of desire
rather than a gure of knowledge. We welcome literary metaphor
because it enables ctions to persuade us of beautiful, untrue things, as
Oscar Wilde phrased it. Literary topoi can be regarded as places where
we store information in order to amplify the themes that interest us.
is series of volumes, Blooms Literary emes, oers students and
general readers helpful essays on such perpetually crucial topics as the
Heros Journey, the Labyrinth, the Sublime, Death and Dying, the
Taboo, the Trickster and many more. ese subjects are chosen for
their prevalence yet also for their centrality. ey express the whole
concern of human existence now in the twenty-rst century of the
Common Era. Some of the topics would have seemed odd at another
time, another land: the American Dream, Enslavement and Emanci-
pation, Civil Disobedience.
I suspect though that our current preoccupations would have
existed always and everywhere, under other names. Tropes change
across the centuries: the irony of one age is rarely the irony of another.
But the themes of great literature, though immensely varied, undergo
Series Introduction by Harold Bloom:
emes and Metaphors
xii
transmemberment and show up barely disguised in dierent contexts.
e power of imaginative literature relies upon three constants:
aesthetic splendor, cognitive power, wisdom. ese are not bound by
societal constraints or resentments, and ultimately are universals, and
so are not culture-bound. Shakespeare, except for the worlds scrip-
tures, is the one universal author, whether he is read and played in
Bulgaria or Indonesia or wherever. His supremacy at creating human
beings breaks through even the barrier of language and puts everyone
on his stage. is means that the matter of his work has migrated
everywhere, reinforcing the common places we all inhabit in his
themes.
2. CoN+vs+ as no+n Tnvxv aNo Tvovv
Great writing or the Sublime rarely emanates directly from themes
since all authors are mediated by forerunners and by contemporary
rivals. Nietzsche enhanced our awareness of the agonistic foundations
of ancient Greek literature and culture, from Hesiods contest with
Homer on to the Hellenistic critic Longinus in his treatise On the
Sublime. Even Shakespeare had to begin by overcoming Christopher
Marlowe, only a few months his senior. William Faulkner stemmed
from the Polish-English novelist Joseph Conrad and our best living
author of prose ction, Philip Roth, is inconceivable without his
descent from the major Jewish literary phenomenon of the twentieth
century, Franz Kafka of Prague, who wrote the most lucid German
since Goethe.
e contest with past achievement is the hidden theme of all
major canonical literature in Western tradition. Literary inuence is
both an overwhelming metaphor for literature itself, and a common
topic for all criticism, whether or not the critic knows her immersion
in the incessant ood.
Every theme in this series touches upon a contest with anteriority,
whether with the presence of death, the heros quest, the overcoming
of taboos, or all of the other concerns, volume by volume. From
Monteverdi through Bach to Stravinsky, or from the Italian Renais-
sance through the agon of Matisse and Picasso, the history of all the
arts demonstrates the same patterns as literatures thematic struggle
with itself. Our countrys great original art, jazz, is illuminated by what
Series Introduction by Harold Bloom
xiii
the great creators called cutting contests, from Louis Armstrong and
Duke Ellington on to the emergence of Charlie Parkers Bop or revi-
sionist jazz.
A literary theme, however authentic, would come to nothing
without rhetorical eloquence or mastery of metaphor. But to experi-
ence the study of the common places of invention is an apt training in
the apprehension of aesthetic value in poetry and in prose.
Series Introduction by Harold Bloom
xv
Volume Introduction by Harold Bloom
1
Astonishment is the mode of the Grotesque, though this is tinged
with distaste, unlike the transcendent astonishment induced by the
Sublime.
Oddly, grotesque as a word as based upon grotto, a cave, under-
ground and phantom-infested. e Shakespearean Fool fused the
Grotesque and the Uncanny or Sublime, most notably the Fool in
King Lear.
For me, the great modern master of the Grotesque was the now
rather neglected Victorian poet Robert Browning (1812-1889). Our
era dumbs down with shocking ferocity, and the neglect of Browning
largely reects his intellectual energy and the authentic, achieved di-
culty of his best poems. His particular masterpiece in the Grotesque
mode is the superb Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came, a dramatic
monologue that is also an internalized quest-romance.
Of all literary forms, quest-romance has undergone the most
astonishing transgurations from the Odyssey through Spensers e
Faerie Queene on to Joyces Ulysses, Prousts In Search of Lost Time,
and Manns e Magic Mountain. Such metamorphic propensi-
ties now render quest-romance into an all but indenable genre: it
has expanded by progressive internalization until further inward-
ness scarcely seems possible. What, from Don Quixote and Hamlet
onwards, is not to some degree an internalized search to re-beget the
individual self? Freud, who increasingly takes his proper place as a
great literary artist, and not a scientist, is the theoretician of modern
quest-romance.
To understand this, commence by casting out the odd notion
that Freuds prime concern was human sexuality. Instead it was the
xvi Volume Introduction by Harold Bloom
individuation and augmentation of the ego, where sexuality neces-
sarily played a key developmental role. If we can speak of Freuds
own quest-romance it would be his drive to free cognition from its
sexual past. In a brilliant perception Freud surmised that all cognition
began with a childs curiosity as to gender dierences, a curiosity that
remains an endlessly moody brooding in most of us but that an elite
group could transcend, by way of an intellectual discipline and of a
profound immersion in culture. And yet our discomfort with culture
grows incessantly. In Freudian quest-romance, we always are marching
on to defeat because each of us is her or his own worst enemy. We have
a will-to-fail, an unconscious sense of guilt, a sado-masochistic drive
beyond the Pleasure Principle.
2
Freud was the last and greatest of the Victorian prophets: Samuel
Butler, omas Carlyle, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Ruskin, Walter
Pater, Matthew Arnold and, in Germany, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche.
Browning, a ercely Protestant sensibility but scarcely a pious Chris-
tian, was the lifelong disciple of Percy Bysshe Shelley, archetypal High
Romantic rebel against the established order, Christianity included.
From his early poetryPauline and Paracelsuswhich were essentially
Shelleyan voyages to the impossible idealon to his mature dramatic
monologues, Browning was faithful to the spirit of Shelley. But the Shel-
leyan Sublime is transformed into Brownings Romantic Grotesque, as
it had been by Shelley himself in his verse-drama, e Cenci.
Brownings darkly splendid Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came
is a controlled phantasmagoria in thirty-four six-line stanzas, spoken
by a nameless childe or candidate for knighthood. e poems title
is taken from a snatch of anonymous song uttered by Shakespeares
Edgar (impersonating madness) in King Lear (III, IV, 173):
Child Rowland to the dark Tower Came,
His word was still, Fie, foh, and fum,
I smell the blood of a British man.
at brief bit of weird lyric was enlarged by Browning into a grand
nightmare of a poem, dependent for many of its grotesque singulari-
ties upon a chapter, Of ings Deformed and Broken, in e Art of
xvii Volume Introduction by Harold Bloom
Painting in All Its Branches, by Gerard de Lairesse, a book in his
fathers library that Browning had memorized in his childhood.
By tradition, the poems obsessed monologist is known as Childe
Roland, which is true to the poems imaginative pattern though not to
its letter. Childe Roland is an unique quester, because he wants to fail.
His heart springs up at nding failure in its scope. All his compan-
ions in the quest have been disgraced as cowards and traitors, and
though he himself is both heroic and loyal his love for his forerunners
augments his manic intensity to fail as they did.
e reader increasingly is made aware that he can give no credence
to what the Childe thinks he sees. If we rode by his side we would see
a wretched landscape no doubt, but not nearly as apocalyptic as the
one Roland ercely describes. e culminating negative vision repre-
sents an apotheosis of the grotesque:
If there pushed any ragged thistle-stalk
Above its mates, the head was chopped; the bents
Were jealous else. What made those holes and rents
In the docks harsh swarth leaves, bruised as to baulk
All hope of greenness? tis a brute must walk
Pashing their life out, with a brutes intents.
As for the grass, it grew as scant as hair
In leprosy; thin dry blades pricked the mud
Which underneath looked kneaded up with blood.
One sti blind horse, his every bone a-stare,
Stood stupeed, however he came there:
rust out past service from the devils stud!
We hear a little childs voice here, desperate at being left alone
with a suering beast. And then suddenly the crisis of his life and
quest burningly assaults Roland:
What in the midst lay but the Tower itself?
e round squat turret, blind as the fools heart,
Built of brown stone, without a counterpart
In the whole world. e tempests mocking elf
Points to the shipman thus the unseen shelf
He strikes on, only when the timbers start.
xviii
at round squat turret, both unique and commonplace, is a
kind of grotto peculiarly raised up. Even as all the lost adventurers
my peers ring his ordeal, Roland sounds his slug-horn in deance of
his fate, and concludes dauntlessly if ambiguously: Childe Roland to the
Dark Tower Came. rough him, Browning recalls Shelleys trumpet
of a prophecy (from the conclusion to the Ode to the West Wind)
and thus establishes again his relationship to his prime precursor.
Volume Introduction by Harold Bloom
1
THE AMERICAN AND
EUROPEAN GROTESQUE
e Bacchae
by Siegfried Melchinger (Trans. Samuel R.
Rosenbaum), in Euripides (1973)
I
Providing a detailed analysis of Euripides play, Siegfried
Melchinger asserts that The Bacchae is the tragedy of trag-
edies, one whose myth is interpreted as a representation
of the contradictions apparent in every era. For Melchinger,
the grotesque quality of Dionysus retribution on Thebes and
its ruler, the ever-rational Pentheus, emphasizes the extremi-
ties of human nature and the consequences for remaining
ignorant of them. The grotesque murder of Pentheus by his
own mother results from his refusal to acknowledge the
presence and power of the irrational in the city. As Melch-
ingers analysis of the play makes clear, The Bacchaes
grotesque scenes are indispensable to the representation
of Dionysus and the contrary drives of the human psyche he
holds under his sway.
F
Melchinger, Siegfried.e Bacchae. Euripides. Trans. Samuel R. Rosenbaum.
New York: Frederick Ungar, 1973. 17789.
24
Dionysus, the god ever old and ever newthat is, the one who disap-
peared and returned againhad set out to conquer the world. Asia lies
at his feet. In the south and the north of Hellas, he has established
beachheads. Now he is at the point of subjugating the Hellenes.
Unlucky ebes is to be the city in which he will start. He chose it not
because he was born there but because it was the city in which he was
insulted. Mythical time is the present time of the play. Cadmus, the
mythical founder of ebes, is still living. He is the father of Semele,
who was selected by Zeus to be the mother of Dionysus. As god and
begetter, Zeus appeared to her in the guise of a stroke of lightning. So
close did he get to her that she was consumed by its re. Around the
ame is hallowed ground. A tomb and sanctuary, overgrown with ivy,
stand near the still aming city.
Semeles sisters disparage their dead sister. It was not Zeus, they
suggest, but a mortal who fathered Dionysus. To avenge this insult,
Dionysus has chosen them, as well as all the women of ebes, as
his rst victims. is is the state of aairs in ebes when the play
opens.
Young Pentheus is the king. He is the grandson of Cadmus, the
son of Cadmuss oldest daughter, Agave. At a time when Pentheus has
been out of the country, dionysian madness has taken possession of the
women of the city. Leaving hearth and home, they have rushed into
the mountains as, bacchantes, celebrants of Dionysus Bacchus. Moved
by the powers of the god, the older men have also joined them, as has
the patriarch Cadmus.
But the polis is showing resistance. e men, led by Pentheus,
reject the god.
First the drum of the great mother begins to resound. e drum-
sticks begin their rattle and the resin in the torches of the goddess
begins to glow. en the host of nymphs rages in. ey whirl and
throw themselves around and stamp in ecstatic dance. is is Pindars
description of the cavalcade of Dionysus and his throng of followers.
e maenads beat their tambourines. Castanets clatter. eir
heads wreathed with ivy leaves, clothed in fawn skins, carrying a
thyrsus in one hand, a torch in the other, the maenads dance wildly
around Dionysus. Dionysus has put on human form. His mask framed
by long locks is that of a girl, as are his clothes. He is not only god and
man, but also both man and woman. At the end of the prologue he
tells the maenads to beat the drum resoundingly so that ebes will
Euripides
25
see what is happening. He himself is going to the mountain to dance
with the bacchantes.
e maenads are half women, half creatures, who accompany
Dionysus in his triumphal march. ey have something strange and
wild in them, for, as in every human being, the strange and wild are
always latent and will erupt when unleashed. It has manifested itself
in the women of ebes.
e music, the dance, the singing, are barbaric. e new god
Dionysus takes no account of any dierence between Europe and
Asia, between Hellenic and barbarian. He recognizes no dierence
between Tmolus, near Sardis in Asia Minor, from which he and his
throng have come, and ebes, in which he was born and in which he
has now decided to found his cult.
e scene that follows, grotesque and laughable, is meant to be
absurd. In bacchante costume, with ivy leaves in his hair, using a
thyrsus as a crutch, old blind gray-haired Tiresias the prophet patters
in. He is led to the front of the stage and calls to Cadmus. Cadmus
emerges in a short cloak, with a fawn skin covering his spindly legs.
Tiresias asks where he may dance. e elders have already submitted
to the new god, who recognizes no dierences in age.
Pentheus, followed by his armed guard, enters the arena. He is
angered when he sees these two oldsters leaping and shouting. He
wears the mask and costume of a young hero. His manner of speech is
lordly, sharp, and, as one of his people says, all too regal. His gestures
are rapid and authoritative. His personal courage and intelligence are
unquestionable. He is said to be without moderation, but in which
respect? Can a king accustomed to ruling his city with common sense
be blamed if he refuses to tolerate the lawlessness that has broken out
in ebes?
Perhaps Euripides deliberately oers the scenes in which the
older people oend, so that the good sense of the audience will
denounce the followers of Dionysus. Where will this lead to if these
goings-on are not stopped? And even if a god is behind all this, no
polis can survive if such madness prevails. Tiresias and Cadmus,
who have accepted Dionysus, have nothing to propose to solve this
dilemma. Established civic policies no longer have any relevancy once
this divine madness has disrupted the ordinary life of the polis.
Tiresias expounds the credo of Dionysus. e earth was barren,
then Dionysus gave it moisture. He gave us wine to have with our
e Bacchae
26
bread. He gave us the madness of prophetic vision to add to our
understanding, for prophecy is also a form of madness. Tiresias says:
Great power has he over Hellas; belief in the power of man does not
make for humanity. We men of age join in the gods dances because we
are not so insane as to ght against him as you are doing.
en Cadmus adds another argument that would appeal to every
Hellene, no matter how absurd it might seem to us: even if this god
turns out not to be a god, it is to the interest of the house and the polis
to honor him as if he were a god. He says that whether or not the god
be ctional, the worship of him is noble and honorable. So he takes
the wreath from his own head and tries to place it on that of Pentheus,
inviting him to Dance with us!
But Pentheus hisses at his grandfather to keep that wreath
away from him. Only respect for the aged and for piety stops him
from treating old Cadmus roughly. But the other one, the seer, the
seducerhe should be punished. Immediately he orders demolition of
the temple of the seer and a police raid on the stranger who has driven
the women mad. Death by stoning is the nal penalty he commands.
A motive emerges in this scene that will be of decisive signicance
for the further development of the plot. Pentheus interprets an orgy
as being what we associate with the word today, as sexual indulgence
to excess. e foreigner is leading the women astray, into unchastity!
He is desecrating marriage vows.
Pentheus has no other explanation for the events reported to him
and that he himself has witnessed on his way into the city. Some
hordes of women have already been arrested and thrown into prison.
When women have lost all inhibitions, it is only libido that drives
them. is attitude is in line with masculine assumptions by which a
woman is nothing but an object for satisfying the males sexual needs.
e polis was essentially a male state. e thought that a craving to
achieve freedom was expressed in the dionysian revolt of the women
probably did not enter the minds of men of the theater of Dionysus.
In this opinion there is also something of the bragging of the man for
whom a woman is nothing else but a piece of property that exists to
serve the satisfaction of his libido.
It would be foolish to maintain that e Bacchae represents a kind
of early Doll s House, a play with a purpose aimed toward the emanci-
pation of womenbut one of its basic themes is the conict between
the sexes. It is highlighted by extreme contrasts. On one hand, we are
Euripides
27
shown the unleashing of the irrational that is believed by some to
be more deeply imbedded in women than it is in men. On the other
hand, we see the hubris of extreme rationality. Men base their right to
power, claiming to be the sole possessors of rationality, and lay claim
to the right to rule society on this assumption.
In answer to Pentheus, the chorus asserts the reality of the
dionysian credo in the framework of a song of praise to true
wisdom. It prefers peace, the company of the muses and the graces,
to the boundless self-condence of arrogant rationality. Dionysus is
worshipped here as the god of the common man, the majority, and
those who oppose him are not only presumptuous but also lacking in
moderation.
e theme is repeated in the development of the plot. True inner
peace can be achieved only after the excesses of the dionysian orgies.
Once the dark hidden powers have been released and relieved, life
under the customary laws of society can return to the golden mean,
the balance, the equilibrium. is may well be so, but one must realize
that this is not necessarily the point of view of Euripides. It is stated
as the view of the dionysian chorus.
e armed guards bring Dionysus in, in fetters. But they do not
feel safe with him. He did not oer the least resistance. Beyond that,
the maenads they arrested have gone free. e chains that bound
them have dropped o, the locks burst open. It is witchcraft.
Pentheus opens the hearing. e answers of the defendant
Dionysus as to his person are full of irony. ey alternate cheer-
fully, some coming from Dionysus in his apparently human form,
others from him in his actually divine character. e questioning is
concentrated on the principal charge of leading women into unchas-
tity. Dionysus repeats the defense Tiresias has already put forward,
that a womans virtue depends on her own character. It does not
take an orgy to make a woman immoral. e fact that these rites
take place principally at night is quite irrelevant. Vice can prevail
equally by day.
Pentheus debates this with Dionysus in a cold fury. He demands
to see this god but is rebuked: he cannot see him because he is
ungodly. is is too much for Pentheus. Despite Dionysuss warning,
Pentheus orders him locked up in the stables. His women are to be
sent to the slave market or to the factories. Dionysus, broaching the
problem of personal identity, warns him again that he does not know
e Bacchae
28
what he is doing or even what he is. e armed guards approach
Dionysus cautiously. Smiling indulgently, he goes with them.
e chorus of maenads, surrounded by armed soldiers, weeps loud
laments for the disappearance of Dionysus. What follows is a mystery
but this is not, as was often later claimed, the entire play.
e sacred section of the play begins now. Its opening measures
are ritualistic. It is in keeping with the paradoxical nature of the god
that he should die and live again, depart and return, be killed and then
resurrected. e maenads raise their lamentation for his disappear-
ance to a lament for the whole world. is weeping rises to a religious
ecstasy. At its height they hear the voice of the god from inside his
place of connement calling to them.
e music of their antiphony swells in volume. e earth trembles.
Houses are heard collapsing. e ames on Semeles tomb are up.
All are thrown to their knees, maenads and soldiers. Dionysus appears
in thunder and lightning. e sacred section of the play has reached
its culmination. It is his epiphany. Great glory surrounds the god.
Splendor radiates around him triumphantly. He announces in ery
verses what has happened, how Pentheus, rst panting with rage, was
made a fool of and nally sank in a swoon.
Never was a gods revenge more cruel, contemptuous, and insid-
ious. And never did a man resist a god with greater hubris. Pentheus
staggers out of the house with sword in hand. Catching sight of the
stranger, he hurls himself at him. He commands that all doors be
locked. A shepherd comes running. He reports miracles on the moun-
tain. He has seen an idyll, full of modesty and morality. Pentheuss
unjust suspicions and untruths are given the lie.
It occurs to the shepherds to capture Agave, Pentheuss mother,
and bring her into the city in the hope of winning the gratitude of
their master. is causes a ght. Like wild animals stirred up by an
attack, the rage of the bacchantes is unchained. ey begin to tear the
cattle apart. ey storm down into the valley, pour into the villages
like enemy invaders. And when the peasants seize weapons to defend
themselves, blood ows not from swords but from blows of the
thyrsus. e shepherds beseech their king to accept this god, whoever
he may be.
e tearing apart of animals is a ritual of the cult. Like Zagreus
in the Orphic myth, who, after being torn to pieces by the Titans,
was reborn of Semele, in the person of Dionysus, Dionysus himself is
Euripides
29
torn apart by the women so he can be born again. e Orphic rites
included the tearing apart and eating of animals representing Zagreus,
to account for the presence of both divinity and evil in human beings.
us was the power of the god demonstrated at the same time
through an epiphany.
But Pentheus is not yet entirely subdued. He insists on continuing
to run amok. He refuses the shepherds advice. He blusters that this
bacchic frenzy is disgracing ebes in the eyes of all Hellas. He orders
his men to mobilize, saying that eban men will not crawl to the altar
of this god in obedience to the terrorizing acts of the bacchantes.
Was he not right? Could he tolerate all this merely because it
was instigated by a god? Once more, and for the last time, mans
rationality rises up against the irrational terror of the god. Dionysus
warns Pentheus in vain that he will die if he raises arms against him.
But since warnings do not stop Pentheus, it will take other means
to overthrow him. Here the mystery part of the play comes to its
ending.
Dionysus displays his power over Pentheus, the mortal, without
even needing a miracle. It is the dark side of Pentheuss own character
that drives him to his fate. Dionysus awakens it by projecting before
Pentheuss eyes a picture that arouses his sexual desires in a wave of
perverted lasciviousness. Dionysus promises Pentheus to take him to
watch how the bacchantes are carrying on up on the mountain. He
will be able to observe everything as a voyeur from a hiding place.
Pentheus still calls out for his weapons, but Dionysus, with a cutting
exclamation, encourages the self-acting ferment working in Pentheus.
Little by little, it destroys Pentheuss reason.
Now Dionysus has him rmly in his hands. His scorn abuses
him and puts him to shame. Pentheus, the most masculine of men,
must dress in womens clothing, as no man is permitted access to the
orgies.
He must put on his head the same wig with owing locks that he
has just been ridiculing Dionysus for wearing. He must throw a fawn
skin over his shoulders and carry a thyrsus as a symbol.
As Pentheus objects that all ebes would laugh at his appear-
ance, Dionysus promises to conduct him through deserted streets.
Pentheus darts into the house at once, into our net, as Dionysus
says with mocking laughter before he follows him inside. Dionysus
says of himself that though he is the most terrifying of the gods he is
e Bacchae
30
also the most merciful. e female clothing will serve Pentheus also
as his shroud.
e maenads, now clearly seen as votaries of Dionysus, sing the
refrain with real enthusiasm. Mans wisdom counts for little as the
dionysian always triumphs, Submission to Dionysus is extolled again,
for it brings the happiness of the quiet in the home, of those that live
content with what each day brings without yearning for more.
Pentheus staggers to his shocking end. In his womens clothing
he dances like a maenad. Dionysus escorts him from the stage in this
absurd costume. His madness is clear to all to see, but also its cause:
lasciviousness. At last he asks Dionysus to let him parade through
the city in his female nery because, he says, he is the only man who
would dare do such a thing. Dionysus assures him that he is great
indeed, that his fame will rise to heaven after the suering that he will
endure on this expedition to the mountains.
e maenads transfer their mountain orgies to the stage and
repeat them. Gruesome become their dancing and singing. ey call
down death on the godless, the immoral, and the unjust. ey will
laugh uproariously when Pentheus dies.
A messenger brings news. Euripides does not spare us any of the
horror he reports. We see the voyeur avid with eagerness to witness
the unchastity of the maenads, hiding in a grove of r trees. Dionysus
himself had bent down a treetop to earth so Pentheus could bounce
up on it, so as not to be seen from the ground. Pentheus disappeared
out of sight, and a loud voice called out to the bacchantes that the man
who mocked their orgies is at hand. And as he spoke, the messenger
said, A holy ame leaped up into heaven from the earth. e heavens
stood still and the valley was silent. No leaf stirred and no sound of
animals could be heard.
en we see how the maenads tore the tree out of the ground, and,
as Pentheus plunges to earth, how they fell upon him, his own mother
in the lead, and tore him limb from limb. Each tossed the pieces to the
other with her bloody hands. And Pentheuss mother seized the head,
torn from the body, to impale it on her thyrsus. She carried it through
the forest as though it were that of a lion killed in the hunt.
She is coming to the city. e messenger rushes away, not to see
the horrible sight. But the maenads dance and Agave steps into the
dance with her sons head on her sta, dancing and exulting with the
rest. She comes to invite her father, Cadmus, to the feast. She will nail
Euripides
31
this captured lions head up on the wall, so all the world of the polis
can see the prize she has taken in the hunt.
e last step is the worst. Agave awakes from her madness.
Cadmus comes with the bier on which the severed portions of
Pentheuss body have been laid and covered with a black cloth. e
raving mother, still radiant, approaches it with the head still on her
sta. Now all the cast, even the chorus, falls back from her. She real-
izes what she has done. Agave is annihilated. So this is the reward for
submission to the god, the gratitude of the god. Cadmus whispers that
Dionysus has destroyed them.
A gap follows this passage in the surviving manuscripts of the
play, but we do have some clues as to how the plot developed. Agave
speaks a long lament. She counts over the limbs of the son she bore
and murdered. How can she bear to live on after this? en Dionysus
appears ex machina. Some of the gods prophecy has been preserved.
All of themCadmus, Agave, and her sistersmust leave ebes
and go abroad. In vain Cadmus prays to their ancestor for forgiveness,
pleading that angry gods should not act as vindictively as mortals do.
e victims, weeping, draw away, taking sad farewell of their country,
their noble lineage.
e Bacchae is not like the medieval mystery plays because two
mortals rise up against the sacred rituals. e rst of them is Pentheus,
with his claim for the self-created order of men. en Agave accuses
the gods for punishing minor sinslike the defaming remarks the
sisters made about Dionysuss mother, Semelebeyond all measure
and with cruel craftiness.
What, then, is e Bacchae? It is the tragedy of tragedies. It brings
out into the open and examines the old myths that were the stu of
the theater in older times, using the archaic arena, the costumes and
forms that were familiar. Gilbert Murray said that it is bound more
tightly by form than any Hellenic play we know. It brings together
everything the models of previous tragedy contributed and distills out
of them what remained relevant to its own day. It is the essence of the
human condition as Euripides saw it in 406 BC, after looking back
over a long lifetime.
Its myth is interpreted as a representation of the contradictions
apparent in every era. Dionysus is not the anti-Apollo that Nietzsche
considered him to be. He is in the center between the opposite poles,
not the god of metamorphoses, but the god of dichotomy. He is in the
e Bacchae
32
middle between man and woman, between Asia and Europe, between
Hellas and the barbarian world, between heaven and hell (according to
Heraclitus, his other name is Hades), between death and life, between
raving and peace (mania and hesychia).
Dionysus is the one who disappears and returns, hunter and
hunted, murderer and victim, life and death. e tragedy consists
in knowing that these two aspects are dierent sides of the same
manifestation.
Goethe considered e Bacchae to be Euripidess most beautiful
tragedy. In his last years he was preparing to translate it into his own
beloved German language. But death overtook him before he could
do it.
Euripides
33
THE BIRDS
(ARISTOPHANES)
Optimism
by Voltaire (Trans. William F. Fleming),
in Voltaires Philosophical Dictionary,
Vol. IV (1910)
I
In this entry from his Philosophical Dictionary, Voltaire elabo-
rates on some of the philosophical and theological issues
that Candide also raises. Satirically presenting a grotesque
world devoid of justice where the idealistic and innocent
suffer, Candide bears witness to the grotesque horrors of
humanity. In the Philosophical Dictionary, Voltaire specically
takes issue with a trend of rational idealism present in Enlight-
enment-era thought, epitomized by the writings of German
philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (many consider Dr.
Pangloss, Candides companion and teacher, to be a carica-
ture of Leibniz). According to Leibniz, our worldthough lled
with sufferingis the best possible world. This is true because
if we state that the world is imperfect, we must acknowledge
that its creator is imperfect. Since God is perfect by deni-
tion, such a conclusion is illogical for Leibniz. Voltaire traces
the various manifestations of this type of abstract optimism
Voltaire. Optimism. Voltaires Philosophical Dictionary, Vol. IV. Trans. William
F. Fleming. New York: Lamb Publishing (1903, 1910): 8089.
42
and its alternatives in his essay. Never missing an opportunity
to highlight the absurdity of each doctrine, Voltaire notes how
none of them would console him as he grotesquely describes
dying in frightful torments from a bladder stone. Optimism
(also translated as All Is Well) contains much of the argu-
ment that Candide satirically pursues, as well as a small
demonstration of how Voltaire utilizes grotesque imagery to
expose the ignorance of those who attempt to rationalize the
world with little regard for its contents. Filled with Voltaires
characteristically sharp wit, this essay suggests that readers
approach Candide as a grotesque and satirical critique of
Enlightenment thought.
F
I beg of you, gentlemen, to explain to me how everything is for
the best; for I do not understand it. Does it signify that everything is
arranged and ordered according to the laws of the impelling power?
at I comprehend and acknowledge. Do you mean that every one
is well and possesses the means of livingthat nobody suers? You
know that such is not the case. Are you of the opinion that the lamen-
table calamities which aict the earth are good in reference to God;
and that He takes pleasure in them? I credit not this horrible doctrine;
neither do you.
Have the goodness to explain how all is for the best. Plato, the
dialectician, condescended to allow to God the liberty of making ve
worlds; because, said he, there are ve regular solids in geometry, the
tetrahedron, the cube, the hexahedron, the dodecahedron, and the
icosahedron. But why thus restrict divine power? Why not permit the
sphere, which is still more regular, and even the cone, the pyramid of
many sides, the cylinder, etc.?
God, according to Plato, necessarily chose the best of all possible
worlds; and this system has been embraced by many Christian philos-
ophers, although it appears repugnant to the doctrine of original sin.
After this transgression, our globe was no more the best of all possible
worlds. If it was ever so, it might be so still; but many people believe
it to be the worst of worlds instead of the best.
Leibnitz takes the part of Plato; more readers than one complain
of their inability to understand either the one or the other; and for
Voltaire
43
ourselves, having read both of them more than once, we avow our
ignorance according to custom; and since the gospel has revealed
nothing on the subject, we remain in darkness without remorse.
Leibnitz, who speaks of everything, has treated of original sin;
and as every man of systems introduces into his plan something
contradictory, he imagined that the disobedience towards God, with
the frightful misfortunes which followed it, were integral parts of the
best of worlds, and necessary ingredients of all possible felicity: Calla,
calla, senor don Carlos; todo che se haze es por su ben.
What! to be chased from a delicious place, where we might have
lived for ever only for the eating of an apple? What! to produce in
misery wretched children, who will suer everything, and in return
produce others to suer after them? What! to experience all maladies,
feel all vexations, die in the midst of grief, and by way of recompense
be burned to all eternityis this lot the best possible? It certainly is
not good for us, and in what manner can it be so for God? Leibnitz felt
that nothing could be said to these objections, but nevertheless made
great books, in which he did not even understand himself.
Lucullus, in good health, partaking of a good dinner with his
friends and his mistress in the hall of Apollo, may jocosely deny the
existence of evil; but let him put his head out of the window and he
will behold wretches in abundance; let him be seized with a fever, and
he will be one himself.
I do not like to quote; it is ordinarily a thorny proceeding. What
precedes and what follows the passage quoted is too frequently
neglected; and thus a thousand objections may rise. I must, notwith-
standing, quote Lactantius, one of the fathers, who, in the thirteenth
chapter on the anger of God, makes Epicurus speak as follows: God
can either take away evil from the world and will not; or being willing
to do so, cannot; or He neither can nor will; or, lastly, He is both able
and willing. If He is willing to remove evil and cannot, then is He not
omnipotent. If He can, but will not remove it, then is He not benevo-
lent; if He is neither able nor willing, then is He neither powerful nor
benevolent; lastly, if both able and willing to annihilate evil, how does
it exist?
e argument is weighty, and Lactantius replies to it very poorly
by saying that God wills evil, but has given us wisdom to secure the
good. It must be confessed that this answer is very weak in compar-
ison with the objection; for it implies that God could bestow wisdom
Candide
44
only by allowing evila pleasant wisdom truly! e origin of evil has
always been an abyss, the depth of which no one has been able to
sound. It was this diculty which reduced so many ancient philoso-
phers and legislators to have recourse to two principlesthe one good,
the other wicked. Typhon was the evil principle among the Egyptians,
Arimanes among the Persians. e Manichaeans, it is said, adopted
this theory; but as these people have never spoken either of a good or
of a bad principle, we have nothing to prove it but the assertion.
Among the absurdities abounding in this world, and which may
be placed among the number of our evils, that is not the least which
presumes the existence of two all-powerful beings, combating which
shall prevail most in this world, and making a treaty like the two
physicians in Molire: Allow me the emetic, and I resign to you the
lancet.
Basilides pretended, with the Platonists of the rst century of the
church, that God gave the making of our world to His inferior angels,
and these, being inexpert, have constructed it as we perceive. is
theological fable is laid prostrate by the overwhelming objection that
it is not in the nature of a deity all-powerful and all-wise to intrust the
construction of a world to incompetent architects.
Simon, who felt the force of this objection, obviates it by saying
that the angel who presided over the workmen is damned for having
done his business so slovenly, but the roasting of this angel amends
nothing. e adventure of Pandora among the Greeks scarcely meets
the objection better. e box in which every evil is enclosed, and at
the bottom of which remains Hope, is indeed a charming allegory;
but this Pandora was made by Vulcan, only to avenge himself on
Prometheus, who had stolen re to inform a man of clay.
e Indians have succeeded no better. God having created man,
gave him a drug which would insure him permanent health of body.
e man loaded his ass with the drug, and the ass being thirsty, the
serpent directed him to a fountain, and while the ass was drinking,
purloined the drug.
e Syrians pretended that man and woman having been created
in the fourth heaven, they resolved to eat a cake in lieu of ambrosia,
their natural food. Ambrosia exhaled by the pores; but after eating
cake, they were obliged to relieve themselves in the usual manner. e
man and the woman requested an angel to direct them to a water-
closet. Behold, said the angel, that petty globe which is almost of no
Voltaire
45
size at all; it is situated about sixty millions of leagues from this place,
and is the privy of the universego there as quickly as you can. e
man and woman obeyed the angel and came here, where they have
ever since remained; since which time the world has been what we
now nd it. e Syrians will eternally be asked why God allowed man
to eat the cake and experience such a crowd of formidable ills?
I pass with speed from the fourth heaven to Lord Bolingbroke.
is writer, who doubtless was a great genius, gave to the celebrated
Pope his plan of all for the best, as it is found word for word in the
posthumous works of Lord Bolingbroke, and recorded by Lord Shaft-
esbury in his Characteristics. Read in Shaftesburys chapter of the
Moralists the following passage:
Much may be replied to these complaints of the defects of
natureHow came it so powerless and defective from the hands
of a perfect Being?But I deny that it is defective. Beauty is the
result of contrast, and universal concord springs out of a perpetual
conict. . . . It is necessary that everything be sacriced to other
thingsvegetables to animals, and animals to the earth. . . . e laws
of the central power of gravitation, which give to the celestial bodies
their weight and motion, are not to be deranged in consideration of a
pitiful animal, who, protected as he is by the same laws, will soon be
reduced to dust.
Bolingbroke, Shaftesbury, and Pope, their working artisan, resolve
their general question no better than the rest. eir all for the best
says no more than that all is governed by immutable laws; and who
did not know that? We learn nothing when we remark, after the
manner of little children, that ies are created to be eaten by spiders,
spiders by swallows, swallows by hawks, hawks by eagles, eagles by
men, men by one another, to aord food for worms; and at last, at the
rate of about a thousand to one, to be the prey of devils everlastingly.
ere is a constant and regular order established among animals
of all kindsa universal order. When a stone is formed in my bladder,
the mechanical process is admirable; sandy particles pass by small
degrees into my blood; they are ltered by the veins; and passing
the urethra, deposit themselves in my bladder; where, uniting agree-
ably to the Newtonian attraction, a stone is formed, which gradually
increases, and I suer pains a thousand times worse than death by
the nest arrangement in the world. A surgeon, perfect in the art of
Tubal-Cain, thrusts into me a sharp instrument; and cutting into the
Candide
46
perineum, seizes the stone with his pincers, which breaks during the
endeavors, by the necessary laws of mechanism; and owing to the same
mechanism, I die in frightful torments. All this is for the best, being
the evident result of unalterable physical principles, agreeably to which
I know as well as you that I perish.
If we were insensitive, there would be nothing to say against this
system of physics; but this is not the point on which we treat. We ask
if there are not physical evils, and whence do they originate? ere
is no absolute evil, says Pope in his Essay on Man; or if there are
particular evils, they compose a general good. It is a singular general
good which is composed of the stone and the goutof all sorts of
crime and suerings, and of death and damnation.
e fall of man is our plaister for all these particular maladies of
body and soul, which you call the general health; but Shaftesbury
and Bolingbroke have attacked original sin. Pope says nothing about
it; but it is clear that their system saps the foundations of the Christian
religion, and explains nothing at all.
In the meantime, this system has been since approved by many
theologians, who willingly embrace contradictions. Be it so; we ought
to leave to everybody the privilege of reasoning in their own way upon
the deluge of ills which overwhelm us. It would be as reasonable to
prevent incurable patients from eating what they please. God, says
Pope, beholds, with an equal eye, a hero perish or a sparrow fall; the
destruction of an atom, or the ruin of a thousand planets; the bursting
of a bubble, or the dissolution of a world.
is, I must confess, is a pleasant consolation. Who does not nd
a comfort in the declaration of Lord Shaftesbury, who asserts, that
God will not derange His general system for so miserable an animal
as man? It must be confessed at least that this pitiful creature has a
right to cry out humbly, and to endeavor, while bemoaning himself,
to understand why these eternal laws do not comprehend the good of
every individual.
is system of all for the best represents the Author of Nature as
a powerful and malevolent monarch, who cares not for the destruction
of four or ve hundred thousand men, nor of the many more who in
consequence spend the rest of their days in penury and tears, provided
He succeeds in His designs.
Far therefore from the doctrinethat this is the best of all possible
worldsbeing consolatory, it is a hopeless one to the philosophers
Voltaire
47
who embrace it. e question of good and evil remains in irremediable
chaos for those who seek to fathom it in reality. It is a mere mental
sport to the disputants, who are captives that play with their chains.
As to unreasoning people, they resemble the sh which are trans-
ported from a river to a reservoir, with no more suspicion that they
are to be eaten during the approaching Lent, than we have ourselves
of the facts which originate our destiny.
Let us place at the end of every chapter of metaphysics the two
letters used by the Roman judges when they did not understand a
pleading. N. L. non liquetit is not clear. Let us, above all, silence
the knaves who, overloaded like ourselves with the weight of human
calamities, add the mischief of their calumny; let us refute their
execrable imposture by having recourse to faith and Providence.
Some reasoners are of opinion that it agrees not with the nature of
the Great Being of Beings for things to be otherwise than they are. It
is a rough system, and I am too ignorant to venture to examine it.
Candide
49
DON QUIXOTE
(MIGUEL DE CERVANTES)
Grotesque Renaissance,
by John Ruskin,
in e Stones of Venice, Volume the ird:
e Fall (1880)
I
In this excerpt from Stones of Venice, John Ruskin, an inu-
ential nineteenth-century art critic, discusses the nature of
the grotesque, citing Dantes Inferno as one of the most
perfect portraitures of endish nature. Noting the impor-
tance of representing the degradation of the body when
depicting vice, Ruskin attributes the success of Dantes
grotesque portrayals to his mingling of extreme horror . . .
with ludicrous actions and images. Following his discussion
of Dante, Ruskin goes on to explore the grotesques relation
to beauty, claiming that if the same objects rendered by art
as grotesque were perceived in their true light, they would
cease to disturb and become altogether sublime. For Ruskin,
the fallen human soul, limited in its ability to grasp an innite
world, distorts the objects of its contemplation the farther it
reaches. Though highly speculative, Ruskins remarks provide
insight into Dantes project and how his use of the grotesque
Ruskin, John. Grotesque Renaissance. e Stones of Venice, Volume the ird: e
Fall. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1880: 11265.
110
may be related to the enormity of his vision, a vision so remote
from and incongruous with lived experience.
F
[. . . Nothing] is so refreshing to the vulgar mind as some exercise of
[satire or humor], more especially on the failings of their superiors;
and that, wherever the lower orders are allowed to express themselves
freely, we shall nd humor, more or less caustic, becoming a principal
feature in their work. e classical and Renaissance manufacturers
of modern times having silenced the independent language of the
operative, his humor and satire pass away in the word-wit which has
of late become the especial study of the group of authors headed by
Charles Dickens; all this power was formerly thrown into noble art,
and became permanently expressed in the sculptures of the cathedral.
It was never thought that there was anything discordant or improper
in such a position: for the builders evidently felt very deeply a truth
of which, in modern times, we are less cognizant; that folly and sin
are, to a certain extent, synonymous, and that it would be well for
mankind in general, if all could be made to feel that wickedness is as
contemptible as it is hateful. So that the vices were permitted to be
represented under the most ridiculous forms, and all the coarsest wit
of the workman to be exhausted in completing the degradation of the
creatures supposed to be subjected to them.
Nor were even the supernatural powers of evil exempt from this
species of satire. For with whatever hatred or horror the evil angels
were regarded, it was one of the conditions of Christianity that they
should also be looked upon as vanquished; and this not merely in their
great combat with the King of Saints, but in daily and hourly combats
with the weakest of His servants. In proportion to the narrowness
of the powers of abstract conception in the workman, the nobleness
of the idea of spiritual nature diminished, and the traditions of the
encounters of men with ends in daily temptations were imagined
with less terric circumstances, until the agencies which in such
warfare were almost always represented as vanquished with disgrace,
became, at last, as much the objects of contempt as of terror.
e superstitions which represented the devil as assuming various
contemptible forms of disguises in order to accomplish his purposes
aided this gradual degradation of conception, and directed the study
Dante Alighieri
111
of the workman to the most strange and ugly conditions of animal
form, until at last, even in the most serious subjects, the ends are
oftener ludicrous than terrible. Nor, indeed, is this altogether avoid-
able, for it is not possible to express intense wickedness without some
condition of degradation. Malice, subtlety, and pride, in their extreme,
cannot be written upon noble forms; and I am aware of no eort to
represent the Satanic mind in the angelic form, which has succeeded
in painting. Milton succeeds only because he separately describes
the movements of the mind, and therefore leaves himself at liberty
to make the form heroic; but that form is never distinct enough to
be painted. Dante, who will not leave even external forms obscure,
degrades them before he can feel them to be demoniacal; so also John
Bunyan: both of them, I think, having rmer faith than Miltons in
their own creations, and deeper insight into the nature of sin. Milton
makes his ends too noble and misses the foulness, inconstancy, and
fury of wickedness. His Satan possesses some virtues, not the less
virtues for being applied to evil purpose. Courage, resolution, patience,
deliberation in council, this latter being eminently a wise and holy
character, as opposed to the Insania of excessive sin: and all this, if
not a shallow and false, is a smooth and artistical, conception. On the
other hand, I have always felt that there was a peculiar grandeur in the
indescribable, ungovernable fury of Dantes ends, ever shortening
its own powers, and disappointing its own purposes; the deaf, blind,
speechless, unspeakable rage, erce as the lightning, but erring from
its mark or turning senselessly against itself, and still further debased
by foulness of form and action. Something is indeed to be allowed for
the rude feelings of the time, but I believe all such men as Dante are
sent into the world at the time when they can do their work best; and
that, it being appointed for him to give to mankind the most vigorous
realization possible both of Hell and Heaven, he was born both in the
country and at the time which furnished the most stern opposition
of Horror and Beauty, and permitted it to be written in the clearest
terms. And, therefore, though there are passages in the Inferno which
it would be impossible for any poet now to write, I look upon it as all
the more perfect for them. For there can be no question but that one
characteristic of excessive vice is indecency, a general baseness in its
thoughts and acts concerning the body,
1
and that the full portraiture
of it cannot be given without marking, and that in the strongest lines,
this tendency to corporeal degradation; which, in the time of Dante,
Inferno
112
could be done frankly, but cannot now. And, therefore, I think the
twenty-rst and twenty-second books of the Inferno the most perfect
portraitures of endish nature which we possess; and at the same time,
in their mingling of the extreme of horror (for it seems to me that
the silent swiftness of the rst demon, con l ali aperte e sovra i pie
leggier, cannot be surpassed in dreadfulness) with ludicrous actions
and images, they present the most perfect instances with which I am
acquainted of the terrible grotesque. But the whole of the Inferno is
full of this grotesque, as well as the Faerie Queen; and these two poems,
together with the works of Albert Durer, will enable the reader to
study it in its noblest forms, without reference to Gothic cathedrals.
[. . .]
e reader is always to keep in mind that if the objects of horror,
in which the terrible grotesque nds its materials, were contemplated
in their true light, and with the entire energy of the soul, they would
cease to be grotesque, and become altogether sublime; and that there-
fore it is some shortening of the power, or the will, of contemplation,
and some consequent distortion of the terrible image in which the
grotesqueness consists. Now this distortion takes place [. . .] in three
ways: either through apathy, satire, or ungovernableness of imagina-
tion. It is this last cause of the grotesque which we have nally to
consider; namely, the error and wildness of the mental impressions,
caused by fear operating upon strong powers of imagination, or by
the failure of the human faculties in the endeavor to grasp the highest
truths.
e grotesque which comes to all men in a disturbed dream is the
most intelligible example of this kind, but also the most ignoble; the
imagination, in this instance, being entirely deprived of all aid from
reason, and incapable of self government. I believe, however, that the
noblest forms of imaginative power are also in some sort ungovern-
able and have in them something of the character of dreams; so that
the vision, of whatever kind, comes uncalled, and will not submit itself
to the seer, but conquers him, and forces him to speak as a prophet,
having no power over his words or thoughts. Only, if the whole man
be trained perfectly, and his mind calm, consistent and powerful, the
vision which comes to him is seen as in a perfect mirror, serenely, and
in consistence with the rational powers; but if the mind be imperfect
and ill trained, the vision is seen as in a broken mirror, with strange
distortions and discrepancies, all the passions of the heart breathing
Dante Alighieri
113
upon it in cross ripples, till hardly a trace of it remains unbroken. So
that, strictly speaking, the imagination is never governed; it is always
the ruling and Divine power: and the rest of the man is to it only as
an instrument which it sounds, or a tablet on which it writes; clearly
and sublimely if the wax be smooth and the strings true, grotesquely
and wildly if they are stained and broken. And thus the Iliad, the
Inferno, the Pilgrims Progress, the Faerie Queen, are all of them true
dreams; only the sleep of the men to whom they came was the deep,
living sleep which God sends, with a sacredness in it, as of death, the
revealer of secrets.
Now, observe in this matter, carefully, the dierence between a
dim mirror and a distorted one; and do not blame me for pressing the
analogy too far, for it will enable me to explain my meaning every way
more clearly. Most mens minds are dim mirrors, in which all truth is
seen, as St. Paul tells us, darkly: this is the fault most common and
most fatal; dullness of the heart and mistiness of sight, increasing to
utter hardness and blindness; Satan breathing upon the glass, so that
if we do not sweep the mist laboriously away, it will take no image.
But, even so far as we are able to do this, we have still the distortion
to fear, yet not to the same extent, for we can in some sort allow for
the distortion of an image, if only we can see it clearly. And the fallen
human soul, at its best, must be as a diminishing glass, and that a
broken one, to the mighty truths of the universe round it; and the
wider the scope of its glance, and the vaster the truths into which it
obtains an insight, the more fantastic their distortion is likely to be,
as the winds and vapors trouble the eld of the telescope most when
it reaches farthest.
NOTE
1. Let the reader examine, with special reference to this subject,
the general character of the language of Iago.
Inferno
115
KING LEAR
(WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE)
e Grotesque Protagonist
by Gilbert H. Muller,
in Nightmares and Visions: Flannery OConnor
and the Catholic Grotesque (1972)
I
Gilbert Muller hails Flannery OConnors short story Revela-
tion as a triumph of the comic grotesque, one whose
protagonist, Ruby Turpin, turns the story into a punitive fable
on arrogance, hypocrisy, and pride. Discussing OConnors
place in the Southern grotesque tradition and her use of
grotesque characterizations, Muller claims the grotesque
was [her] ideal vehicle for objectifying [the] fears, obses-
sions, and compulsions she perceived in Southern culture.
The presence of the grotesque, for Muller, suggests that the
visible world is incomprehensible and unregenerate [i.e. unre-
deemed]. This fearful and revelatory vision leaves readers,
and OConnors Ruby Turpin, oundering in a sea of contra-
dictions and incongruities, yearning for spiritual redemption.
F
Muller, Gilbert H. e Grotesque Protagonist. Nightmares and Visions:
Flannery OConnor and the Catholic Grotesque. Athens, GA: University of
Georgia Press, 1972: 1950.
178
e moral vision of writers like West, Sophocles, and Faulkner was
obviously congenial to Flannery OConnor, because she found her
natural idiom in stories where the charactersMiss Lonelyhearts,
Oedipus, the Bundrensconfront the limits of mystery. As Miss
OConnor once remarked in delineating her own work, the look of
this ction is going to be wild . . . it is almost of necessity going to
be violent and comic, because of the discrepancies that it seeks to
combine.
1
And the writer who cultivates this type of vision, based
on characters who are forced out to meet evil and grace and who act
on a trust beyond themselves,
2
will inevitably be interested in the
grotesque.
Miss OConnor began writing about grotesques because she
could, as she readily admitted in a letter to James Farnham, recognize
them. Essentially the reason why my characters are grotesque, she
explained, is because it is the nature of my talent to make them so.
To some extent the writer can choose his subject; but he can never
choose what he is able to make live. It is characters like the Mist and
the Bible salesman that I can make live.
3
Flannery OConnor was
preeminently successful in character depiction because she realized
that the grotesque was the ideal vehicle for objectifying fears, obses-
sions, and compulsions. Within her southern landscape (only two of
her stories are set outside the South, and they involve southern char-
acters), it is the common everyday confrontations, such as a family trip
or a visit to the doctors oce, that are lled with horror, and it is the
sudden irrationality of the familiar world that induces distortions in
character. us the grotesque suggests that the visible world is incom-
prehensible and unregenerate, and that the individual is oundering
in a sea of contradictions and incongruities.
e typical grotesque character in Miss OConnors ction is an
individual who projects certain extreme mental states which, while
psychologically valid, are not investigations in the tradition of psycho-
logical realism. To be certain, the reality of the unconscious life
incorporating dream, fantasy, and hallucinationis expressed, but
grotesque characterization is not interested in the subtleties of emotion
and feeling, but rather in their larger outlines. is method actually
tends toward the symbolic, where distillation of character into a basic
set of preoccupations serves to crystallize attitudes toward the ethical
circumstances being erected. Here a basic point to emphasize is that
grotesque characterization does not necessarily make the characters
Flannery OConnor
179
in a story remote or improbable, since the sacrice in psychological
realism is more counterbalanced by the impact of the grotesque.
[. . .]
Although there is no counterpart in her ction to Faulkners
Yoknapatawpha, to Eudora Weltys Natchez Trace, or to the dark
and bloody ground of Robert Penn Warren, OConnors writing
does bear an intrinsic relationship to the historicity of her region. As
she observed in her essay e Catholic Novelist in the Protestant
South:
e two circumstances that have given character to my own
writing have been those of being Southern and being Catholic.
is is considered by many to be an unlikely combination,
but I have found it to be a most likely one. I think that the
South provides the Catholic novelist with some benets
that he usually lacks, and lacks to a conspicuous degree. e
Catholic novel cant be categorized by subject matter, but only
by what it assumes about human and divine reality. It cannot
see man as determined; it cannot see him as totally depraved.
It will see him as incomplete in himself, as prone to evil, but
as redeemable when his own eorts are assisted by grace. And
it will see this grace as working through nature, but as entirely
transcending it, so that a door is always open to possibility and
the unexpected in the human soul.
4
e operation of grace through nature is one of the authors major
ctional and religious concerns, and this explains why she valued her
region and its culture so highlyprecisely because it revealed certain
manifestations of the spirit grounded in the concrete world. is
spiritual dimension of reality led Miss OConnor to remark in e
Regional Writer: To call yourself a Georgia writer is certainly to
declare a limitation, but one which, like all limitations, is a gateway
to reality. It is a great blessing, perhaps the greatest blessing a writer
can have, to nd at home what others have to go elsewhere seeking.
5
e South provided Miss OConnor with two main attributes of her
ctiona sense of manners and a sense of religious mystery. Manners
are a part of the concrete world which every serious novelist must
acknowledge. You get manners, she observed in Writing Short
Stories, from the texture of existence that surrounds you. e great
Revelation
180
advantage of being a Southern writer is that we dont have to go
anywhere to look for manners; bad or good, weve got them in abun-
dance. We in the South live in a society that is rich in contradiction,
rich in irony, rich in contrast, and particularly rich in speech.
6
is
sense of historical ambiguity, rooted in the concrete, extends outward
until it embraces the realm of mystery, and the coincidence of these
two qualities, as Robert Heilman has observed in one of the most
penetrating essays on the nature of southern literature, is what makes
the ction of this region so distinctive. Heilman terms the sense of
mystery a sense of totality, yet it is easy to discern that he and Miss
OConnor are discussing the same phenomenon:
Inclined to question whether suering is totally eliminatable
or unequivocally evil, the Southerners are most aware that,
as Tate has put it, man is incurably religious, and that the
critical problem is not one of skeptically analyzing the religious
impulse of thinking as if religion did not exist for a mature
individual and culture, but of distinguishing the real thing and
the surrogates. . . . For them, totality is more than the sum of the
sensory and the rational. e invention of gods is a mark, not
of a passion for unreality, but of a high sense of reality; is not a
regrettable ight from science, but perhaps a closer approach to
the problem of being.
7
e burden which a sense of reality and of mystery imposes upon
a writer is one of honesty toward ones region, rather than of slavish
devotion to it. As Miss OConnor mentioned in e Fiction Writer
and His Country, truthful depiction of these two qualities requires a
delicate adjustment of the outer and inner worlds, in such a way that,
without changing their nature, they can be seen through each other.
To know oneself is to know ones region. It is also to know the world,
and it is also, paradoxically, a form of exile from that world.
8
To be
an exile from the world implies a detachment from it, and this in turn
permits a degree of objectivity in rendering it. is feeling of exile
places OConnor at the center of what Lewis Simpson, in an elegant
and carefully wrought investigation of the southern writer, terms the
Great Literary Secession.
9
Miss OConnor is able to appreciate the
cultural and historical richness of her region because of this detach-
ment, which does not negate her willingness to utilize the Souths
Flannery OConnor
181
rm guidelines: . . . these guides have to exist in a concrete form,
known and held sacred by the whole community. ey have to exist
in the form of stories which aect our image and our judgement
of ourselves.
10
By being in partial exile from her region, Flannery
OConnor never succumbs to what C. Van Woodward has called
those illusions of innocence and virtue which aict all aspects of the
southern mindand the broader American character as well.
[. . .]
In her facetious moments Miss OConnor was fond of asserting
that to be a Georgia author was a rather specious dignity, on the
same order as, for the pig, being a Talmadge ham.
11
Yet seen within
the larger context analyzed above, it is obvious that for her the term
regional writer was certainly a valuable restriction. Indeed her
origins were an asset, because Flannery OConnor realized that the
interplay of social and religious forces in the South worked to produce
both characters and situations that were inherently grotesque. us,
when asked why she wrote about grotesque characters, she replied:
Because we can still recognize one. In the South, where most
people still believe in original sin, our sense of evil is still
just strong enough to make us skeptical about most modern
solutions, no matter how long we embrace them. We are still
held by a sense of mystery, however much against our will. e
prophet-freaks of Southern literature are not images of the
man in the street. ey are images of man forced out to meet
the extremes of his own nature. e writer owes a great debt to
everything he sees around him, and in Georgia he is particularly
blessed in having about him a collection of goods and evils
which are intensely stimulating to the imagination.
12
Realizing that the South was Christ-haunted and that ghosts cast
strange shadows, very erce shadows, particularly in our literature,
13
Miss OConnor made the vast majority of her characters attest to a
religious presence by either fanatically embracing or denying it, by
remaining dangerously apathetic about it, or by replacing it with a
more contemporary explanation of human destiny. e communal
displacement which is so evident in her farm stories, for example,
serves as an index of the spiritual displacement of the characters.
With a regional background rooted in a sense of evil and of original
Revelation
182
sin, incredible grotesques emerge, since the history of the area tends
to foster extreme behavior.
Delineation of the cultural grotesque as a main character type
establishes Flannery OConnor as a very special kind of regionalist,
as one who both utilizes the Souths special resources and who is
decidedly at odds with it, for what she once described as the divi-
sion of Christendom is rooted largely in the failure of community.
Her cultural grotesques do not cultivate the land but instead pursue
moral and spiritual decay. ey debase their own traditions, and conse-
quently Miss OConnor found little civic virtue in her rural folk. She
assailed the myth of agrarian perfection promulgated from Jeerson
to Allen Tate. is led her to conclude that the Catholic novelist in
the Protestant South will feel a good deal more kinship with back-
woods prophets and shouting fundamentalists than he will with those
politer elements for whom the supernatural is an embarrassment and
for whom religion has become a department of sociology or culture
or personality development.
14
Realizing that the Agrarians could no
longer speak for her generation, she evolved a new attitude based on
physical and spiritual isolation within the community. Her ction
reveals that the norms of southern life have lost their sacredness and
have become disastrously secular in orientation. e reality of this
situation in turn forced her to concentrate upon the atypicality of
southern life, because the new southern identity must derive not from
the mean average or the typical, but from the hidden and often the
most extreme.
15
For Flannery OConnor communal life in the South should have
a spiritual basis, yet its very absence forced her not only to attack this
dissociation but also to locate the divine in the extreme. I am always
having it pointed out to me, she wrote, that life in Georgia is not at
all the way I picture it, that escaped criminals do not roam the roads
exterminating families, nor Bible salesmen prowl about looking for
girls with wooden legs.
16
e point is that people like the Mist
and the Bible salesman, or the insane Singleton of the uncollected
story e Partridge Festival (1961), who kills even more people
than the Mist, are necessary in order to force a recognition of
mans radical dependence on God upon the average man. e true
cultural grotesques are the invariably well-mannered members of
the community who ignore the spiritual foundations of their culture.
Miss OConnor sees the South as struggling to preserve this spiritual
Flannery OConnor
183
identity, not only against the Raybers and the Sheppards, but also
against those numerous members of the community who substitute
sanctimoniousness for true Christian virtue. is insight into human
nature applies especially well to her earth mothersto Mrs. May
in Greenleaf, to Mrs. McIntyre in e Displaced Person, to
Mrs. Cope in A Circle in the Fire, and to Mrs. Turpin in Revela-
tion. ese women traipse their elds, pastures, and woods with a
single-minded sense of righteous proprietorship that prevents them
from recognizing a fundamentally spiritual estrangement from
their surroundings, an estrangement rooted in their inability to
act charitably toward their neighbors. Unaware of their alienation,
these ordinary individuals are extremely vulnerable to extraordinary
events which test their harshness and rigidity of spirit.
One of the most remarkable of these cultural grotesques is Ruby
Turpin, the protagonist of Flannery OConnors short story, Revela-
tion. Unlike many writers whose energies atrophy in middle age,
Miss OConnor had talents that were constantly improving, and a
story as nearly awless as Revelation (which won a posthumous
rst prize in the OHenry competitions) is a poignant testament to
a talent thwarted by death. First published in the Sewanee Review in
1964, it is a fable of Gods providence operating in a doctors oce
and in a pig pen. A triumph of the comic grotesque, the story opens in
a doctors waiting room, where an extraordinary collection of patients
who form a miniature societya ship of foolsawaits examination.
Assembled in this almost claustrophobic oce are representative
diseases of the body, the mind, and the spirit: the crippled bodies of
the aged, the maimed intelligences of the poor and the neuroses of the
intellectually gifted, and the defective souls of the self-righteous. eir
illnesses represent the maladies of society, and the traits of this society
are progressively revealed to a point where the absurdity implicit in
the characters behavior must explode.
Ruby Turpin, who self-indulgently speculates about the bless-
ings bestowed on her by the Lord, unconsciously turns the story
into a punitive fable on arrogance, hypocrisy, and pride. She gradu-
ally emerges as a high-toned Christian lady whose sense of social
and moral superiority and whose extreme self-absorption and pride
border on narcissism. Negative aspects of her character are progres-
sively revealed and thrown into grotesque perspective, and each
brushstroke lls in a canvas that is unrelieved by any redeeming
Revelation
184
qualities. Mindless of her faults, she establishes herself as a type of
white culture heroine, aligned with a pitiful minority against the
encroachments of Negroes, poor-white trash, and the baser elements
of humanity. Because of her obsessions and her spiritual deformities
she is inherently grotesque; her thoughts and her actions reveal her
as a negative moral agent, unaware of her own absurdity because she
is so attached to an inauthentic existence.
It is relevant that Miss OConnor plots this story at a pace that
is discernibly slower than most of her short ction and that Rubys
unbearable self-righteousness is gradually reinforced to the point of
the readers exasperation. e lack of any physical action, counter-
pointed by Rubys constant speculation on the mysteries of creation
and by the mechanical conversation of the patients, creates a repressed
narrative pace wherein the slightest disruption in movement could
have the unusual eect of releasing tensions which lie just beneath the
surface of the story. us the dramatic escalation which occurs abruptly
after Ruby thanks the Lord for having created in her such a ne crea-
ture is so unanticipated that the shocking impact creates one of the
revelations to which the title of the story alludes. As the Wellesley girl
strikes Ruby Turpin in the eye with a hurled book and pounces on her
in a frenzy, the astonishing disclosure of the girls imprecation is not
only authoritative in moral terms, but approximates, as perfectly as the
literary medium can, the actual force of revelation.
e execration which the girl hurls at Ruby Turpin is both
shocking and convincing, for it calls Rubys self-contained egocentric
existence into question. Ruby tries to rebel against this revelation,
which in theological terms is a manifestation of Gods providence, and
which in emotional terms is cathartic. Because of this revelation she
becomes an inhabitant of a world which suddenly appears estranged to
her. Her initial revelationthat she is, in the girls words, a wart-hog
from hellis at rst incomprehensible and then outrageous, and the
remainder of the story traces the process whereby she painfully learns
obedience, which is a prerequisite of true faith and of salvation.
Rubys failure to present a suitable defense of herself shifts from
outrage to hatred and bitterness toward God, and the image of this
woman marching out to the pig parlour to wage battle with the Lord
is a brilliant and hilarious picture of the false believer journeying to
meet her apocalypse. Still actively engaged in an attempt to reconstruct
the world in her own image, she subsumes any conception of God to
Flannery OConnor
185
her own blueprint, an act that constitutes absolute heresy. is is her
central crisisand the crisis of all of Flannery OConnors cultural
grotesques: as the landscape transforms itself from the brightness of
late afternoon to a deepening and mysterious blue, the reality of this
crisis begins to catch up with her.
Ruby Turpin is one of the authors countless grotesques who are
largely the creations of themselves. eir own misconception of self
and of social laws places them in opposition to a higher justice which
assures the ultimate triumph of their oppositesthe humble and the
meek. Assuredly the lame shall enter rst, while the superior citizen,
conducting his life for his own sake, shall suer a humiliation even
more acute than total damnation.
Conscious elaboration of the cultural grotesque was merely a part
of Flannery OConnors incisive depiction of degeneracy at all social
levels. All her characters are susceptible to defects in nature and spirit,
and these deciencies are what estrange them from the community
and from God. Whether it is Haze Motes trying nihilistically to
overturn his culture, or Ruby Turpin attempting to preserve it, Miss
OConnor ridicules pride and hypocrisy wherever she nds it. She
unmasks her grotesques by exposing their perversity, aectation, and
vanity, and she frequently reduces them to impotence through satire.
For OConnor it is the grotesque which underlies all forms of failure.
Revealing the dilemmas in the quest for human identity, she shows
how the lack of an integrated societywhich for the author would
be a Christian societyprevents the possibility of an integrated
personality. All her grotesques eventually come to the realization of
the fact that they are aspiring toward illusory points in a secular world.
is defect in vision, epitomized by Haze Motes, whose very name
suggests his confused condition, creates an abnormality which is not
easily cured.
e grotesques of Flannery OConnor are individuals who cannot
erase the horrors of their obsessions. Few images of peace and beauty
populate their world, few are the interludes of order. Implicit in their
behavior are all the conventions of the grotesquethe nightmare
world, the perversion, the satanic humor. ese people wear their
deciencies of spirit as scarsas emblems of a world without order,
meaning, or sense of continuity. In an attempt to transcend their
painful condition, to rise above that which is alienated and estranged,
Miss OConnors protagonists invariably descend into the demonic.
Revelation
186
Obsessed with their own sins, with weakness, evil, and suering, they
turn inward upon themselves and act out their agonies in extraordi-
nary ways. Because OConnors grotesques areto paraphrase T. S.
Eliot in his essay on Baudelairemen enough to be saved or damned,
their actions in this world become reections of the interior life of
the soul. It is one of the triumphs of Flannery OConnors artand
a mark of her vital faiththat she is willing to write about all types
of malefactors who, utterly out of harmony with the world and with
Creation, risk exile and damnation for their disbelief.
NOTES
1. Some Aspects of the Grotesque in Southern Literature, in
Mystery and Manners, ed. Sally and Robert Fitzgerald (New
York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1969), p. 43. is essay was
published originally in Cluster Review (March 1965). Miss
OConnor was one of the few writers of the grotesque who
commented on the tradition and genre which she was using in
her ction.
2. Ibid., p. 42.
3. Flannery OConnorA Tribute, p. 23.
4. Mystery and Manners, pp. 196-197. is essay appeared initially
in the Georgetown magazine, Viewpoint (Spring 1966).
5. Ibid., p. 54. e Regional Writer was rst published in Esprit,
7 (Winter 1963).
6. Ibid., p. 103.
7. e Southern Temper, in Southern Renaissance, ed. Louis D.
Rubin, Jr., and Robert D. Jacobs (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
Press, 1953), p. 11. Many of the most astute critics of southern
literature have acknowledged this holiness of the secular. See
in this anthology the essays by Richard Weaver and Andrew
Lytle, and in the editors South: Modern Southern Literature in its
Cultural Setting (Garden City: Doubleday, 1961) the essay by
Louise Cowan, who writes:
. . . as a community adapts itself to a way of life, a
conciliation of the divine and the human orders may be
eected within it. In such a society, economic, moral,
and aesthetic patterns, transformed by a kind of grace,
Flannery OConnor
187
lose their exclusively secular character and begin to
assume a sacredness within the community; and loyalty
between members of the community rests on this essen-
tially metaphysical basis. Men do not bow to each other
but to the divine as it manifests itself in the communal
life (pp. 9899).
8. e Fiction Writer and His Country, in e Living Novel:
A Symposium, ed. Granville Hicks (New York: Collier, 1957),
p. 163.
9. e Southern Writer and the Great Literary Secession,
Georgia Review, 24 (Winter 1970), 393-412. As with Heilman
and others, Simpson connects the posture of the literary exile
with manifestations of the divine. e vision of the Agrarians,
he writes, always had . . . a strong religious and metaphysical
quality. is indeed is the quality of the whole modern eort
toward a renewal of letters, which ultimately is an expression of
an increasing alienation of modern man from the mystery
of the Word (p. 411).
10. Mystery and Manners, p. 202.
11. Ibid., p. 52.
12. Margaret Meaders, Flannery OConnor: Literary Witch,
Colorado Quarterly, 10 (Spring 1962), 384.
13. Recent Southern Fiction: A Panel Discussion, Bulletin of
Wesleyan College, 41 ( January 1961), p. 11.
14. Mystery and Manners, p. 207.
15. Ibid., p. 58.
16. Ibid., p. 38.
Revelation
189
SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR
(LUIGI PIRANDELLO)